Werling v. Ingersoll

181 U.S. 131, 21 S. Ct. 570, 45 L. Ed. 782, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1349
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 15, 1901
Docket168
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 181 U.S. 131 (Werling v. Ingersoll) 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
Werling v. Ingersoll, 181 U.S. 131, 21 S. Ct. 570, 45 L. Ed. 782, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1349 (1901).

Opinion

Me. JnsTios Peoeham,

after making the above statement of facts, delivered the opinion of the court..

The plaintiffs in error claim that upon the passage of the above mentioned act of Congress of 1822 the State of Illinois immediately became vested with the title to a strip of land ninety feet wide on each side of the route of the canal through the public lands of the United States from Lake Michigan to the Illinois Eiver, and that the act of Congress of March 2,1827, did not alter or in any way affect the provisions of the act of 1822 or take away the title which they claim had already vested in the State upon the passage of that act; that although the title *138 to any specific, portion of land under the act 1822 was in the nature of a float until the route of the canal was surveyed and adopted and a map thereof made and filed in the Treasury Department, yet when that was done the title to the ninety feet on each side of the canal was vested in the State as of the date of the passage of the act.

The various land grants made by Congress to railroads are cited for the purpose of showing that the act of 1822 constituted a grant of lands in prcnsenti and absolute in character, although to be thereafter identified by future action. Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44; Leavenworth, Lawrence &c. Railroad v. United States, 92 U. S. 733, 741; Railroad Company v. Baldwin, 1 03 U. S. 426; United States v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company, 146 U. S. 570; 146 U. S. 615; 168 U. S. 1.

The language of the act of 1822, it will be observed, is somewhat peculiar and differs from that generally used in the land grants to railroads, which usually contain the expression that there be and is hereby granted'?’ to the railroad companies the lands mentioned, or words of similar import. In this act it is provided that “ ninety feet of land on each side of said canal shall be forever reserved from any sale to be made by the United States except in cases hereinafter provided for, and the use thereof forever shall be and the same is hereby vested in the State for a canal, and for no other purpose whatever — on condition, ... if said ground shall ever cease to be occupied by and used for a canal suitable for navigation, the reservation and grant hereby made shall be void and of none effect. . . . ”

By this language the strict technical title is not conveyed to or vested in the State. It is simply a provision withdrawing from sale this strip of land and vesting the use of it for a canal, and for no other purpose whatever, in the State, with a condition that if not so used the reservation and grant are to be void. If proceedings had in fact been taken under this act, the route surveyed and a map thereof made and filed in the Treasury Department in compliance with the provisions of the act, then the use of the land designated on the map so filed, for the purpose mentioned in the act of 1822, would very likely have vested in the State as of the date of such act. The action of the authorities *139 on the part of tbe State, after tbe passage of tbe act of 1827 and up to tbe filing of tbe .map in 1829, shows, however, that it was the- act of 1827 and not that of 1822 which was in their contemplation when the map was filed in the Treasury Department.

During 1823 and 1824 a route was .surveyed and marked through the public lands of the United States for a canal connecting the- Illinois River “ with the southern lend of Lake Michigan,” but it does not appear that* the route was ever adopted or that a máp of such route was ever filed. The map which was filed in 1829 purported to show the route of“a canal connecting the Illinois River with Lake Michigan, omitting the expression “ with the southern bend of Lake Michigan,” which latter description, it is said, would, if closely and technically followed, have taken the canal into the State of Indiana. The route of the canal laid out on the map filed did connect the canal with the waters of Lake Michigan in the State of Illinois, but not in terms with the southern bend' of that lake. It is claimed, however, that the two descriptions, “the southern bend of Lake Michigan ” and “ the waters of Lake Michigan,” are substantially identical, and that,the route of the canal as marked on the map of 1829 is in all material matters the same as that surveyed under the act.'of 1822. However this may be, it cannot be denied that.between 1822 and the passage of the act of Congress in 1827 no route had been adopted for the canal and no work of construction had been commenced thereon, although, as already stated, a route had been - surveyed and marked, yet none had been adopted, and none was adopted until after the passage of the state act of January 22, 1829. This appears by the fifth section of that act, in which the canal commissioners were authorized to explore, examine and determine and fix upon the most proper and eligible route for a canal, and to cause maps, surveys, profiles, etc., to be made, and thereafter, when they deemed it expedient and funds could be secured, they were authorized to commence the work of constructing the canal. The sixth section of the same act had special reference to the selection of the land granted by the Congressional act of 1827.

The filing of a map with reference only to the act of 1827, *140 specifying both the sections reserved to the United States and those granted to the State under that act, would not thereby fix and identify lands which had been mentioned but not identified, in a different and prior act, and which were not referred to in any way in the map filed under the act-of 1827. No lines showing the boundary of a strip ninety feet wide on each side of the canal were ever placed on the map which' was filed in the Treasury Department in 1829, the only map which was ever filed there. That map showed the proposed route and also the sections granted to the State and those reserved to the United States, and the right of way along the route would be taken to be .for a canal of the proposed width as stated in the acts of the General Assembly, and which width •was accepted and acquiesced in by Congress and the Government.

It was not until 1848, eleven years after the work of construction was commenced and a year after the, completion of the canallas is stated by counsel for plaintiffs in error in his brief, that a survey was made of the ninety feet strip on each side of the canal from one end to the other, and the lines of that survey marked on maps under the directions of the canal commissioners, and the maps and profiles of the survey filed in the office of the state canal commissioners, but not with the Commissioner of the General Land Office or in the Treasury Department at Washington. This action of the canal commissioners was a mere ex parte

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
181 U.S. 131, 21 S. Ct. 570, 45 L. Ed. 782, 1901 U.S. LEXIS 1349, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/werling-v-ingersoll-scotus-1901.