St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. Winona & St. Peter Railroad

112 U.S. 720, 5 S. Ct. 334, 28 L. Ed. 872, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1642
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 5, 1885
Docket139
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 112 U.S. 720 (St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. Winona & St. Peter Railroad) 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
St. Paul & Sioux City Railroad v. Winona & St. Peter Railroad, 112 U.S. 720, 5 S. Ct. 334, 28 L. Ed. 872, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1642 (1885).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Miller

delivered the opinion o'f the coi rt.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of Minnesota, and a motion is made to dismiss it for want of jurisdiction.

It will sufficiently appear in the opinion on the merits, that the rights asserted by both parties are founded on acts of Congress, and require the construction of those acts to determine their conflicting claims. The motion to dismiss, therefore, cannot prevail.

The source of this controversy is to be found in the act of Congress of March 3, 1857, 11 Stat. 195, making grants of land to the Territory of Minnesota and the State of Alabama to aid in the construction of railroads. The first section of this statute — the important one in the case — is as follows:

Be it enacted, by the Senate and Mouse of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled, That there be and is hereby granted to the Territory of Minnesota, fpr the purpose of aiding in the construction of railroads, from Stillwater, by way of Saint Paul and Saint Anthony, to a point between the foot of Big Stone Lake and the mouth of Sioux Wood River, with a branch via Saint Cloud and Crow Wing, to the navigable waters of the Red River of the north at such point as the Legislature of said Territory may determíne; from St. Paul and from Saint Anthony via Minneapolis to a convenient point of junction west of the Mississippi, to the southern boundary of the Territory, in the direction of the mouth of the Big Sioux River, with a branch via Paribault to the north line of. the State of Iowa, west of range sixteen; from-Winona via Saint Peter, to a point on the Big Sioux River south of the forty-fifth parallel of north latitude; also from La Crescent, via Target Lake, up the valley of Root River, to a point of junction with the last-mentioned road, east of range seventeen, every alternate section of land, designated by odd numbers, for six sections in width on each side of *722 each of said roads and branches; but in case it shall appear that the United States have, when the lines or routes of said roads and branches are definitely fixed, sold any sections, or any parts thereof, granted as aforesaid, or that the right, of preemption has attached to the same, then, it shall be lawful for any agent, or agents, to be appointed by the Governor of said Territory or future State, to select, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Interior, from the lands of the' United States nearest to the tiers of sections above specified, so much land in alternate sections, or parts of sections, as shall be equal to such lands as the United States have sold,' or otherwise appropriated, or to which the rights of pre-emption have attached as aforesaid; which lands (thus selected in lieu of those sold, ■and to which pre-emption rights have attached as aforesaid, together with the sections and parts of sections designated by odd numbers as aforesaid and appropriated as aforesaid) shall be held by the Territory or future State of Minnesota for the use and purpose aforesaid; Provided, That the land to be so located shall, in no case, be further than fifteen miles from the lines of said roads or branches, and selected for and on account of each of said roads or branches; Provided further, That the lands hereby granted for and on account of said roads and branches, severally, shall be exclusively applied in the construction of that road for and on account of which such lands are hereby granted, and shall be disposed of only as the work progresses, and the same shall be applied to no other purpose whatsoever; And provided further, That any and all lands heretofore reserved to the United States, by any act of Congress, or in any other manner by competent authority, for the purpose of aiding in any object of internal improvement, or for any other purpose Avhatsoever, be and the same are hereby reserved to the United States from, the operation of this act, except so far as it may be found necessary to locate the routes of said railroads and branches through such reserved lands, in which case the rights of way only shall be granted, subject to the approval of the President of the United States.”

The Territory of Minnesota accepted this grant and conferred the right to the lands which came to it by means of its *723 provisions on certain-railroad, corporations, which failed to perform their obligations to the State; by reason of which, and by the foreclosure of statutory mortgages, the State r3sumed control of the lands. It is unnecessary to pursue the various steps by which it was done, but it may be stated shortly that the right to build one of the roads mentioned in the act of Congress, and to receive the lands granted in aid of the enterprise, namely, from St. Paul atad St. Anthony, by way of Minneapolis, to the southern boundary of the State, in the direction of the mouth of the Big Sioux River, became vested in the St. Paul and Sioux City Railroad Company, the plaintiff in error in this case.

A similar right in regard to the road to be built from' Winona via St. Peter to a point on the Big Sioux River, south of the forty-fifth parallel of latitude, and to the lands granted by the act in aid of it,' became vested in the Winona and St. Peter Railroad Company, the defendant in error.

These companies have complied with the terms of the grant by Congress and by the Minnesota Legislature, and completed the construction of the roads which they undertook to build. They have also each of them, received large quantities of the land appropriated by'the act of March, 1857, and by subsequent acts on the same subject, and, at one point where the lines of the two roads- crossed, so that' the grant of lands to each of the roads ran into the other’s limit, the conflict has been settled by adopting the principle of an equal undivided interest in the lands so situated.

The present controversy has relation to another part of the general course of these roads, where the lines of their location, not approaching each other so close that the limits of six miles within which the alternate six sections are to be first sought for interfere with each other, but so close that the fifteen-mile limits, under the act of 1857, of selection for lands sold or pre-empted do overlap each other, a¡s do also the limits' of the extension of the grants under the acts of 1864 and 1865, to be hereafter considered.

It is in regard to the lands to be selected, under all these grants, and chiefly in regard to the claim of the St. Paul Com *724 pany, that, in search of its deficient lands in place (using that phrase for lands within six miles of its road), which had been disposed of before its location, it can, within its limit of fifteen miles under the original act, or its twenty miles under the subsequent acts, make those selections of odd-numbered sections within the six-miles limit of the Winona Company, that the present controversy arises.

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Bluebook (online)
112 U.S. 720, 5 S. Ct. 334, 28 L. Ed. 872, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-paul-sioux-city-railroad-v-winona-st-peter-railroad-scotus-1885.