United States v. Southern Pacific Railroad
This text of 223 U.S. 565 (United States v. Southern Pacific 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.
Opinion
delivered' the opinion of the court.
This is a bill brought by the United States to quiet title and cancel patents, and for an .accounting, as to lands lying within the indemnity limits of the grant made to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company by the act of July 27, 1866, c. 278, § 18, 14 Stat. 292, known as the Main Line Grant, and within the primary limits of the grant made to the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad Company by § 3 of the same act. The Atlantic and Pacific road forfeited its grant, (act of July 6, 1886, c. 637, 24 Stat. 123), and thereafter the Southern Pacific' selected the parcels in question as indemnity under its Main Line Gfant. The rights of the Southern Pacific under this grant were not subordinated to those of the Atlantic and Pacific under the same statute, as they were by its branch line grant of 1871, considered in our last decision, but in case of conflict each road took half within the conflicting place limits. Southern Pacific Railroad Co. v. United States, 183 U. S. 519. The special grounds for the decision between the same parties in 168 U. S. 1, followed in the case preceding this, do not exist here. Therefore the Circuit Court and the Circuit Court of Appeals held that the state of the lands at the time of .selection determined the right, with an accidental exception that we shall explain. 152 Fed. Rep. 303. 167 Fed. Rep. 510. 93 C. C. A. 146. Both parties appeal; the United States from the *570 decision on the main point, the Southern Pacific, from what concerns the excepted lands.
The Government argues that as the lands selected lay within the primary limits of the Atlantic and Pacific they cannot have been contemplated as possibly falling into the indemnity lands of the other road. It refers to an intimation in Southern Pacific Railroad Company v. United States, 189 U. S. 447, 452, made with regard to the branch line grant and to lands within the place limits of the Southern Pacific but for the paramount right of the Texas Pacific, that as the indemnity grant was ‘not including the reserved numbers’ ‘it might be argued’ that those words excluded the secondary claim to the same lands by way of indemnity after a forfeiture of. the Texas Pacific grant. It suggests that Ryan v. Railroad Company, 99 U. S. 382, relied on for the ground of decision below, concerned land which the United States was claiming at the time of the indemnity grant and which it. ultimately acquired, and that its áuthority should be limited, to such a case. But we are of opinion that these arguments ought not to prevail.
An indemnity grant, like the residuary clause in a will, contemplates the uncertain and looks to the future. What á railroad is to be indemnified for may be fixed as of the moment of the grant, but what it. may elect when its right to indemnity is. determined depends on the state of the lands selected at the moment of choice. Of course the railroad is limited in choosing by the terms of the indemnity grant, but the so-called grant is rather to be described as a power. Ordinarily no color of title is gained until the power is exercised. When it is exercised in satisfaction of a meritorious claim which the Government created upon, valuable consideration and which it must be taken to have intended to satisfy (so far as it may be satisfied within the territorial limits laid down), it seems to us that lands within those limits should not be excluded simply *571 because in a different event they would have been subject to a paramount claim. It seems to us, in short, that Ryan v. Railroad Company, supra, should be taken to establish a general principle and should not be limited to its special facts. As to the suggestion in 189 U. S. 447, 452, the words ‘not inehiding the reserved numbers’ refer primarily at least to the numbers reserved from any part of the grant by the terms of the act, and the suggestion was made only as to a claim of indemnity from lands in and adjoining a strip to which the title under the primary grant failed. Whether there was anything in it in any aspect we need not consider now. It certainly cannot affect this case.
A more delicate question is presented by the appeal of the Southern Pacific. It is this: A part of the lands in controversy were not only within the main line indemnity limits of the Southern Pacific and the primary limits of the Atlantic and Pacific, but also within the indemnity limits of the Southern Pacific branch line grant. It is agreed that they were embraced in the decree against the right of the Southern Pacific under its branch line grant ■in 168 U. S. 1, and the argument is that the matter is res judicata, on the ground that á decree, or judgment is binding as to all media concludendi, and that the former decree established the right of the United States to this land. Dowell v. Applegate, 152 U. S. 327; United States v. California and Oregon Land Co., 192 U. S. 355, 358. But the selections in this case were made after the decree in 168 U. S. 1, and if the matter were at large it would seem a strong thing to hold an adjudication conclusive not only as to existing titles, under the grant in controversy, but as to merely possible sources of title in the future under a different and distirict grant. We shall not discuss that question, however, or consider just how far the decisions have gone.. The Solicitor General candidly agreed that the Government should not and would not rely upon this *572 ground, if it had taken a position inconsistent with it in the earlier ..case, and it seems to us plain that it did so and expressly deprecated any reference in that case to the rights under the Main Line Grant.
It appears that the bill in 168 U. S. 1, was brought or at least tried as a bill to quiet title against claims of the Southern Pacific under the branch line grant, and that during the litigation on that question there was pending another bill to quiet title under the Main Line Grant, being the one before this court in 183 U. S. 519.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
223 U.S. 565, 32 S. Ct. 326, 56 L. Ed. 553, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-southern-pacific-railroad-scotus-1912.