Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.

117 U.S. 406, 6 S. Ct. 790, 29 L. Ed. 928, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1858
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 5, 1886
Docket169
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 117 U.S. 406 (Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co.) 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
Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad v. Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Co., 117 U.S. 406, 6 S. Ct. 790, 29 L. Ed. 928, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1858 (1886).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion of the court.

These are cross-appeals from a decree of the Circuit Court for the District of Iowa.

In that court the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Railway Company brought its bill in chancery on the 4th day of March, ' 1879, against the Sioux City and St. Paul Railroad Company, which in due time was answered.

The subject of contest in this suit was the right to certain lands granted by Congress to the State of Iowa to aid in building two railroads, whose right to the lands became vested in one or both ■ of these companies, however named originally. The grant of the lands was by a single statute, and ivas to the *407 State as a trust for the construction of two roads which necessarily crossed each other, and by the act of Congress the place of crossing was to be in O’Brien County. The act granted for the aid of each road every alternate section of land, designated by odd numbers for ten sections in width on each side of said roads, and in the event that any of these odd sections had, when the lines of the roads were definitely located, been sold or otherwise disposed of, the usual grant of lands in lieu of them should, by the Secretary of the Interior, be caused to be selected, provided they were in, no case to be located more than twenty miles from the lines of the roads. 13 Stat. 72, ch. 84.

The roads to be benefited by this grant have both been completed, and both companies are entitled to the odd sections within ten miles of their lines of road, and • to the indemnity lands, so far as they can be found of odd numbers within twenty miles. But as the roads cross each other these limits also cross and overlap, and the claims to the odd sections within those limits necessarily conflict. This presents questions which, at the time the suit was brought, were important, because the . value of the land in controversy is large, and because many other land grants to railroad companies presented the same difficulty. But during the pendency of this suit in the Circuit Court, and on appeal here, all these questions have, it is believed, been decided by this court, so that nothing remains but to apply the principles of these decisions to the admitted facts of this case. Cedar Rapids Co. v. Herring, 110 U. S. 27; Kansas Pacific Co. v. Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Co., 112 U. S. 414; Sioux City & St. Paul Co. v. Winona Co., 112 U. S. 720.

1. It was.claimed by the Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul Company, which, for brevity, will be called the Milwaukee Company, that, by reason of the prior location of the line of its road through the lands where the crossing finally took place, they acquired a priority for their entire claim to the exclusion of the other company within the limits of the lap. That is, that when their line was definitely located they became immediately entitled to every odd section within ten miles of the road and to the paramount right of selection of indemnity lands within twenty miles.

*408 2. The Sioux City road asserted, by virtue of the fact of the prior construction of their road through the overlapping lines of the grant, that they had secured the paramount right which the other company claimed by reason of prior location.

Both these contentions are wrong. The title acquired from the United States relates back to the date of the grant, and neither company can obtain any superiority of title by any act done by it or by any omission- to act by the other, provided there is no forfeiture of the grant. This principle is fully decided in the case of Sioux City & St. Paul Railroad Co. v. Winona & St. Peter Railroad Co., 112 U. S. 720. In such case the companies take the lands coming within the conflicting lines in equal undivided moieties.

In the opinion above referred to it was held that, while this rule applied to whát are called lands in place, that is, those odd sections found within the ten-mile limit of the road, as those ten miles conflicted .with each other, it did not apply to lieu lands or indemnity lands which were to be selected outside pf the ten-mile limit. The reason of this was said to be that, with regard to the odd sections found within the original limits of the grant undisposed of when the line of the road was definitely located, that location ascertained the sections which passed by the grant and fixed the right to such sections, whether it was the whole or the moiety of them.

But no title to indemnity lands was vested until a selection was made by which they were pointed out and ascertained, and the selection made approved by the Secretary of the Interior. In a case, therefore, where two companies had this right of selection within the same limits, priority of title might be created by priority of selection, or some other mode than location of the road or priority of construction.

The Circuit Court, in its decree, disregarded this distinction between lands found in place within ten miles of each road and those within the indemnity limits, and applied the tenancy in common principle to the lands claimed as indemnity for others not found within the ten miles, as well as to those found within those limits and not sold or disposed of.

It appears from the record in this case, that there are within *409 tlie lap of the twenty mile limits of both roads, subject to the grants to these roads, both for lands in place and for lieu or indemnity lands, 189,595-fVV acres which constituted the subject matter of this controversy.

1. Of these, 63,'T96-&V acres are within the ten mile limit of the Sioux City road, and not within the ten mile limit of the Milwaukee road,- though they are within its twenty mile limit. The result of the rule on which the Circuit Court acted was to divide these lands equally between the two companies.

But the principles Ave have stated, and which were fully considered in The St. Paul Company v. The Winona Company, exclude the Milwaukee Company in this case from invading the ten mile limit of the Sioux City road to seek indemnity for losses by reason pf lands within its own ten mile limit previously disposed of. This 63,796-&% acres being odd- sections Avithin the ten mile limit of the Sioux City road, and not within the ten mile limit of the Milwaukee road, belonged exclusively to the former, and the latter company had no interest in them. The decree is in that respect erroneous and must be reversed, and all these lands given to the Sioux City Company.

2. Of the lands in controversy there Avere 33,071x10- acres Avithin the ten mile limit of the Milwaukee road, and not

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Bluebook (online)
117 U.S. 406, 6 S. Ct. 790, 29 L. Ed. 928, 1886 U.S. LEXIS 1858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sioux-city-st-paul-railroad-v-chicago-milwaukee-st-paul-railway-co-scotus-1886.