93 F. 707 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1899
In its different stages this case has been three times under the consideration of this court, and once by the circuit court of appeals for this circuit. 68 Fed. 609; 74 Fed. 585; 31 C. C. A. 334, 87 Fed. 970. It was first presented to this court on demurrer to the original bill; next, upon a plea filed by the defendants to the amended bill, which the complainant caused to be set down for argument, and which was thereafter argued, submitted, and disposed of by the opinion reported in 74 Fed. 585; and then upon a plea interposed by the defendants to the second amended bill, which the complainant likewise caused to be set down for argument, and which was thereafter argued and submitted, resulting, for the reasons given in the former opinion, in an order sustaining the plea, with leave to the complainant, if it should be so advised, to reply to the plea, and take issue in respect to the matters of fact therein alleged. 93 Fed. 991. A replication was thereafter filed by the complainant, and an agreed statement of facts entered into by the respective parties, upon which, together with the second amended bill of complaint and the answer thereto, the case is now submitted for final decision. The subject in controversy is a piece of land which was settled upon by the defendant Groeck on the 2d day of September, 1885, as gpvernment land, and which he was, against the protest and after a contest by the complainant, permitted by the land department to enter as such, and for which a patent was issued to him by the government of the United States on the 11th day of April, 1890. The complainant, claiming to be entitled to the land by virtue of a congressional grant, seeks by the suit to obtain a decree that the title conveyed by the patent to Groeck is held in trust for it, to compel the conveyance thereof to the
The grant under which the complainant claims the land is that of July 27, 1866 (lá Stat 292), by which, among other things, the Southern Pacific Railroad Company was authorized to connect with the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad at such point, near the boundary line of the state of California, as it should deem most suitable for a railroad line to San Francisco, and, subject to certain conditions, exceptions, and limitations, was granted every alternate section of public land, not mineral, designated by odd numbers, to the amount of 10 alternate sections per mile on each side of said road, to which the United States should have full title, not reserved, sold, granted, or Otherwise appropriated, and free from pre-emption or other claims or rights at the time such road should be designated by a plat thereof filed •in the office of the commissioner of the general land office; and where, prior to said time, any of said sections or parts of sections should be granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, pre-empted, or otherwise disposed of, the act provided that other lands should “be selected by said company in lieu thereof under the direction of the secretary of the interior, in alternate sections designated by odd numbers, not more' than ten miles beyond the limits of said alternate sections, and not including reserved numbers.” The original bill alleged, among other things, that on the 24th day of November, 1866, the complainant, by its board of directors, accepted the grant upon the terms and conditions contained in it, which acceptance was filed with the secretary of the interior December 27, 1866, and that on the 3d day of January, 1867, complainant filed with the secretary a map of the route of its road, as located and surveyed, .which map was accepted by the secretary, and on the same day transmitted by him to the commissioner of the general land office to be filed in that office,' which was done on that day; that on the 22d day of March, 1867, the commissioner transmitted a copy of the map to the register and receiver of the local land office at Visalia, Cal., in which district the land in controversy is situated; and that the register of the local land office acknowledged its receipt by letter of date March 30, 1867. The original bill also set forth the joint resolution of congress of June 28, 1870 (16 Stat. 382), by which complainant was authorized to “construct its road and telegraph lines, as near as may be, on the route indicated upon the map filed by said company in the department of the interior on the 3d day of January, 1867,” and alleged that the road was completed by the complainant upon the line as shown upon that map, and, as constructed, ran through Tulare county, which is within the district of lands subject to sale at Visalia, Cal., and was completed within the time limited by the acts of congress, which fact was duly reported to the president, and by him accepted and approved ; that the land in controversy is more than 20, but within 30, miles of the complainant’s road as so located and constructed, and that when its route was definitely fixed the said land had not been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, pre-empted, or otherwise -disposed of or appropriated by the United States for any purpose, hut that -the United States then had full title thereto;
This court held, in the opinions referred to, that upon the filing by the complainant in the general land office of its map of the general route of (he road authorized to be built, the granting act itself operated to withdraw the lands within the indemnity, as well as the primary, limits of the grant, from sale or other disposition, for the benefit of the grantee; that the piece of land in controversy, being witbin the indemnity limits of the grant to complainant, was not subject to settlement by Groeck0; and that therefore the action of the officers of (he land department, awarding and patenting the land to him, was erroneous. That ruling of this court wTas sustained by the circuit court of appeals in the opinion reported in 31 C. C. A. 334, 87 Fed. 970, and as it then appeared that the complainant had completed the road sq authorized to be built, and had filed in the general land office maps showing its definite location, judgment would therefore have followed for the complainant as prayed for, but for the fact that the complainant, having waited nearly 25 years after the withdrawal of the land in controversy for its benefit, and more than 3 years after the defendant Groeck’s adverse entry upon it, before attempting to select the land in controversy, and having waited for more than another year before instituting suit therefor, the entire delay and neglect being its own, and in no respect caused by any failure or neglect on the part of the government or of any of its officers, it was here held (hat the complainant was guilty of such laches as made it proper for a court of equity to refuse its aid; this court being of opinion that, notwithstanding Groeck’s settlement was without right, and notwithstanding the proceedings in the land office awarding' and patenting (he land to him were erroneous, there must always be on the side of a complainant invoking the aid of the equity powers of a court of justice, not only conscience and good faith, but reasonable diligence as well. In this latter view the circuit court of appeals held that this court was in error, and accordingly reversed its decree, with directions for further proceedings not inconsistent witli its opinion. If, therefore, the facts as now presented be in substance the same as those considered on the former hearings of the cause, there
On the previous presentation of the cause it appeared that, while the map filed by the complainant in the general land office on the Sd day of January, 1867, was a map of the general route of the road authorized to be built, and while it appeared that it actually constructed the road in sections prior to the filing of any map of its definite location, it also appeared that such map of definite location was filed in the general land office in sections subsequent to the completion of the road. Thus, in the opinion of the circuit court of appeals (31 C. C. A. 334, 87 Fed. 971), that court, in stating the facts, said:
“The appellant [Southern Pacific Kailroad Company] commenced to build its road during the year 1870, and completed the construction in different sections between that date and the year 1889; the last section, extending from Huron westerly to Alcalde, having been constructed during the year 1888.”
