after making! the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
There is no diversity of citizenship in this case, and the only ground of jurisdiction claimed is that the action arises under the laws of the United States.. The case is a pure action of ejectment, añd the general rule in such actions, as to the complaint, is that the only facts necessary to be stated therein are, that plaintiff is the owner of the premises described, аnd entitled to the possession, and that defendant wrongfully withholds such possession, to plaintiff’s damage in an amount stated. Setting 'out the source, of the рlaintiff’s title, as was done with so much detail in this case, was unnecessary, but it does not alter the case, because’ a claim that the title comеs from the United States does not, for that reason merely, raise a Federal question.
It is a long-settled rule, evidenced by many decisions of this court, thаt the plaintiff cannot make out a case as arising under the Constitution or the laws of the United States unless it necessarily appears' by the cоmplaint or petition or bill in stating plaintiff’s cause of action. In
Gold-Washing Co.
v.
Keyes,
The mere fact that the title of plaintiff comes from a patent or under an aсt of Congress does not show that a Federal question arises. It was said in
Blackburn
v.
Portland &c. Co.,
To say that there is a dispute between the parties as to the construction' of the patent or оf the several acts of Congress referred to, does not raise a Federal question, because a statement that there is such dispute is entirеly unnecessary in averring or proving plaintiff’s cause of action. His source of title, as set forth in the petition, might not be disputed, and the defense might rest upon the defense of adverse possession/ as set up in the answer. If defendants contented themselves on the trial with proof of such defеnse, then no question of a Federal nature would have been tried or decided. •
*342 In those cases where the dispute necessarily appears in the course of properly alleging and proving the plaintiff’s cause of action, the situation is entirely different. In this case the real dispute, as stated by the plaintiff, is whether plaintiff is entitled to the land formed by accretion, which has taken place many years since the patent wаs issued and since the acts of Congress . were passed. There is no dispute as to the terms of the patent or of the acts of Congress. The language of the averment in the petition (which is sét out in full in the foregoing statement of facts) shows that the .controversy in dispute is not at all in regard to the land covered by the letters pa.tent or by the acts of Congress, and no dispute is alleged to exist as to such land, but the dispute relates to land, “ which land is a рortion of the land formed by accretions or gradual deposits from said river, along said west bank thereof, between said north and south lines of said outlot, confirmation and surveys, and which thereby became a portion of the land granted by said letters patent and acts of Congress approved June 13,1812, and June 6, 1874, respectively.”
Now, whether the land contained in the original patent reached to the Mississippi river as its eastern boundary, under the distances called for by the patent, would be a question of fact, as was stated in
Sweringen
v.
St. Louis,
As this land in controversy is not the land described in the letters patent or the acts of Congress, but, as is stated in the petition, is formed by accretions or- gradual deposits from the rivеr, whether such land belongs to the plaintiff is, under the cases just cited, a matter of local or state law, and not one arising under the laws of the United Stаtes.
The question before us is wholly different from the case of a writ of error to a state court founded upon section 709 of the Revised Statutes оf the United States. A Federal question may appear in the course of the trial, and some right specially claimed or set up under a Federаl statute may have been denied, and the party against whom the decision was made can have the question reviewed by this court under that section.
In
Cooke
v.
Avery,
In any aspect in which this case may be viewed, we think it was not one over which the Circuit Court had jurisdiction, and for that reason its order dismissing the petition is
Affirmed.
