Roughton v. Knight

219 U.S. 537, 31 S. Ct. 297, 55 L. Ed. 326, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1652
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 20, 1911
Docket711
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 219 U.S. 537 (Roughton v. Knight) 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
Roughton v. Knight, 219 U.S. 537, 31 S. Ct. 297, 55 L. Ed. 326, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1652 (1911).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

The question in. this case is whether the complainant below, and appellant here, has acquired, a vested right to an exchange of a one hundred and sixty-acre tract of land owned by him and situated inside the exterior boundary of a forest-reserve, for a tract o{ public land of similar area, by reason of acts done in compliance yvith the terms of that, provision of the Forest Reserve Act of June 4,1897, providing for such exchanges. .The Supreme Court of California sustained a demurrer and dismissed his *544 bill. 103 Pac. Rep. 844. A writ of error to that court brings the case here for review as to the Federal question.

That the complainant came within the terms of the actr of June 4, 1897, there can be no doubt. He owned one hundred and sixty acres of patented land within the exterior lines of a public forest reservation, and was entitled to relinquish title to the United States and receive a patent for one hundred and sixty, acres of public land outside the reservation, to be selected by himself. The provision of that act conferring this privilege is set out in the margin, being found in the act of June 4, 1897, c. 2, 30 Stat. 36. 1

The contention is that he lost his right because he neglected to make a selection and thereby complete any exchange until the act extending the privilege was repealed by the act of March 3, 1905, c. 1495, 33 Stat. 1264. The repealing act is set out in the margin. 2

*545 Before the repéal of the act the appellant, in pursuance of the provisions thereof and of the regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior, did these things:

He executed a deed of relinquishment to the United States and caused the same to be duly recorded in June, 1899. He deposited this deed, together with an abstract of title, in the Land Office of the United States for the proper district at Visalia, California. This was in June, 1899. It is' then averred that the deed and the abstract were forwarded to the Commissioner of the Land Office at Washington, and reached there about June 25, 1899, and were there retained until January 3, 1905, when they were returned to the Visalia land office for delivery to the complainant, and were' delivered to him January 9, 1*905, and that no objection as to either form or sufficiency of the relinquishment was made by the Commissioner or any other official of the United States. - Thus the matter stood from January 9, 1905, until March 3, when the repealing act was passed.

On March 14, 1905, eleven days after the repealing act, the appellant undertook to make a selection, and for that purpose filed his application to select the one hundred and sixty acres subsequently patented to the defendant, with notice of the prior selection so made , by complainant. Upon these facts, he demanded that a patent should issue to him for the land so selected, but the Commissioner and the Secretary of the Interior denied power to issue any such patent, the law having been repealed before the selection was made.

The issue is a sharp one. The complainant insists that when he made and delivered his deed, with an abstract showing a clear title to one hundred and sixty acres *546 within a forest reservation, he became entitled to make a selection of one hundred and sixty acres in lieu thereof at any time, and that the repeal of the act did not deprive him of the right to a patent for the land selected on March 14, 1905. The appellant does not bring himself within any of the exceptions' to the repealing act. No selection actually made before the repeal has proven invalid and there was no contract with the Secretary of the Interior to be saved from impairment, unless the acts referred to constitute in and of themselves such part performance as to constitute a contract with the Secretary of the Interior. That there was no such contract is evident from a consideration of the character of the exchange provision and the regulations adopted by. the Secretary of the Interior prescribing the method of carrying out the act. Upon its face the act is neither more nor less than a proposal by the Government for an exchange of claims to land unperfected or lands held under patents situated within the exterior lines of a forest reservation, for an equal area of public land subject to entry elsewhere. The reasons for the provision are found in the disadvantages* which result to such a settler or owner who had acquired his right before the creation of a reservation in the public lands surrounding him. He was thereby isolated from neighborhood association and deprived of the advantage of schools, churches and of increasing value to his own land from occupation by others of the lands thus devoted to reservation purposes. But the act did not prescribe the method by which one so situated might avail himself of the proposal. It was therefore competent for thé Land Department to adopt rules and regulations for the administration of the act in this particular, and this was done, and those rules are found in 24 L. D. 592, 593.

In Cosmos Co. v. Gray Eagle, 190 U. S. 301, 309, these regulations are referred to as reasonable and valid rules, *547 “entitled to respect and obedience.” The regulations which have a bearing here are rules 14,-15 and 16.

To take advantage of the proposal contained in this act the applicant must select the land he wishes, to receive in lieu and file a sufficient relinquishment of land within a forest reserve. Manifestly there must be an acceptance of the relinquishment by some one authorized to' decide upon its sufficiency and an assent to the particular selection made in lieu.

It was not unreasonable that iii the administration of this act the Land Department should limit the authority of any official to accept a relinquishment. As far back as April 14, 1899, the Secretary of the Interior construed the act and made the regulations before mentioned. In Hyde’s Case, 28 L. D. 284, he instructed the Commissioner of the General Land Office that “the officers of the Land Department are not authorized to accept, consider or pass upon- a relinquishment of the tract within the limits of a forest reservation, except in connection with a proffered or tendered selection of other lands in lieu thereof.”

In the case of William S. Tevis, February 28, 1900, 29 L. D. 575, 576, the Secretary instructed the Commissioner in the same terms, saying:'“Paragraphs 15 and 16 of the rules and regulations issued June 30, 1897, under said act (24 L. D. 589, 592), cléarly require that in all. cases of exchange of- lands under .said act, whether the land relinquished be ‘a tract covered by an unperfected bona fide claim or by a patent,’ an application to select lieu lands must accompany the relinquishment of the lands within the limits of a forest reservation.”

- In a ruling made February 24, 1906, 34 L. D. 458, in connection with the application for an exchange, the facts were nearly identical with those in the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
219 U.S. 537, 31 S. Ct. 297, 55 L. Ed. 326, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roughton-v-knight-scotus-1911.