And in the opinion of this court on demurrer to the original bill, reported in 68 Fed. 609, 611, it is said:
“The bill also sets forth the joint resolution of congress of June 28, 1870 (16 Stat. 382), by which complainant was authorized to ‘construct its road and telegraph lines, as near as may be, on the route indicated by the map filed by said company in the department of the interior on the 3d day of January, 1867,’ and alleges that the road was built by the complainant upon the line as shown upon that map, and, as constructed, ran through Tulare county, which is within the district of lands subject to sale»at Visalia, Cal., and was completed within the time limited by the acts of congress, which fact was duly reported to the president, and by him accepted and approved; that the land in controversy is more than 20, but within 30, miles of the complainant’s road as so located and constructed, and that when its route was definitely fixed the said land had not been granted, sold, reserved, occupied by homestead settlers, pre-empted, or otherwise disposed of or appropriated by the United States for any purpose, but that the United States then had full title thereto; that the entire indemnity limits -under the grant to the complainant are insufficient to supply the losses, sustained by it within the granted limits, and that the commissioner of the general land office, in his annual report to the president and to the interior department for the year 1883, ‘has attested and certified to the fact that the land within the indemnity limits of said act of July 27, 1866, will by no means supply the loss of lands within the twenty-mile limits to said railroad company under said act.’ ”
The agreed statement of facts upon which the case is now submitted shows, among other things: That on January 3, 1867, the complainant filed a map of the general route of the entire railroad which it was, by the act of July 27,1866, and the joint resolution of congress of June 28, 1870, authorized to construct, in the office of the commissioner of the general land office, and that on that day the secretary of the interior and the commissioner duly accepted and approved the said map, and the general route shown thereon. That the complainant commenced to build its railroad during the year 187Q, and completed the construction of that portion thereof extending from San Francisco to Tres Pinos, and from Alcalde to Needles, by way of Goshen and Mojave, in several different sections, prior to the year 1889, — the last section thereof, extending from Huron westerly to Alcalde, being constructed during the year 1888, — and that all of such railroad was constructed along the line shown on the general route
I am of opinion that the joint resolution passed hy congress on June 28, 1870 (16 Stat. 382), distinguishes this case from those relied upon by the counsel for the defendants; for that resolution declared that the Southern Pacific Company might construct its road and telegraph line, as near as might be, on the route indicated by the map filed by it in the interior department on the 3d day of January, 1867, and that:
“Upon the construction of each section of said road in the manner and within the time provided hy law, and notice thereof being given by the company to the secretary of the interior, he shall direct an examination of each such section hy commissioners to be appointed by tlie president, as provided in the act making a grant of land to said company, approved July 27, 38(5(5, and upon tlie report of the commissioners to the secretary of the interior that such section of said railroad and telegraph line has been constructed as required by law, It shall be the duty of the sa,id secretary of tlie interior to cause patents to be issued to said company for the sections of land coterminous to each constructed section reported on as aforesaid, to the extent and amount granted to said company by the said act of July 27, 18(56, expressly saving and reserving all the rights of actual settlors, together with the other conditions and restrictions provided for in the third section of said act.”
Congress itself thus provided for the building of the complainant’s road along the line designated by the map filed by it in the general land office on the 3d day of January, 1867; and the complainant, having so built all of its road along that line, except the portion between Tres Pinos and Alcalde, has earned the public Lands situated opposite to and coterminus with the portions so completed within the place limits of the grant, and the right to select within its indemnity limits such of the public lands as are necessary to make good the losses sus