United States v. Des Moines Navigation & Railway Co.

142 U.S. 510, 12 S. Ct. 308, 35 L. Ed. 1099, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1989
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 11, 1892
Docket987
StatusPublished
Cited by94 cases

This text of 142 U.S. 510 (United States v. Des Moines Navigation & 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
United States v. Des Moines Navigation & Railway Co., 142 U.S. 510, 12 S. Ct. 308, 35 L. Ed. 1099, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1989 (1892).

Opinion

Me. Justice Brewer,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

Prior to the decision, of this court in Dubuque &c. Railroad Co. v. Litchfield 23 How. 66, which decision was announced in 1860, it was a disputed question whether the grant extended above the Raccoon Fork. The opinions and rulings of the executive officers of the government were conflicting; and it is not strange that many settled upon these lands in the belief that they were public lands of the United States, and open to settlement. But if they were not in fact open to settlement — if the title legally and fairly passed to the navigation company— no relief from the hardships occasioned by their mistake can be furnished by the courts, whose functions are limited to declaring where, in the face of conflicting claims, the title really rests. We pass, therefore, to the consideration of the matter of title.

It will be observed, in the first place, that there is in this case no question as to the priority of claim. The single question is whether, the defendant’s title is good as against the *528 government. If so, it is unquestionably prior to all claims of the settlers, for, as appears, as early as June, 1849, the lands to the northern-limits of the State were reserved-from settlement and sale by direction of the Land Department; and this reservation was continued in force notwithstanding the subsequent conflicting rulings as to the extent of the grant and the adjudication of this court as to the extent of its. limits. The validity of this reservation was sustained in the case of Wolcott v. Des Moines Company, 5 Wall. 681, decided at December term, 1866. In that case it was held that, even in the absence of a command to that effect in the statute, it was the duty of the officers of the Land Department, immediately upon a grant being made by Congress, to reserve from settlement and sale the lands within the grant; and that, if there was a dispute as to its extent, it was the duty to reserve all lands which, upon eithér construction, might become necessary to make good the purposes of the grant. This ruling as to, the power and duty of the officers of the Land Department has since been followed in many cases. Bullard v. Des Moines & Fort Dodge Railroad, 122 U. S. 167, and cases cited in the opinion.

As lands properly reserved are not open to settlement or sale, it follows that the lands above Raccoon Fork were at the time of the passage of the resolution of 1861 wholly within the disposing, -power of Congress; and no rights could have attached, by occupancy or otherwise, which would burden the title, or either legally or equitably affect any grant or disposition which Congress might then see fit to make. By that .resolution Congress relinquished to the State all the title of the United States, (and that was a full and absolute title,) to such tracts of -land as were then held by bona fide purchasers under the state law; and by the act of the succeeding year, the grant was in terms extended to the northern limits of the State, so that all alternate sections above the Raccoon -Fork, ndt theretofore, disposed of by the State to bona fide purchasers, thereby passed to the State. As the original grant in 1846 was within settled rules of construction a grant m prcesenti, (Deseret Salt Company v. Tarpey, ante 241, and cases cited in the opinion;) the act of 1862, which was a mere extension of *529 the grant, took effect and passed title at once to the State; and the resolution of 1861, which was in terms a relinquishment, also operated as an immediate transfer of title. By the reservation, therefore, full title was retained in the United States; and by the resolution-of 1861, and the act of 1862, the same full title passed eo instanti to the State.

But if by the resolution title passed to the State, it also at the same time passed through the State to the real beneficiaries of this resolution, to wit, bona fide purchasers under the State of Iowa. Section 1202 of the, Code of Iowa, of 1851, reads as follows: “ Where a deed purports to convey a greater interest than the grantor was at the time possessed of, any after-acquired interest of such grantor to the extent of that which the deed purports to convey enures to the benefit of the grantee.” The deeds macfe by the State to the navigation company recite that, “the State of Iowa does hereby sell, grant, bargain and convey to the said Des Moines Navigation and Kailroad Company the following referred to and described lands, to wit,” (describing them,) “ to have and hold the above-described lands and each and every parcel thereof, with all the rights, privileges, immunities and appurtenances of whatever nature thereunto belonging.” These were deeds purporting to convey a full title. That is the general rule, and such is the import of section 1232, Code of Iowa, 1851, prescribing forms for deeds.

Even if there were no such statute with respect to after-acquired titles, the manifest intent of Congress in the resolution was, not to transfer the title to the State to be by it disposed of as it saw fit, but to the State solely for' the benefit of bona fide purchasers. The inference from the language, standing by itself,, is made certain by the act of 1862, where it refers to the lands covered by this resolution as lands “ released by the United States to the grantees of the State of Iowa, under the joint resolution of March 2, 1862.” This is an interpreta-' tion by Congress of the scope of that resolution, and shows to whom Congress intended that the lands should pass.

Was the navigation company a bona fide purchaser under' the State? Of course if it was, the other defendants who *530 hold under it also -were. It is claimed by the appellant that the bona fide purchasers referred, to were certain parties who had bought portions of these lands from the State of Iowa, paying cash therefor, for the purpose of making homes, ahd who had taken possession thereof and were then occupying the same. But the term “ bona fide purchaser ” has a well-settled meaning in the law. It does not require settlement or occupancy. Any one is a bona fide purchaser who buys in good faith and pays value. To limit the term as here used to settlers is to interpolate into the statute a restriction which neither the language nor the surrounding circumstances justify. The term itself, as stated, has no such restricted meaning; and while it may be that there were individuals holding tracts which they had separately settlecljon and paid for, yet it was also true that the great body of the lands had been conveyed to the navigation company in payment for work done on the Des Moines improvement. This was a well-known fact; and if Congress had intended to distinguish between settlers and other purchasers, it would not have used language whose well-understood meaning included both. If anything can be drawn from the debates in Congress at the time of the passage of this resolution, it sustains this construction.

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Bluebook (online)
142 U.S. 510, 12 S. Ct. 308, 35 L. Ed. 1099, 1892 U.S. LEXIS 1989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-des-moines-navigation-railway-co-scotus-1892.