United States v. City of Chicago

48 U.S. 185, 12 L. Ed. 660, 7 How. 185, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 342
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 18, 1849
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 48 U.S. 185 (United States v. City of Chicago) 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
United States v. City of Chicago, 48 U.S. 185, 12 L. Ed. 660, 7 How. 185, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 342 (1849).

Opinion

Mr. Justice WOODBURY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case comes before us on a certificate of a division of opinion between the judges of the.Circuit Court in the-District of Illinois.

A preliminary question has. arisen as to our jurisdiction, which first deserves attention.

The proceedings in the court below were a bill, filed on the 19th of April, 1845, by the United States against the city of Chicago, to obtain an injunction not to lay out. certain streets through land belonging to the United States, which the city was preparing to open.

*191 Before the return day a temporary injunction was issued, and when the term arrived, a motion was made to continue that injunction till the merits of the bill were decided. No answer had been put in to the merits, but a hearing was had on affidavits as to the motion, and in that hearing the division of opinion occurred which is now before us.

Two leading objections have been suggested to our jurisdiction over the matter. • One is, that the division arose, not. in a hearing of the merits, but of a preliminary motion, resting in the discretion of the court; and the other is, that several questions are certified, covering the whole case rather than a single point.

. . In respect to the first objection, we do not propose to decide whether the grant of a preliminary and temporary injunction is a matter of discretion merely, rather than of right. Because, whichever it may be, the questions of division presented here are not those on matters of mere discretion in the court below, but involve the right of the United States in the land proposed to be laid out' as a street by the city. The adjudged cases, where a certificate has not been sustained on account of some discretion connected with the subject, are chiefly those where the question presented involved merely a matter of discretion, rather than arising in the consideration of a motion or point, which was one of discretion. (Smith v. Vaughan, 10 Peters, 366; Packer v. Nixon, 10 Peters, 411.) It must be obvious, that, in deciding a matter of discretion, a point may arise which is one of right and very materia). Other cases not sustained were decided on the ground that they occurred after the merits of the cause were decided, and in proceedings subsequent thereto, whether discretionary cr not. (Bank of United States v. Green, 6 Peters, 28; United States v. Daniel, 6 Wheat. 548 Devereaux v. Marr, 12 Wheat. 212; 5 Cranch, 11, 187; 4 Wash. C C. 333.) The act of Congress seems to roach only matter arising in the progress of the cause, and not afterwards, because the proviso is, “that nothing herein contained shall prevent the cause from proceeding,” &c., and hence implies it must be in the progress of the cause. See Act of Congress, April 29th, 1802, 2 Stat. at Large, 159, 160; 6 Wheat. 548. But the present question, occuning before "a final decision, comes expressly within the words of the law, — “that whenever any question shall occur before a Cireuit Court, upon which the opinions of the judges shall be opposed, the point ” of disagreement shall be certified, Ac. (2 Stat. at Large, 159.) And this provision, manifestly, is broad enough to cover any material question of right thus arising, whether the subject on hearing was one of discretion or of right.

*192 Tire sécond ground of objection, that these questions are several in number, and so material as to decide the whole cause, might prevail, if they had not arisen at one time, at one stage in the cause, and involved little beyond one point. Because, if they are several in number and apply to different stages of the trial, and relate to independent points, they are generally •not proper. United States v. Baily, 9 Peters, 267; Nesmith v. Sheldon, 6 How. 43; White v. Turk, 12 Peters, 238; United States v. Stone, 14 Peters, 524; Saunders v. Gould, 4 Peters, 392; Grant v. Raymond, 6 Peters, 218.

■ That these three questions require an opinion virtually on .only one point, namely, the right of the United States to the place proposed to be opened as a street, is manifest, when we see that the decision of this one way disposes, of them all, and of the whole case. And the principle embracetPin-. the other branch of this objection, to acting on several points which dispose of the whole case, is, not that the whole case may not properly be disposed of by-our decision on what is certified, but that the decision must in substance be, not on several questions arising in various stages of th„ cause, and some of them anticipated and presented, so as to cover the whole case. Leland v. Wilkinson, 10 Peters, 294.

There has justly been a leaning in this court to decline jurisdiction in cases of decisions below where it is doubtful ; because the power vested hére in such cases, "it is believed, was meant to be muchi more restricted than is often practised, and is in the most favorable view rather an anomaly. But by considering questions, if certified here, only when real divisions of opinion occur on them, and at one and the same time, no danger exists of extending this branch of our jurisdiction beyond what Congress intended. On. the contrary, it is divisions of opinion pro forma, and from courtesy to counsel,.and on a variety of points, and at times, some not then having actually arisen, but being anticipated, which appear-to transcend the original design of vesting such a power here.

We have, therefore, for several years, declined to consider a certificate of such a variety of points so arising. (See cases before cited.-) Arid although an indulgence has sometimes been given to certificates, where, in important cases, a division was certified pro forma (Jones v. Van Zandt, 5 How. 224), yet we do not feel justified in repeating it.

To proceed to a consideration of the principal matter involved in these questions, it will be necessary first to advert briefly to some of the admitted facts in the case.

The United States became the owners of ,the land occupied, by Fort Dearborn, near Chicago, in the State of Illinois, under *193 the original cession of the Northwest Territory. It was occasionally a station for troops from 1804 to 1824, when, the whole fractional quarter-section on which the fort stood was reserved by the General Land Office for military purposes, on the application of the Secretary of War. See . Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Peters, 502. In that case, which is better known as the Be’aubean- claim, this court decided that this was a legal appropriation of that quarter-section of land to a public purpose, and exempted it from the rules as to the mass of public lands and their usual liabilities.,

Prom that time till A. D. 1839 it was occasionally occupied as a fort by the. United States, and a light-house was erected on it under the authority of Congress, when the Secretary of War, thinking that a portion of the same might' be sold without injury to the public interests, proceeded, with the approbation of the President, to make such a sale, under the act of Congress of March 3d, 1819. (3 Stat. at Large, 520.)

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Bluebook (online)
48 U.S. 185, 12 L. Ed. 660, 7 How. 185, 1849 U.S. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-city-of-chicago-scotus-1849.