Silver v. Ladd

74 U.S. 219, 19 L. Ed. 138, 7 Wall. 219, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 994
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 15, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 74 U.S. 219 (Silver v. Ladd) 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
Silver v. Ladd, 74 U.S. 219, 19 L. Ed. 138, 7 Wall. 219, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 994 (1869).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The donation certificate granted to Elizabeth Thomas was set aside by the Commissioner of the Land Office, June 25, 1862, on the ground'that Elizabeth Thomas was not the head of a family. On appeal to the Secretary of the Interior, the action of the commissioner was affirmed, on the ground that she was not a settler on the land. The Supreme Court of Oregon, whose judgment we are now to review, held the certificate void, because she was not such a person as could take lands under the act, being an unmarried female.

If, for any of these reasons, the action of the commissioner can be sustained-, then the judgment of the Supreme Court of Oregon dismissing plaintiff’s bill must be affirmed. If it cannot, then the patents issued to defendants after the certificate of Elizabeth Thomas was wrongfully set aside, must enure to the benefit of plaintiff, representing her equitable title.

*225 It is upon the application of the facts of this ease to part of section four of the act of 1850, that the questions of construction already mentioned arise.

■ As there is nothing in this act which requires the settler to be the head of a family, that question may be dismissed without further consideration.

In reference'to the question of actual settlement and residence on the land, wé have only to refer to the case of Lindsey v. Hawes, * where this precise question is raised, and where it is said that a person residing in a liouse which is bisected by the line dividing two quarter sections, will be held to reside on both, and, consequently, on either of them, to which he may assert.a claim Nor is any importance'to be attached to the fact that Mrs Thomas was old and incapable of the manual labor necessary to.cultivating ground. If it was done for her by hired servants, or by her son without compensation, it is equally available to her. In reference to this question and to the one next to be considered— namely, the right of unmarried women to the benefits of this statute — we may apply, with added force, the language used in Lindsey v. Hawes, that it concerns a construction of one of the most benevolent statutes of the government, made for the benefit of its own citizens, inviting and encouraging them to settle upon its public lands. In addition to this it may be said that the section of this statute which we are now considering was passed for the purpose of rewarding in a liberal manner a meritorious class of persons, who had taken possession of.that country and held it'for the United States, under circumstances of great danger and discouragement. These circumstances and the policy-of this act are fully Stated in the ease of Stark v. Starrs, decided at our last term.

Anything, therefore, which sav.ors of narrowness or illib- ■ erality in defining the class, among those residing in the Territory in those early days, and partaking of the hardships which the act was intended- to reward, -who shall be entitled *226 to its benefits, is at variance with the manifest purpose of Congress.

With these views we approach the last and most difficult question in the case, namely, whether Mrs. Thomas is excluded from.-the benefit of this act because she was an unmarried woman.

The affirmation of this proposition is based upon that clause of the fourth section, which, in prescribing the quantity of land to be given to each actual settler, says it shall be “ one-half' section, or three hundred and twenty acres, if a single man, and if a married man,” six hundred and forty acres. We admit the philological criticism that the words “single man ” and “ married man,” referring to the conjugal relation of the sexes, do not ordinarily iuclude females. And no doubt it is on this critical use of the words that the decision of the Oregon court is mainly founded.

But, conceding to it all the force it may justly claim, we are of opinion that it does not give the true meaning of the act, according to the intent of its-framers, for the following reasons:

1. The language of the statute is, that there is hereby granted t.o “ every white settler or occupant of the public lands, above the age of eighteen years,” &c. This is intended to be the description of the class of persons who may take, and if not otherwise restricted, will clearly iuclude all women of that age as well as men.

2. It is only in prescribing the quantity of land to be taken, that the restrictive words are used, and even then the words used are capable of being construed generically, so as to include both sexes. In the case of a married man it is clear that it does include his wife.

8. The evident intention to give to women as well as men, is shown by the provision, that, of the six hundred and forty acres granted to married men, one-half shall go to their wives, and be set apart to them by the surveyor-general, and shall be held in their own right. Can there be any reason why a married woman, who has the care and protec *227 tion of a husband, and who is incapable of making a sepa rate settlement and cultivation, shall have land given to her own use, while the unprotected female, above the age of eighteen years, who makes her own settlement and cultivation, shall be excluded ?

4. But a comparison of the manifest purpose of Congress and the language used by it, in section four of this statute, with those of section five, will afford grounds for rejecting the interpretation claimed by defendants, which are almost conclusive.

The first of these sections applies, as we have already said, to that meritorious class who were then residing in the Territory, or should become residents by the first of December thereafter. It extends to persons not citizens of the United States, to persons only eighteen years old, and it gives to each a half-section of land. The fifth section makes a donation of half this amount, and is restricted to citizens of the United States, or those who have declared their intention to become citizens, and to persons over twenty-one years of age. But what is most expressive in regard to the matter under discussiou is, that the very first line of that section, • in which the class of donees is described, uses the words “white male citizens of the United States.”

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Bluebook (online)
74 U.S. 219, 19 L. Ed. 138, 7 Wall. 219, 1868 U.S. LEXIS 994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/silver-v-ladd-scotus-1869.