United States v. Ingram

172 U.S. 327, 19 S. Ct. 177, 43 L. Ed. 465, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 34 Ct. Cl. 537
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 3, 1899
Docket82
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 172 U.S. 327 (United States v. Ingram) 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. Ingram, 172 U.S. 327, 19 S. Ct. 177, 43 L. Ed. 465, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 34 Ct. Cl. 537 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brewer,

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

The contention of the appellee is that no valid entry can be made under the Desert Land act of land within the place limits of a land grant to railroad corporations; that therefore the attempted entry was absolutely void, and that if he had fully complied with the provisions of that act he could not have acquired a good title to the lands entered; that he was therefore justified in abandoning the entry which he had attempted to make; that the Government had received money which it had no right to receive, and was under an implied obligation to return it — an obligation which could be enforced by an action in the Court of Claims. His main reliance is on United States v. Healey, 160 U. S. 136 ; but the singular fact is that in that case a title by patent to an even-numbered section within the limits of a railroad land grant acquired under the Desert Land act was not questioned, and a claim of the patentee to recover the difference between $2.50 per acre, which he had paid in accordance with the statute in respect to railroad land grants, and $1.25 which he insisted was all he was required to pay under the Desert Land act, was rejected. Counsel for appellee pick out a sentence or two' in the opinion in that case, and, severing them from the balance, insist that this' court decided that land within the place limits of a railroad land grant is wholly removed from the operation of the Desert Land law, as much so as if it had already been conveyed to a private owner, and conclude that, being so wholly separated from the reach of that law, an attempted entry thereunder is absolutely void, and may be abandoned by the' entryman at any time. It seems a little strange to have this contention pressed upon us in view of the fact that a patent for lands within a railroad land grant was not disturbed by that decision, and a claim to recover an excess payment was repudiated. Nowhere in the *329 opinion is there an intimation that the patentee did not acquire a perfect title, no suggestion that the whole proceeding was void and the land patented still the property of the Government, or even that it had the right to maintain a suit to set aside the patent as a cloud upon its title. And certainly if the title conveyed by the patent was absolutely void, then the patentee had paid not only the half which he sought to recover but the entire purchase money for nothing, and should at least have been allowed to recover the half which he sued for.

It may be well to refer to the several statutes of Congress. The general policy in respect to railroad grants, expressed in the many statutes making such grants, and finally carried into the Bevised Statutes in section 2357, is that while the ordinary price of public lands is $1.25 an acre, “ the price to be paid for alternate reserved lands, along the line of railroads within the limits granted by any act of Congress, shall be $2.50 per acre.” One hundred and sixty acres might be preempted at that price, or eighty acres homesteaded. (Bev. Stat. see. 2289.) In other words, Congress, in no manner limiting either the right of preemption or homestead, simply declared that these alternate reserved lands should be considered as worth $2.50 instead of $1.25, the ordinary price of public lands. All appropriations by individuals were based upon that valuation, but the right to appropriate was in no manner changed. The reason for this addition to the price of alternate reserved sections within a railroad grant has been often stated by this court, and is referred to in the opinion in United States v. Healey, supra. It is that a railroad ordinarily enhances the value of contiguous lands, and when Congress granted only the odd sections to aid in the construction of one it believed that such construction would make the even and reserved sections of at least double value.

This difference in price was based, as will be perceived, solely on the matter of location, and not at all upon any distinction in the character or quality of the land, and the difference in price was the only matter that distinguished between an entry of lands within and those without the place *330 limits of a railroad. Such being the general policy of the Government in respect to public lands, Congress in 1877 passed the Desert Land act. This act, while limited in its operation to certain States and Territories, in terms applied to “any desert land” within them. It provided for reclamation by irrigation, gave three years in which to accomplish such reclamation, and permitted the entry of not exceeding 610' acres. The only substantial advantages of an entry under the Desert Land act over an ordinary preemption were in the amount of land and the time of payment. Six hundred and forty acres could be taken under the one, and only one hundred and sixty under the other. The price was the same, but under the one only twenty-five cents per acre was payable at the time of the entry, and the balance was not required until, at the end of three years, the reclamation was complete; while under the other the entire $1.25 was payable at the time of the entry. These advantages were offered to induce reclamation of desert and arid lands.

Now, it is a well-known fact that along the lines of many land grant railroads are large tracts of arid lands — desert lands within the very terms of the statute. Indeed, nearly every transcontinental line runs for long distances through these desert lands. Did Congress act on the supposition that no inducement was necessary to secure the reclamation of the arid public lands within the place limits of those grants ? Do not the reasons for legislation in respect to lands remote from railroads have the same potency in respect to lands contiguous thereto ? If Congress had intended to exclude lands within the place limits of railroads from the scope of this act would it have said “ any desert land,” or defined “ desert lands ” as broadly as it did by section 2, which reads :

“ Sec. 2. That all lands, exclusive of timber lands and mineral lands, which will not, without irrigation, produce some agricultural crop, shall be deemed desert lands within the meaning of this act, which facts shall be ascertained by proof of two or more credible witnesses under oath, whose affidavits shall be filed in the land office in which said tract of land may be situated.”

*331 The reasons which established and justified the policy of double price for the former apply as fully to lands which had to be reclaimed before they could be cultivated as to lands which needed no reclamation. Contiguity to the railroad is the same fact in each. The significance of this was recognized in the Healey ease. Indeed, the whole controversy in that case was as to the matter of price, and grew out of the fact that after the passage of the Desert Land act the Interior Department at first ruled that its effect ivas to reduce the price of even sections within railroad place limits, entered under it, from $2.50 to $1.25 an acre, while in 1889 a change was made in its rulings, and it was thereafter held that the act worked no such reduction. Secretary Noble, in Tilton’s case, decided March 25, 1889, 8 Land Dec. 368, 369, said, and his language was quoted in our opinion:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
172 U.S. 327, 19 S. Ct. 177, 43 L. Ed. 465, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1376, 34 Ct. Cl. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ingram-scotus-1899.