Williams v. Baker

84 U.S. 144, 21 L. Ed. 561, 17 Wall. 144, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1320
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 10, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 84 U.S. 144 (Williams v. Baker) 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
Williams v. Baker, 84 U.S. 144, 21 L. Ed. 561, 17 Wall. 144, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1320 (1873).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MILLER

delivered the opinion of the court.

The foundations of the title on each side of this controversy rest on acts of Congress, and the decision of the cases requires their construction. The casés ave identical, except that as the holder of each of the conflicting titles becomes *146 plaintiff in turn, he is thrown upon the strength of his own title, rather than the weakness of the opposing one.

The title of Baker has its inception in the act of August 8th, 1846, the material part of which is in these words:

“ There is hereby granted to the Territory of Iowa, for the purpose of aiding said Territory in improving the navigation of the Bes Moines River from its .mouth to the Raccoon Fork, so called,-in said Territory, one equal moiety in alternate sections of the public lands remaining unsold and not otherwise disposed of, incumbered, or appropriated, in a strip five miles in width on each side of said river, to be selected within said Territory by an agent or agents, to be appointed by the governor thereof, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the Treasury of the United States.”

It was also provided .that the lands should become the property of the State of Iowa on her admission as such into the Union, which was soon expected.

The State of1 Iowa passed laws for the work of improving ■the navigation of the river, which contemplated a series of locks and dams, and after prosecuting the work for some time under a State board of public works, made a contract with a corporation called the Des Móines Navigation and Railroad Company for the further progress of this improvement. By this contract the lands'of the Congressional grant, which constituted the 'sole fund for making the improvement, were to be conveyed by the State to the company, at fixed prices, as they' earned them in the progress of the work.

The Secretary of the Treasury, as the lands were selected by the agent of the State and the selections approved by him, certified the approved lists to the State, and this was, and always has been, considered the appropriate mode of evidencing the title of the State under the-grant. The State conveyed by patent to the navigation company the lauds so certified as the progress of the work authorized it, according to the terms of the contract. All the lands in controversy here, have been so certified to the State by the Secre *147 tary of the Treasury, or of the Interior, to' which 'department, on its organization, that' matter was transferred.

But in the progress of the woi’k, and after the lands lying between the mouth of the river and the Raccoon Fork had been nearly or entirely exhausted, a question arose in the land department whether the grant included any lands above that point. This was a very important question, for, if it did not, the whole scheme was a failure, much the larger portion of the lands below that point having been entered by individuals before the passage of the act, and the river being quite as long, or longer, above the fork, and within the State, than below.

This question was the subject of opposing decisions by at least three secretaries and as many attorñeys-generál, and occupied several years of negotiation between the State and the department. At one period of the controversy the lands were all certified to the State by the secretary, Mr. Stuart.

While this controversy was going on between the State of Iowa and the department, Congress passed the act of 1856, which will be more fully considered hereafter as the source of title of the Cedar Rapids Company, by which there was granted to the State of Iowa alternate sections of laud for building several railroads across the State east and west, which roads run through the lands we have been speaking of as in controversy under the act of 1846.

In 1857 or 1858, Mr. Litchfield, who had such title as the navigation company could give under the State of Iowa, brought a suit in the Circuit Court of the United States to recover possession of a tract of these lands, in which he was resisted by the Dubuque a.nd Pacific Railroad Company, one of the beneficiaries under the railroad grant of 1856, and that suit coming to this court, * it was here held that the original grant did not extend above the Raccoon Fork, and that the acts of the Secretary of the Interior in certifying such lands to the State of Iowa were void aud conferred no title, and that Mr.'Litchfield had none.

*148 This decision was received as a final settlement of the long-contested question of the extent of the grant. But it left the State of Iowa, which had made engagements on the faith of the lands certified to her, in an embarrassed condition, and it destroyed the title of the navigation company to lands of the value of hundreds of thousands of dollars, which it had received from the State for money, labor, and material actually expended and furnished. What was also equally to be regretted was, that many persons, purchasers for value from the State of the navigation company, found their supposed title an invalid one.

This decision was made and published in 1860, and to remedy the grave evils above mentioned, Congress, on the 2d day of March, 1861, passed a joint resolution in the following words:

“ Resolved, That all the title which the United States still retain in the tracts of land along the Des Moines River, and above the mouth of the Raccoon Fork thereof, which-have been certified to said State improperly by the Department of the Interior as part of the grant by act of Congress, approved August 8th, 1846, and which is now held by bond fide purchasers under the State of Iowa, be, and the same is hereby relinquished to the State of Iowa/'

To show still further the intention of Congress to make good to the State as far as possible all that was claimed by her,under the original grant, Congress passed an act, approved July 12th, 1862, by which the grant was in express terms extended to the northern boundary of the State, and as som°e of the lands had been sold by the United States, provision was made for the selection of an equal quantity of lands of the government in any other part of the-State,'

This legislative history of the title of the State of Iowa, and .of those to whom she had conveyed the lands certified to her by the Secretary of the Interior as part of the grant of 1846, including among her grautees the Bes Moines Navigation- and Railroad Company, needs no gloss or criticism to show that the title of the State and her grantees is per- *149 feet, unless impaired or defeated by some other and extrinsic matter which would have that effect.

Such matter is supposed to be found in the act of 1856, already referred to, granting lands to the State of Iowa to aid in building railroads. The argument is, that as by the true construction of the act of 1846 none of the lands above the Raccoon Fork were granted for the improvement of the river, the grant of 1856 covered all the lands erroneously certified to the State under the former, which came within the descriptive terms of the latter grant'.

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Bluebook (online)
84 U.S. 144, 21 L. Ed. 561, 17 Wall. 144, 1872 U.S. LEXIS 1320, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-baker-scotus-1873.