Southern Pacific Railroad v. Fall

257 U.S. 460, 42 S. Ct. 147, 66 L. Ed. 316, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2424
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1922
Docket60
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 257 U.S. 460 (Southern Pacific Railroad v. Fall) 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
Southern Pacific Railroad v. Fall, 257 U.S. 460, 42 S. Ct. 147, 66 L. Ed. 316, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2424 (1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit to enjoin the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of the General Land Office from going beyond what the plaintiff insists is the'limit of their power and duty, in dealing with a selection of indemnity land under the Act of July 27, 1866, c. 278, 14 Stat. 292, which made a land grant in aid of the construction of a railroad in California,

The grantee constructed and put in operation the greater part of the road — 495.52 miles — and thereby earned the right to have the grant fulfilled as to-that part., *461 As to the part not constructed — 84 miles — the grant was forfeited. Act September 29, 1890, c. 1040, 26 Stat. 496. The plaintiff long since succeeded to the rights of the grantee, and so much of the grant as was not forfeited is still in process of administration.

The grant, §§ 3 and 18, included all the odd-numbered sections within prescribed place limits on either side of the road, save as some of the sections or'parts of sections fell within excepting clauses in the grant; and in lieu of, the lands excepted others were to be. selected by the grantee, or its successor, “ under the direction of the Secretary of the Interior,” in. odd-numbered sections within prescribed indemnity limits.

Among the excepted lands, usually called “ losses ” or “bases for indemnity,” was section 15 in a particular township. That section contained 640 acres and each quarter quarter therein contained 40 acres. In presenting an extended list of indemnity selections the plaintiff sought to •use 15 acres of one of these quarter quarters .as the base for a particular selection without then using the remaining 25i acres; and that selection was rejected on the ground that under an existing regulation prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior it was not admissible to use a part of a minor legal subdivision as the base for a selection unless the remaining part was similarly used in the same list. Another basé.had been specified in the beginning, but on examination in the land office it was found, to be a tract outside the place limits and the plaintiff then sought to use the present base in its stead.

In the courts below the plaintiff took the position that' the regulation operated as an arbitrary curtailment of its right of selection and was not within the scope of the power and duty of the Secretary, or of the Commissioner, in administering tbe indemnity provisions of the grant; and on that ground the plaintiff sought a mandatory injunction requiring those officers to deal with the selection *462 regardless of the regulation. Both courts held the plaintiff's. position untenable and refused the injunction. 49 App. D. C. 241; 263 Fed. 637.

To determine the question- presented it is necessary to have in mind the situation which prompted the adoption of the regulation and also to understand how it is applied in actual practice.

The public lands are surveyed and platted, as nearly as may be, into rectangular tracts known as sections, half sections, quarter sections, half-quarter sections, and quarter-quarter sections; and, where the lines of the survey are interrupted by lakes, public reservations, Spanish or Mexican grants, state or territorial lines, etc., the irregular tracts at the point of interruption are platted and known as fractional sections, etc., or as lots having particular numbers. After the survey the land officers dispose of the lands only according to these legal subdisions — that is, as sections, half sections, etc. — and regard the minor subdivisions — quarter-quarter sections and lots — as not subject to further division, save in exceptional instances where Congress has specially provided otherwise. Under this practice a right to purchase or enter 40 acres may be exercised by taking a full quarter-quarter section, but not by taking a part only of each of two or more minor subdivisions. And the same rule is applied to relinquishments and lieu selections ;■ that is to say, a right to relinquish land tcnvhich title has been acquired and to take other land in its stead may not be exercised by exchanging less than a legal subdivision at a time. In short, where Congress has not specially provided otherwise, the practice has been, and is, to conform all sales, entries and other transactions to the subdivisions established by the survey and to treat the minor subdivisions as indivisible for all administrative purposes.

While the existence and scope of this practice are shown in many decisions of the Secretary of the Interior, it suf *463 fices here to refer to two. In one it is said to be well settled in the land department “ that, in the absence of a statute making special provision to the contrary, public lands can be disposed of only according to the legal subdivisions of the public survey,” Melder v. White, 28 L. D. 412, 420; and in the other it is said to be “ an established rule ” of that department “ that parts of minor legal subdivisions of surveyed public lands can not be entered, selected, relinquished, or surrendered, under the public land laws, except in entries of particular kinds.” Southern Pacific Ry. Co., 46 L. D. 279, 281.

In the exceptional instances in which Congress has directed otherwise the principle of the practice was not disturbed. Ail that was done was to provide a special mode of segregating and identifying particular lands which were being subjected to special forms of disposal which could not well be adjusted to the lines of the usual survey. The most conspicuous example of this is found in the laws regulating the disposal of mineral lands.

The manner of keeping the land office records — which is according to a system of “ tract books,” — and the mode of checking up and tracing the various land transáctions, have long been adjusted to this practice; and in the judgment of the land officers adherence to it is of much importance.

The regulation in question adapts and applies this general practice to the selection of indemnity lands under railroad land grants by requiring (a) that the selections be accompanied by a specification, tract for tract, of the losses on which they are based, (b) that the selections be made by legal subdivisions, and (c) that in specifying the losses minor legal subdivisions be used in entireties and not in fragments..

The last part of the regulation is what is challenged here. As applied and enforced by the land officers it is not directed against using parts of a minor subdivision as *464 bases for two or more selections where the entire subdivision is used in the same selection list, but only against using it in fragments to sustain distinct selections in different lists. To illustrate: Parts of a lost quarter quarter containing 40 acres may be specified as the bases for selecting two or more fractional subdivisions aggregating 40 acres where the selections are all included in a single list, but not otherwise. Arid’ conversely,, the loss of two or more fractional subdivisions aggregating 40 acres may be made the base for selecting a quarter quarter of 40 acres where the selection is not made piecemeal in different lists. Southern Pacific Ry. Co., supra.

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Related

Work v. Central Pac. Ry. Co.
12 F.2d 834 (D.C. Circuit, 1926)

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Bluebook (online)
257 U.S. 460, 42 S. Ct. 147, 66 L. Ed. 316, 1922 U.S. LEXIS 2424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-pacific-railroad-v-fall-scotus-1922.