Southern Pac. R. v. United States

69 F. 47
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 21, 1895
DocketNo. 193
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 69 F. 47 (Southern Pac. R. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Pac. R. v. United States, 69 F. 47 (9th Cir. 1895).

Opinion

BELLINGER, District Judge.

This is a suit by the United States against the Southern Pacific Railroad Company and its grantees to determine the title to about 700,000 acres of land in Los Angeles and Ventura counties, Gal. These lands are within the, limits of a grant by congress to the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad Company, of July 27, 1866, as determined by what the government contends was the line of definite location of route by the company. By the same act the Southern Pacific Railroad Company was authorized to build [49]*49a road from a point of connection with the road of the Atlantic & Pacific Company, at or near the boundary line of California, to San Francisco, and, to aid in such construction, was given a similar grant of land to that granted the Atlantic & Pacific Company. On 11 arch 3, 1871, for the purpose of connecting the Texas & Pacific Railroad with San Francisco, congress authorized the Southern Pacific Company to construct a line of road from a point at or near Telmcliapi Pass, via Los Angeles, to the Texas & Pacific Railroad, at or near the Colorado river, “with the same rights, grants, and privileges,” etc., as were granted to said Southern Pacific Company by the act of July 27, I860. On July 6, 1886, the lands granted to the Atlantic & Pacific Company in California were, by act of congress. forfeited and restored to the public domain. The lands in controversy are within the limits of both grants at the place where the line of the Southern Pacific crosses what is claimed by the government, as above stated, to be that of the Atlantic & Pacific Company; and the question to be decided is as to whether the earlier grant attached to such lands, and thus operated to exclude them from the grant to the Southern Pacific Company. This same question was considered in the supreme court of the United States in two cases by the United States against the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, heard together, and decided in 146 U. S. 570, 13 Sup. Ct. 152. It was contended in these cases that no map of definite location of line between the Colorado river and the Pacific Ocean was ever filed by the Atlantic & Pacific Company. The facts relied upon to maintain this contention were these: The Atlantic & Pacific Company had claimed the right to build its road from the Colorado river to the Pacific Ocean, and thence north to San Francisco. It tiled maps in the office of the secretary of; the in torior of this route, in four sections, at different times in 1872, as will more fully appear hereafter. Taken together, these maps formed a continuous line of route from the Colorado river to San Francisco. This line reached the Pacific Ocean at San Buenaventura, which, however, was not the terminus of any line of definite ioeaiion, whether shown by one or more of the maps, but was only an intermediate point. It was contended that this was not a valid location Í1) because the maps were of segments of route, and were filed at. different times; (2) because the maps were filed in the office of the secretary of the interior instead of the general land office; and (3) because the line thus formed extended through San Buenaventura to San Francisco. The court held the location thus made to be good as a definite location from the Colorado river to San Buenaventura.; and upon this conclusion as to definite location of line it held that the lands within the limits of the grant to the Atlantic & Pacific Company, as identified by such location, were reserved from the grant to the Southern Pacific Company. In the present case, the validity of this location of line by the Atlantic & Pacific Company is attacked upon the ground that the company, by an earlier and different location of line of route, was precluded from making the location relied upon, and upon the further ground [50]*50that the second location was not bona fide, but was a mere fraudulent device intended to impose upon the government, and having ' that effect. These new objections, and the effect of the former adjudication, are the grounds of controversy in this suit.

On October 25, 1869, the Atlantic & Pacific Company filed with the interior department its plat, purporting to designate the line of its road as located from a point selected by the company for crossing the Colorado river, by the route deemed by the company the most practicable and eligible to the Pacific Ocean. The line of road designated on this plat is from a point on the Colorado river near the thirty-fifth parallel, extending westerly over the Tehachapi Pass, and in a northwesterly direction to San Francisco. This map or plat is in evidence for the first time in this case. It was introduced by the defendants, who claim not to have known of its existence when the former case was heard. The defendants contend that this is a map of definite location of route by the Atlantic & Pacific Company, and that the action of the interior department subsequent to the filing of the maps of 1872, in approving a line of definite location by the company, did not refer to the line of these maps, but to the line designated on this map or plat of 1869. If this is so, the grant of the company is identified by this line, and the lands in dispute are not within it, and are therefore subject to the grant to the Southern Pacific Company. The commissioner of the general land office, in conformity with the decision of the secretary of the interior, to whom the matter had been referred, refused to recognize the claim of the Atlantic & Pacific Company to a reservation of lands upon the route designated on this map of 1869, upon the ground that the company could not take a grant of lands from the Colorado river to San Francisco. From the consideration given to this question subsequently by the interior department, it seems that this refusal was based upon the conclusion that, inasmuch as the act of 1866 authorized the Southern Pacific Railroad Company to build a-road from a point of connection with the Atlantic & Pacific near the state boundary line, to San Francisco, the right to build such connection was exclusive in the former company. No other map or plat of definite location was filed by the Atlantic 6 Pacific Coinpany until the 9th day of March, 1872, when it filed four maps in the office of the secretary of the interior, two of which refer to territory outside of California, and therefore cut no figure in the case. The other two purport to be maps of definite location from San Francisco to San Miguel Mission, and from a point on the west boundary of Los Angeles county to a point in township 7 N., range 7 E. of San Bernardino base and meridian. The lines thus designated do not connect with each other, nor with any other part of the located line. On the 11th of April, 1872, the acting secretary of the interior, in answer to a letter by the president of the Atlantic and Pacific Company, stated that the maps theretofore filed at different dates by the company had been approved. On August 15, 1872, two other maps, purporting to be maps of definite location, were filed by the company. These maps were approved April 16, 1874. By these maps lines are designated from San [51]*51Miguel Mission to a point of connection with the line of the second map of March 9, 1872, at the west boundary of Los Angeles county, and from the east end of the same line in township 7 N., range 7 E. of Ban Bernardino base and meridian, to the Colorado river. The four maps thus filed, taken together, make one continuous line of location from the Colorado river to San Francisco.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Southern Pac. R.
98 F. 45 (Ninth Circuit, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
69 F. 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pac-r-v-united-states-ca9-1895.