delivered the opinion of the court.
This case involves the construction and application of the act of Congress of February 25,1885, c. 149, entitled “An act to prevent unlawful occupancy of the public lands.” 23 Stat. 321. The first section of the act reads as follows:
“That all enclosures of any public lands in any State or Territory of the United States, heretofore or to be hereafter made, erected or constructed by any person, party, association or corporation, to any of which land included within the enclosure the person, party, association or corporation making or controlling the enclosure had no claim or color of title made or acquired in good faith, or an asserted right thereto by or under claim, made in good faith with a view to entry thereof at the proper land office under the general laws of the United Stages at the time any such enclosure was or shall be made, are hereby declared to be unlawful, and the maintenance, erection, construction or control of any such enclosure is hereby forbidden and prohibited; and the assertion of aright to the exclusive use and occupancy of any part of the public lands of the United States in any State or any of the Territories of the' United States, without claim, color of title or asserted right, as above specified as to enclosure, is likewise declared unlawful and hereby prohibited.”
By section 2 of said act, it. is made the duty of the district attorney of the United States for the proper district, when complaint is made to him by affidavit by any citizen of the United States, that section 1 of the act is being violated, to institute a civil suit in .the name of the United States in the .proper United States District or Circuit Court against the person or persons in charge of or controlling the unlawful enclosure complained of. By this- section jurisdiction is also conferred upon any United States District or Circuit Court, or territorial District Court having jurisdiction over the locality where the land enclosed, or any part thereof, shall be situated, to hear and determine proceedings in equity, by writ of injunction, to restrain violations of the provisions of the act. • It. is also made- the duty of said courts in case any enclosure shalLbe found to be unlawful, to make the'proper order, judgment or decree for the destruction of the same, in a summary way, unless the enclosure shall be removed by the parties complained of within five days after they are ordered to do so.
Defendants are certainly within the letter of this statute. They did' enclose public lands of the United States to the amount of 20,000 acres, and there is nothing tending -to show that they had any claim or color of title to the same, or any asserted right'thereto under a. claim made in good faith under the general laws of the United States. The defence is in substance that, if the act be construed so" as to apply to fences upon private property, it is unconstitutional.
There is no doubt of the general proposition that a man may do what he will with his own, but this’right is subordinate to another, which finds expression in the familiar maxim :
Sie utere tuo ut alienum non Icedas.
His right to erect what he pleases upon his own land will not justify him in maintaining a nuisance, or in carrying on a business or trade that is offensive to his neighbors. Ever since
Aldred's case,
9 Coke, 57, it has been
It is true that a man may build a fence upon his own land as high as he pleases, even though' it obstructs his neighbor’s lights, and the weight of authority is that his motives in so doing cannot be inquired into, even though the fence be built expressly to annoy and spite his neighbor; and, that in this particular, the law takes no account of the selfishness or malevolence of individual proprietors;
Mahan
v. Brown,
But the injustice of the prevailing doctrine upon this subject, in its practical' operation, became so manifest that, in 1887, the legislature of Massachusetts passed a statute declaring that any fence “ unnecessarily exceeding six feet in height, maliciously erected or maintained for the purpose of annoying the owners or occupants of adjoining property,” should be deemed a private nuisance, and. that any such owner or occupant who was thereby injured in his comfort, or in the quiet enjoyment of his estate, might have an action of tort for the damage. The constitutionality of this statute was attacked in the case of
Rideout
v.
Knox,
While the lands in question are all within the State of Colorado, the Government has, with respect to its own lands, the rights of an ordinary proprietor, to maintain its possession and to prosecute trespassers. It may deal with such lands precisely as a private individual may deal with his farming property. It may sell or withhold them from sale. It may grant them in aid of railways or other public enterprises. It may open them to preemption or homestead settlement; but it would be recreant to its duties as trustee for the people of the United States to permit any individual or private corporation to monopolize them for private gain, and thereby practically drive intending settlers from the market. It needs no argument to show that the building of fences upon public lands with intent to enclose -them for private ■ use would be a mere trespass, and that such fences might be abated by the officers of the Government or by the ordinary processes of courts of justice. To this extent no .legislation was necessary to vindicate the rights of the Government as a landed proprietor.
But the evil of permitting persons, who owned or controlled the alternate sections, to enclose the entire tract, and thus to
¥e are not convinced by the argument of counsel for the railway company, who was permitted to file a brief in this .■case, that the fact that a fence, built in the manner indicated, will operate incidentally or indirectly to enclose public lands, is a necessary result, which Congress must have foreseen when it made the grants, of the policy of granting odd sections and retaining the even ones as public lands; and that if such a result inures to the damage of the United States it must be ascribed to their improvidence and carelessness in so surveying and laying off the public lands, that the portion sold and granted by the Government cannot be enclosed by the purchasers without embracing also in such enclosure the alternate sections' reserved by the United States. Carried to its logical conclusion, the inference is that, because Congress chose to aid in the construction of these railroads by donating to them all the odd-numbered sections within certain limits, it thereby intended incidentally to grant them the use for an indefinite time of all the even-numbered sections. It seems but an ill return for the generosity of the Government in granting these roads half its lands to claim that it thereby incidentally granted them- the benefit of the whole.
The Government has the same right to insist upon its proprietorship of the even-numbered sections that an individual has to claim the odd sections, and if such proprietor would have the right to complain of the Government fencing in his lands in the manner indicated and leasing them for pasturage, the Government has the same right to complain of a similar action upon his part. If there be any general impression that in dealing with public lands the rights are altogether those of the individual proprietors, and that such rights as the Government has exist only by their sufferance, the act in question will do much to rectify this misapprehension.
It is no. answer to say that, if such odd-numbered sections were separately fenced in, which the owner would doubtless have the right to do, the result would be the same as in this case, to practically exclude the Government from the even-
It is equally immaterial that the defendants have undertaken- to build large reservoirs for water to be supplied for the-irrigation of its lands, or that they have proceeded in accordance with the act of Congress in acquiring the necessary sites to be used in the construction of such reservoirs, or that they have expended large sums of money in providing for this improvement. . If they have enclosed the public lands in violation of the statute it is no answer to say that they have enclosed them for irrigating as well as for pasturage purposes. The violation of the statute is none the less manifest from the fact that the defendants had an ulterior purpose, or a purpose other than that of pasturage.
We are of opinion that, in passing the act in question, Congress exercised its constitutional right of protecting the public lands from nuisances erected upon adjoining property; that the act is valid, and that the judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals must be
Affirmed.
