United States v. Sweet

245 U.S. 563, 38 S. Ct. 193, 62 L. Ed. 473, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 2107
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 28, 1918
Docket99
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 245 U.S. 563 (United States v. Sweet) 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. Sweet, 245 U.S. 563, 38 S. Ct. 193, 62 L. Ed. 473, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 2107 (1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit by the United States to quiet the title to section 32 of a designated township in Carbon County, Utah, the suit being specially directed against a claim asserted by the defendant, as an assignee of the State, under 'the school land grant to the latter. Whether this tract passed to the State .under that grant or was reserved to the United States as mineral land is the matter in controversy. In the District Court the United States prevailed as to all but 40 acres, but in the Circuit Court of Appeals that decree was reversed and one for the defendant was directed. 228 Fed. Rep. 421.

The evidence shows that the entire section, excepting 40 acres, is valuable for coal and has been known to be so since before Utah became a State. Land valuable for coal is mineral land within the meaning-of the public land laws. Thus the ultimate question for decision is whether the school land grant to Utah embraces mineral land. The grant is found in § 6 of the Act of Congress of July .16, 1894, c. 138, 28 Stat. 107, and is copied in the margin 1 *567 with another closely related section of the same act. It neither expressly includes mineral lands nor expressly excludes them. If it did either, it would be conclusive of the will of Congress upon the point. But, as it makes no mention of such lands, it is permissible — indeed, is essential — to inquire whether the congressional will is otherwise made manifest, that is to say, whether the general words of the grant are to be read in the light of other statutes and a settled public policy in respect of mineral lands.

In the legislation concerning the public lands it has been the practice of Congress to make a distinction between mineral lands and other lands, to deal with them along different lines, and to withhold mineral lands, from disposal save under laws specially including them. This practice began with the ordinance of May 20, 1785, 10 Journals of Congress, Folwell’s ed., 118, and was observed *568 with such persistency in the early land laws 1 2**5as to lead this court to say in United States v. Gratiot, 14 Pet. 526, “It has been the policy of the government, at all times in disposing of the public lands, to reserve the mines for the use of the United States,” and also to hold in United States v. Gear, 3 How. 120, that an act making no mention of lead-mine lands and providing generally for the sale of “all the lands” in certain new land districts, “reserving only” designated tracts, “any law of Congress heretofore existing to the contrary notwithstanding,” could not be regarded as disclosing a purpose on the part of Congress, to depart from “the policy which had governed its legislation in respect to lead-mine lands,” and so did not embrace them. A like practice prevailed in respect of saline lands, and in Morton v. Nebraska, 21 Wall. 660, where a disposal of such lands under an act providing generally for the sale of lands in certain Territories was drawn in question, this court said that it could not be supposed “without an express declaration to that effect” that Congress intended by such an act to permit the sale of saline lands and thus to depart from “a long-established policy by which it had been governed in similar cases.”

While the early land laws occasionally and specially provided for the sale of mineral lands, they very generally evinced a purpose to reserve such lands for future disposal; and this purpose was given particular emphasis following the discovery of gold in California in 1848, as is shown in the Oregon donation act, the homestead act (which *569 adopted the mineral land reservation of the preemption act of 1841), the grant to the several States for the benefit of agricultural colleges, the railroad land grants and other land acts of that period. 1 Noticeable among those acts is one which, in dealing with grants to Nevada and surveys in that State, declared, “in all cases lands valuable for mines of gold, silver, quicksilver, or copper shall be reserved from sale,” c. 166, 14 Stat. 85, and another declaring, "no act passed at the first session of the thirty-eighth congress, granting lands to states or corporations, to aid in the construction of roads or for other purposes, or to extend the time of grants heretofore made, shall be so construed as to embrace mineral lands, which in all cases shall be, and are, reserved exclusively to the United States, unless otherwise specially provided in the act or acts making the grant.” 13 Stat. 567. Although applied in one instance to lands in Nevada and in the other to grants made at a particular session of Congress, these declarations were but expressive of the will of Congress that every grant of public lands, whether to a State or otherwise, should be taken as reserving and excluding mineral lands in the absence of an expressed purpose to include them; and upon this theory both declarations were carried into the Revised Statutes as being general and per *570 manent in their nature — the first in enlarged terms as § 2318, 1 and the other as § 2346.

By the Act of March 3, 1853, c. 145, 10 Stat. 244, Congress granted to the State of California sections 16 and 36 in each township for school purposes and large quantities of lands for other purposes. Mineral lands were neither expressly excepted from nor expressly included in the grant of the school sections, but were specially excepted from, the other grants. This difference led to a controversy over the true meaning of the school grant, the state authorities taking the view that it did, and the land officers of the United States that it did not, include mineral lands. Ultimately the controversy came before this court in Mining Co. v. Consolidated Mining Co., 102 U. S. 167, and the position taken by the land officers of the United States was sustained, the court saying, p. 174:

“Taking into consideration what is well known to have been the hesitation and difficulty in the minds of Congressmen in dealing with these mineral lands, the manner in which the question was suddenly forced upon them, the uniform reservation of them from survey, from sale, from preemption, and above all from grants, whether for railroads, public buildings, or other purposes, and looking to the fact that from all the grants made in this act they are reserved, one of which is for school purposes besides the sixteenth and thirty-sixth sections, we are forced to the conclusion that Congress did not intend to depart from its uniform policy in this, respect in the grant of those sections to the State.
“It follows from the finding of the court and the undisputed facts of the case, that the land in controversy being mineral land, and well known to be so when the surveys of it were made, did not pass to the State under the school-section grant.”

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

Related

STATE EX REL. SCHOOL & INST. TRUST LAND ADMN. v. Mathis
2009 UT 85 (Utah Supreme Court, 2009)
Pinto v. State
721 So. 2d 791 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1998)
Alaska v. United States
35 Fed. Cl. 685 (Federal Claims, 1996)
Asarco Inc. v. Kadish
490 U.S. 605 (Supreme Court, 1989)
Kadish v. Arizona State Land Department
747 P.2d 1183 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1987)
Trustees for Alaska v. State
736 P.2d 324 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1987)
Watt v. Western Nuclear, Inc.
462 U.S. 36 (Supreme Court, 1983)
Jensen v. Dinehart
645 P.2d 32 (Utah Supreme Court, 1982)
Dunavant v. United States
520 F. Supp. 39 (E.D. Arkansas, 1981)
Andrus v. Utah
446 U.S. 500 (Supreme Court, 1980)
United States v. Union Oil Company of California
549 F.2d 1271 (Ninth Circuit, 1977)
Estate of Fairbank ex rel. Fairbank v. United States
164 Ct. Cl. 1 (Court of Claims, 1964)
United States v. Schaub
163 F. Supp. 875 (D. Alaska, 1958)
United States v. Union Pacific Railroad
353 U.S. 112 (Supreme Court, 1957)
Federal Trade Commission v. Menzies
145 F. Supp. 164 (D. Maryland, 1956)
State v. Bradley Estates, Inc.
223 F.2d 129 (Tenth Circuit, 1955)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 U.S. 563, 38 S. Ct. 193, 62 L. Ed. 473, 1918 U.S. LEXIS 2107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-sweet-scotus-1918.