United States v. McLaughlin

30 F. 147, 12 Sawy. 179, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedDecember 13, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 F. 147 (United States v. McLaughlin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. McLaughlin, 30 F. 147, 12 Sawy. 179, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396 (circtndca 1886).

Opinion

Sawyer, J., (Sabin, J., concurring.)

This, and the six other suits, are brought by the United States against the Central Pacific Railroad Company, as patentee, and its various grantees, now holding the title, to vacate seven different patents, embracing, in the aggregate, many thousand acres of land, as having been, improperly, issued by mistake. They are the same patents sought to be vacated in U. S. v. Central Pacific R. Co., 8 Sawy. 81, 11 Fed. Rep. 449, in which the bill was dismissed, without deciding the case upon the merits, for want of indispensable parties; as no one having, at the time, any interest in the lands, was made a party to the suit. In the present case, the Central Pacific Railroad Company, not having any interest, is a mere nominal party, and the case must depend upon the rights of the other defendants, who derive title through the patentee.

The patents purport to have been issued in pursuance of the act of July 1, 1862, to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line across the continent, (12 St. 489, and amendatory acts,) under which the Central and Western Pacific roads were constructed. A portion of the lands in question, are admitted to he within the exterior boundaries of the lands claimed under the fraudulent Moquelamos grant, which was finally rejected by the supreme court of the United States, on February 13, 1865. Until the final rejection of said grant on February 13, 1865, the lands, so admitted to be within the boundaries of the alleged grant, were held by the supreme court, in Newhall v. Sanger, 92 U. S., 761, to be sub judice, and therefore not public lands, and not to be within the terms of any grant, that attached prior to the final rejection of that grant, and that decision is controlling, provided the facts are, as they were supposed to be, in that case. Newhall v. Sanger was not a suit between the parties to the railroad grant, and it was decided upon demurrer. The facts seem to have been imperfectly known to the parties, and the allegations of the bill upon which the case turned, were extremely loose. The grant is to the alternate sections on “each side of said road, not sold, reserved or otherwise disposed of by the United States, and, to which a pre-emption, or homestead claim may not have attached, at the time the line of said road is definitely fixed.” If the line of said road was “definitely fixed,” before February 13, 1865, then, unless there were other controlling equities, under.the decision in Newhall v. Sanger, the lands which were, then, sub judice within the hounds of the Moquelamos grant did not pass to the railroad company) and ought not to have been patented. But, on the contrary, if the line of said road was not “definitely fixed,” within the meaning of the act, till after February 13,1865, then, it is conceded, that they had ceased to be sub judice, and they did pass to the [149]*149railroad company, and wore properly patented. The bill alleges that the line was “definitely fixed” on December 8, 1864. The sworn answer re-sponsivo to the bill, denies this allegation, and alleges that the line was not definitely fixed till February 1, 1870, or, at least, till 1868, and the burden of showing affirmatively a definite location at an earlier date is on complainants. The complainants contend, and claim to have introduced evidence establishing this position — that the lino of the road was “'definitely fixed” on December 8, 1864 — the time alleged in the bill, by the filing of a certain map in the office of the secretary of the interior, at Washington, a copy of which is in evidence as Exhibit A. While the defendants, on the contrary, contend that this is not a map definitely fixing the line of the road, but is only the map required by section 7 of the act, to be filed in the department of the interior to “designate the general route of said road, as near as may be;” and that the lino of said road was not “definitely fixed,” till the filing of the map of the road as actually located and constructed on February 1,1870, a copy of which is in evidence as Exhibit 17; or, at least, until the road was actually located in 1868, where it is, in fact, built, both of which periods are long since the final rejection of the Moquelainos grant. And this is the only disputed issue between the parties on this branch of the case. Upon the determination of this issue, therefore, depends the decision of this case, unless there are other equities disclosed, upon which defendants can rest, as to all, or some of the lands.

The letter of Leland Stanford, president of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, to the secretary of the interior, dated February 20,1864, referring to a prior “general map,” filed on June 1, 1868, and saying that since that time the first fifty miles of the road had been finally located, of which location he sends a map, showing the definite location, manifestly relates to the Central Pacific Railroad proper, extending east from Sacramento over the mountains. At that time the company had been vigorously at work on that lino, but had done nothing on the Western division. This relation to that part of the road appears in the letter itself, from the subsequent passage asking surveys to bo made, and saying: “The company will have thirty-one miles of their road, jfrom Sacramento to Newcastle Gap, completed and running about the first of April next.” Resides, no map of the kind is put in evidence. This letter, evidently, has no bearing on the question at issue.

The first evidence relating to a location of the Western division is a map put in evidence by complainants, and upon which they rely, as showing the time when the line of the road became “definitely fixed.” It is attested October 5, 1865, by the president, secretary and acting chief engineer of the company, and was filed in the general land-office at Washington, having been deposited with the secretary of the interior, and transmitted to the commissioner of the land-office by the secretary, December 8, 1864. It has on its face the following: “Map of the Line of the Western Division of the Central Pacific Railroad Company of California, from Sacramento to San Francisco.” It has also upon it the following:

[150]*150 “United States of America, State of California.
“Office of the Central Pacific Railroad Company of California.
“We, the undersigned, the president, secretary, and acting chiel engineer of'said company, do hereby certify that this is a true and complete map of the iine of said company’s road and telegraph line, from the city of Sacramento to the city of said San Francisco, and the western terminus thereof, as adopted, located, designated, and fixed by the hoard of directors of said company, a copy of which is on file in the office of said company in the city of Sacramento.
“Witness our hands, and the corporate seal of said company hereto affixed • by order of said board of directors, this fifth (5tb) day of October, A. D. 1867.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Michigan v. Jackson, L. & S. R.
69 F. 116 (Sixth Circuit, 1895)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 F. 147, 12 Sawy. 179, 1886 U.S. App. LEXIS 2396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mclaughlin-circtndca-1886.