Santa Fe Pac. R. v. Ickes

153 F.2d 305, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 360, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3302
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedFebruary 4, 1946
DocketNo. 8956—7
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 F.2d 305 (Santa Fe Pac. R. v. Ickes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Santa Fe Pac. R. v. Ickes, 153 F.2d 305, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 360, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3302 (D.C. Cir. 1946).

Opinion

CLARK, Associate Justice.

The Santa Fe Pacific Railroad Company-brought two actions in the District Court requesting relief by way of injunction and mandamus to compel the Secretary of the Interior to determine the Railroad’s right to certain lands selected in accordance with Acts of 18741 and 1904 2, without regard to the release executed by the Santa Fe under Title III, Part II, § 321 of the Transportation Act of 1940.3 The District Court dismissed both complaints on the merits.4

The Santa Fe’s predecessor in interest, the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company, had received lands under an “aid of construction” granting act enacted in 1866.5 Section 3 of that Act provided for the basic grants to Santa Fe’s predecessor, and gave the railroad the right to select indemnity lands where lands within the primary limits of the grant “shall have been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homesteád settlers, or pre-empted, or otherwise disposed of * * *,” as well as the right to select agricultural Lands in substitution for reserved mineral lands within the original grants. No rights involving these “indemnity” lands are in controversy here. However, it later developed that subsequent to the time when the railroad’s rights attached to particular lands under the 1866 Act some of the original grants came into the possession of settlers whose entry or filing was allowed under the preemption or homestead laws. The United States, desiring to confirm title to such lands in the homesteaders, passed Acts in 1874 and 1904 permitting the railroad, when requested to do so by the Secretary of the Interior, to reconvey to the government land, as to which title had vested in the railroad, thus making it possible for the government to perfect title in the later claimants.6 In consideration for the reconveyances under these Acts the railroad gained the right to select “lieu” lands to replace those given up. The controversy here arose out of the i econveyances by the railroad of lands which enabled the government to perfect title in various homesteaders.

The situation thus created should be distinguished from the right to select “in-deinnity” lands under Section 3 of the 1866 Act where land covered by the initial grant was found to be already in the rightful possession of others, or otherwise unavailable to the railroad. The later Acts were passed to remedy a situation wherein the railroad’s rights were prior in point of time, thus requiring a reconveyance to the United States by the railroad in order' that the government might pass good title to subsequent settlers.

In case No. 8957 the Santa Fe in 1916, at the request of the Secretary of the Interior, reconveyed to the United States certain lands in accordance with the terms of the 1874 Act, and in 1943 sought to exercise its right of selection accruing as a result of the 1916 relinquishment.

In case No. 8956 the Santa Fe in 1911 again, upon a similar request, reconveyed' lands under the provisions of the 1904 Act and in August of 1940 it applied to select lands in replacement for those given up at the government’s request under that Act. While its request was pending, the railroad in December 1940 filed with the See-[307]*307retary of Interior a release under the Transportation Act of 1940 of “any and all claims of whatever description to lands, interests therein, compensation or reimbursement therefor on account of lands or interest granted, claimed to have been granted, or claimed should have been granted by any act of the Congress to Santa Fe Pacific Railroad Company or to any predecessor in interest in aid of the construction of any portion of its railroad.”7 ,

The Commissioner of the General Land Office and the Secretary of the Interior thereafter rejected both of appellant’s applications to select “lieu” lands on the grounds that the release under the 1940 Act covered the claims in question and that they could not be asserted after the filing and acceptance of the release.

The release was filed to enable the railroad to enjoy the full applicable commercial rates on certain types of government traffic which had previously been transported at “land grant” rates, and the Santa Fe concedes that it was effective to wipe out any claims it may have had to indemnity lands as provided for in the original granting Act of 1866, and admittedly as a result of the release the Santa Fe actually surrendered and gave up claims to hundreds of thousands of acres o.f land which it would otherwise have been entitled to demand be patented to it.

However, in bringing these appeals the Santa Fe seeks to establish that, contrary to the District- Court! holding, the 1874 and 1904 Acts are to be regarded as separate pieces of legislation, conferring on the railroad under the circumstances shown to exist here, a positive right to select lands to replace those reconveyed. Santa Fe maintains that its rights arising under the later acts are not claims for lands granted “in aid of construction” and hence not covered or contemplated by the 1940 Act and the release filed under it.

Shortly stated, the railroad’s position here is that the Acts of 1874 and 1904 are not amendments of the Act of 1866, nor Acts granting land in aid of construction, but were enacted to enable the United States to recover title to lands then the property of the railroad in consideration for which it offered a quid pro quo in the form of exchange of other lands belonging to the United States.

The lower court has held that the three enactments, i. e., the 1866, 1874 and 1904 Acts, are but parts of a single legislative scheme. Further, it concluded that the 1940 Act, in relation to the granting acts, was intended “ * * * to wipe the slate clean of such claims by any railroad which enjoyed the benefits of the rate concessions made by the Transportation Act of 1940.” Santa Fe Pac. R. Co. v. Ickes, D.C. 57 F.Supp. 984, 986, 987. If we were to accept the position taken by the government and sustained by the lower court to the effect that the 1874 and 1904 Acts are but amendatory of the 1866 Act we would be constrained to hold that the railroad gave up all of its claims under these acts when it filed its release under the 1940 Act. However, we have carefully examined the three “granting acts” in issue in the light of § 321 of the Transportation Act of 1940, and, for reasons which follow, cannot accept the conclusion reached by the District Court.

In interpreting the 1940 Act the Secretary of Interior, judging from the form in which the release was drawn, then considered it applicable only to claims for lands “granted in aid of construction.” But the government in its brief suggests a wider significance to the quoted words than we think can be implied.8 With this latter interpretation we do not agree. Furthermore, it is perfectly apparent from the language of the release itself that the construction of the 1940 statute now contended tor by the Secretary is, as we have seen, at variance with that put upon the same statute by the selfsame Secretary of the Interior when performing his statutory duty of prescribing its terms in conformity with the statute.

Though the legislative history of this particular statute is of little aid on this point, it seems hardly reasonable that [308]*308Congress should have intended to have the release required under the 1940 Act apply .to any claims other than those for lands granted in aid of construction.

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Related

Krug v. Santa Fe Pacific Railroad
329 U.S. 591 (Supreme Court, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
153 F.2d 305, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 360, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3302, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santa-fe-pac-r-v-ickes-cadc-1946.