34 Minn. 538 | Minn. | 1886
The act of congress of July 4, 1866, (14 U. S. St. at Large, 87,) under which plaintiff claims title to the land in controversy, grants to the state of Minnesota (to whose rights plaintiff has succeeded) five alternate sections of land on each side of what is now plaintiff’s road; and provides that “in case it shall appear that the United States have, when the line or route of said road is definitely located, sold any section or part thereof, granted as aforesaid, or that the right of pre-emption or homestead settlement has attached to the same, or that the same has been reserved by the United States for any purpose whatever,” the secretary of the interior shall select, for the purposes of the grant, so much public land “as shall be equal to such lands as the United States have sold or otherwise appropriated, or to which the right of homestead settlement or pre-emption has attached, as aforesaid; * * * provided, that any and all lands heretofore reserved to the United States by any act of congress, or in any other manner by competent authority, for the purpose of aiding in any object of internal improvement, or other purpose whatever, be, and the same are hereby, reserved and excepted from the operations of this act.” The land in dispute is within what is known as the “granted” or “lands in place” limits of the grant. The important question in the case is whether an alleged homestead entry of one Turner of the land in controversy took it out of the operation of the grant.
The homestead law provides that a citizen of the United States who is head of a family may enter 160 acres of unappropriated public land, subject, “at the time the application is made,” to pre-emption at $1.25 per acre; and that the person applying “shall, upon appli
Turner’s alleged homestead entry was made under this provision of law, — section 2293. So far as the forms of the papers evidencing his entry are concerned, they appear to have followed exactly those prescribed in the circular instructions issued to the local land-offices by the general land-office. See Zabriskie, Land Laws of U. S. (1877,) 151, 155, 172, 173; 2 Lester, Land Laws, 253. We perceive no reason why these forms were not properly prescribed, nor why they were not sufficient to satisfy the law; and hence we are not able to agree to the first position taken by plaintiff’s counsel, which we understand to be that the alleged homestead entry is void upon the face of the papers by which it is sought to be evidenced.
And this brings us to consider the counsel’s second position, viz., that the entry, if not void upon these papers, is void upon the facts in the case. It is admitted in pleading, and found by the trial court, that at the time when Turner’s application was made and his affidavit filed, no improvement had been made on the land, and that no member of Turner’s family has ever at any time resided thereon. The terms of the act of congress except from the grant, lands within its
But a long and almost unbroken series of rulings and holdings by the' land department of the United States is to the contrary. They are-to the effect that a homestead entry of record, valid upon its face, per se constitutes the land thus purporting to be entered land to-which it appears that the right of homestead settlement has attached, within the meaning of the various land grants which have been made in aid of the construction of railroads. This result is effected simply by an entry of record, valid upon its face, without reference to the-validity of the entry in fact. Thomas v. St. Joseph & D. C. R. Co., 2 Copp, Pub. Land Laws, 869; White v. Hastings & D. R. Co., Id. 876; Dalton v. Southern Minn. R. Co., Id. 861; Barbeau v. Southern Pac.
We have spoken of this series of rulings by the general land department of the United States as almost unbroken. If some rulings made in such cases as Kniskern v. Hastings & D. R. Co., 2 Copp’s Pub. Land Laws, 858, and Larson v. St. Paul & P. R. Co., Id. 862, and possibly some earlier cases, are to be regarded as inconsistent with these, (as is not altogether clear,) they must be treated as overruled by the later holdings above cited. The act of congress of June 8, 1872, (U. S. Rev. St. § 2308,) evidently rests upon the propriety of a construction of the law like that given by the land department.
As to the weight to which the practical construction thus given to the land laws is entitled, we quote, as fully applicable to this case, what is said by the supreme court of the United States in United States v. Burlington, etc., R. Co., 98 U. S. 334, 341, cited in Kansas Pacific R. Co. v. Atchison, etc., R. Co., 112 U. S. 414: “Such has been the uniform construction given to the acts by all departments of the government. Patents have been issued, bonds given, mortgages executed, and legislation had upon this construction. This uniform action is as potential, and as conclusive of the soundness of the construction, as if it had been declared by judicial decision. It cannot, at this day, be called in question.” We may add that the cases of Burlington & M. R. R. Co. v. Abink, 14 Neb. 95; Atchison, etc., R. Co. v. Pracht, 30 Kan. 66; Kansas Pacific Ry. Co. v. Dunmeyer, 113 U. S. 629, appear to take or to tend towards the same view of the effect of the land-grant acts upon homestead and pre-emption entries taken by the land department; and the cases of United States v. Union Pac. R. Co., 12 Copp’s Land-owner, 161, and Hamilton v. Northern Pac. R. Co., Id. 277, show that as to the Dunmeyer Case this is the understanding of the department itself.