delivered the opinion of the court.
Leave to file a petition for rehearing is sought in this case. The petition has been examined, and we find it so wanting in merit that leave to file it must be denied. Doubtless, a formal denial would suffice, but we prefer to notice two statements in the petition.
As our opinion (
One .of the statements in the petition for rehearing is that our opinion “proceeds on the hypothesis, unsupported by the record,” that the Governor of Arkansas, in his request for the patenting of. the township in question, stated its acreage. In assuming that it is our duty to deal with the case as it is disclosed by the record, counsel are clearly right. A like obligation rests upon counsel. The record (p. 2Ó7) contains a certificate from the General Land Office, introduced in evidence without objection, saying: “The original selection list of swamp" lands, in T. 12 N., R. 7 E., [the township in question] gives the area Of the township as 14,329.97 acres, and that' amount was also given in the approved list. Section 16, which passed to the State under the school grant, contains 514.30 acres, and as such lands were not granted under the swampland laws, the area of section 16 was deducted from the *669 total of the township, leaving 13,815,67 acres, which amount was accounted for in the patent.” The certificate stands uncontradicted in the record and was accepted by the Supreme Court of the State as determinative of the facts recited in it (100 Arkansas, 94, 97). Nothing more; need be said upon this point.
Another statement in the petition is- that we .erred in treating the meandered areas embodying the lands in controversy as unsurveyed lands. The record (p. 1) shows that the complaint filed in the court of first instance, and which counsel seek to maintain, alleged that these lands “were-left unsurveyed by the United States Government.” • The sunk lands were also described by the representative of the State as “not yét surveyed,” when the State’s claims under the Swamp-land grant were being adjusted and settled in 1895. H. R. Rep. No. 1634, 54th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 5 and 32. . This will suffice upon'this ' point.
Leave to file petition denied.
