Wolcott v. Des Moines Co.

5 U.S. 681
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 5 U.S. 681 (Wolcott v. Des Moines Co.) 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
Wolcott v. Des Moines Co., 5 U.S. 681 (1866).

Opinion

Mr. Justice NELSON

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendants conveyed by-deed-poll to the plaintiff, on the 1st August, 1859, the east half of section 17, township 88, range 27, situate in Webster County, State of Iowa, containing three hundred'-and twenty acres, for the consideration of $3040,'and warranted the title. It is charged in the declaration that the title has failed, which is denied on the part of the defendants. This presents the -main issue in the case, .

On the 8th August, 1846, Congress passed an act by which they granted to the Territory of Iowa, for the purpose of aid in the improvement of the. navigation of the Des Moines River, from its mouth to the Raccoon Fork, in said Territory, an equal moiety, in • alternate sections,- of the public lands in a strip of five miles in width on each side of said •river, to be selected within said Territory by an -agent of the goverWr, subject to the approval of the Secretary of the T easury of the United States.

[684]*684The second section provided that the lands so granted should not be sold or conveyed by the Territory, nor by any State to be formed out of it, except as the improvements progressed; that is, sales might be made so as to produce the sum of thirty thousand dollars, and then cease, until the governor or State, as the case might be, should certify the fact to the President of the United States that one half of this sum had been expended on said improvements, when sales again might be made of the remaining lands sufficient to replace this amount; and the sales were thus to progress as the proceeds were expended, and the expenditure so certified to the President. Agents were appointed by the governor, who selected the sections designated by odd numbers, throughout the whole extent of the grant, which, as claimed, extended from the mouth of the river to the northern boundary of the State.

The lot in question is one of the sections thus selected and approved by the Secretary of the Treasury, and duly certified by the governor of the State to the President, according to the second section of the act, and was sold and conveyed, among other parcels of land, by the State to the defendants. The section of land of which the lot in question is a part was situated above the Raccoon Pork.

Some year and a half after the passage of this act a question arose before the commissioner of the land office whether the grant of the odd sections within the five miles extended above this Pork. He determined that it did, and that it extended throughout the whole line of the river within the limits of Iowa. It appears, however, that he afterwards changed his opinion, and on the 19th June, 1848, a proclamation was issued by the President, countersigned by him, ordering a sale of some of these odd sections, among other lands lying above the Pork, and which was to take place in the following October. On the attention of the Secretary of the Treasury being called to the subject, he, after an examination of the act, determined that, upon a true construction of it, the grant extended above ¿¡ae Raccoon Perk, and directed that the odd section should be re[685]*685served from the sale, which was done accordingly, and the State of Iowa duly notified. . Tins was on the 16th June, 1819. On the 6th April, 1850, the Secretary of the Interior, whose department had in the meantime been established, and to which the .-supervision and control of the General Land Office had been assigned, reversed the previous decision of the Secretary of the Treasury, and determined that the grant did not extend beyond the Raccoon Fork. But he directed that the lands should be reserved from sale which were embraced within the State’s selections. The question was then brought before the President, and was referred by him to the Attorney-General, who differed with the Secretary of the Interior, and concurred with the Secretary of the Treasury. But before the promulgation of this decision the President (Taylor) died, and a new cabinet coming in — and among others, a new Attorney-General — he overruled the decision of bis predecessor, and affirmed that of the Secretary of the.Interior. The case was then brought before the new President and cabinet, and the result is stated by the then Secretary of the Interior, uuder date of October 29th, 1851, which was “ that in view1 of the great conflict of opinion among the executive officers of the government, and also in' view of the opinions of several eminent jurists which have been presented to me in favor of the construction contended for by the State, I am willing to recognize the claim of the State, and to approve of the selections, without prejudice to the rights, if any there be, of other parties.” Under this arrangement, the Secretary of the Interior approved of the odd sections above the Fork as certified, according to the act of Congress, till, in December,-1853, the number of acres amounted to over 271,572. On the 21st March, 1856, the commissioner of the land office again decided that the grant was limited to the Raccoon Fork, and the question was again referred to the Attorne37-General, who advised the Secretary of the Interior to acquiesce in the views of his predecessor (a change having taken place as to the incumbent), and to continue the approval of the lands as certified to him under the law which was done accordingly. In the meantime, the [686]*686improvement of the Des Moines Rjver had been carried on by the State, and by the Des Moines Navigation and Railroad Company, who, on the 9th June, 1854, had entered into an engagement with the State to' finish the improvements, as contemplated by the act of Congress, and to expend for that purpose some $1,800,000.

The question as to tile true construction of this grant of 8th August, 1846, and in respect to which such great diversity of opinion existed among the executive officers • of the government, came before this court, and was decided at the December Term, 1859-60. The court held that it was limited to the Raccoon Fork, and did not extend above it-.

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Bluebook (online)
5 U.S. 681, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolcott-v-des-moines-co-scotus-1866.