Platt v. Union Pacific Railroad

99 U.S. 48, 25 L. Ed. 424, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1507
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 21, 1879
Docket885
StatusPublished
Cited by196 cases

This text of 99 U.S. 48 (Platt v. Union Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platt v. Union Pacific Railroad, 99 U.S. 48, 25 L. Ed. 424, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1507 (1879).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Strong

delivered the opinion of th'e court.

If it be conceded that the complainant has complied with all the conditions prescribed by the acts of Congress for the acquisition by a pre-emptioner of an equitable title to a portion of the public lands, the question still remains, whether the land which he claims was open to pre-emption when- his settlement, was made. It is confessedly a part of the lands which the United States granted to the Union Pacific Railroad Company by the act of July 1, 1862. 12 Stat. 489.

The third section 1 of the act contains words of present grant, but the fourth section enacted that on the completion of each successive forty miles of the railroad and telegraph line, patents should be issued, “ conveying the right and title to said lands to said company, on each side of the road, as far as the same is completed, to the amount aforesaid.” The seventh section required the road and telegraph to be completed before, the first day of July, 1874. The amending act of July 2, 1864 (13 Stat. 356), enlarged the grant, but made no change in its terms; and the Secretary of the Interior, as directed by the act, withdrew the lands within fifteen miles of the designated route of the road from pre-emption, private entry, and sale.

’ Such was the grant. The railroad and telegraph line were entirely completed before July 1, 1874 (if not in 4869), and patents for all the lands granted were directed to be issued to the company in November of that year. By force of the grant, however, and by the definite? fixing of the route of the road, and the filing.the map thereof in the Interior Department, as required by law, together with the completion of the road westward and beyond the tract’' claimed by the complainant, the [57]*57title to that tract had become vested in the company before April 16, 1867. On that day the company, for the purpose of raising money necessary to continue and complete the construction of their road, issued their coupon bonds for the sum in the aggregate of $10,400,000, bearing seven per cent interest, and payable in twenty years from their date. On the same day, for the.purpose of securing the payment of the bonds, the company executed a mortgage or deed of trust to trustees of all' and several the several sections of land granted to them by the said acts of Congress, including the' tract claimed by the complainant. The instrument, we think, though in form a deed of trust, was substantially a mortgage. It was delivered to the trustees,'and duly recorded. The bonds were sold in different markets to bona fide purchasers, and they are now outstanding, about $7,000,000 still remaining unsatisfied. • All this was before the entire road was completed, and before the first step was taken by the complainant to obtain his pre-emption right.

In view of these facts, we are to determine whether the mortgage was a disposition of the lands granted to the company within the meaning of the last clause of sect. 2 of the act of 1862. If it was, the tract of land claimed by the complainant was not open to settlement and pre-emption when he entered thereon, nor has it been at any time since. That clause declared that “ all the lands granted by the section, which shall not be sold or disposed of by said company within three years after the entire road shall have been completed, shall be subject to settlement and pre-emption,” &c. Was the mortgage a sale or disposition of the lands as understood by Congress ? That the company had power to mortgage the lands admits of no reasonable doubt. It may be conceded that a railroad company has not power either to sell or mortgage its franchise, or perhaps the road which it has been chartered to build, without express legislative authority, and this has in some cases been decided. The reason is that such a sale or mortgage tends to defeat the purposes the legislature had in view in the grant of the charter. The adventurers who obtain the charter and who accept it undertake to construct and maintain the public work. Their undertaking is the consideration of the grant, and with-[58]*58oat legislative consent they cannot throw off the obligation they have assumed. But the. reason is inapplicable to a sale or mortgage of property which is not. a part of the road and in no way connected with its use. Parting with such property or incumbering it in no degree interferes with the performance of the duties of the company to the public. Railroad companies are not usually empowered' to hold lands other than those needed for roadway and stations, or water privileges. But when they are authorized to acquire and hold lands separate from their roads, the authority must include the ordinary incidents of ownership, — the right to sell or to mortgage. Especially is this so when, as in the present case, the lands have been granted to the company by the legislature that granted the charter, without any restriction of their use.

Assuming, therefore, as we must; and as has been tacitly conceded in the argument, that the company had the power to .make the mortgage of 1867, we need not stop to inquire whether it was a sale or a partial sale. In some of the States, as well as in England, a mortgage is practically, as well as in form, a sale. Jt passes the legal title to the mortgagee. The more general modern doctrine in this country is, we admit, that it creates merely a lien, without any transmission of title. But if not a sale, was the mortgage made by the company defendant in this case not a disposition of the lands granted to it by Congress ? This question is not to be answered by reference to definitions given in the dictionaries. What did Congress mean in the act of 1862 ? That something else than sale, either total or partial, was intended we are required by all the rules of construction to conclude. Congress is not to be presumed to have used words for no purpose. If it was intended that only lands which had been sold before three years Had expired after the entire completion of the railroad should be exempted from preemption, the words “ or disposed of ” were entirely superfluous. But the admitted rules of statutory construction declare that a legislature is presumed to have used no superfluous words. Courts are to accord a meaning, if possible, to every word in a statute. In Commonwealth v. Alger (7 Cush. (Mass.) 53-89), it was said that in putting a construction upon any statute every jpart must be regarded, and it must be so expounded, if [59]*59practicable, as to give some effect to every part of it. So, in People v. Burns (5 Mich. 114), it was held that some meaning, if possible, must be given to every word in a statute, and that where a given construction would make a word redundant, it was reason for rejecting it. To the same effect is Dearborn and Others v. Inhabitants of Brookline (97 Mass. 466) ; and in Gates v. Salmon (35 Cal. 576) it was ruled that no words are to be treated as surplusage or as repetition. The phrase “ or disposed of ” must, therefore, have some distinctive meaning, some meaning beyond the word “ sold.” What that is may be seen very plainly when the whole act of 1862 is examined. We are seeking for the intention of Congress, and to discover that we may look at the paramount object which Congress had in view, as well as the means by which it proposed to accomplish that object. Congress addressed itself to the work of securing a railroad from the Missouri River to the western boundary of the Territory of Nevada, and thence to the Pacific Ocean. The work was vast, beyond the teach of private capital or enterprise.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 U.S. 48, 25 L. Ed. 424, 1878 U.S. LEXIS 1507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platt-v-union-pacific-railroad-scotus-1879.