Plaintiff brought this action to compel the defendant to convey unto it a quarter section of land for which defendant had received patent from the United States, or pay the amount due under an executory contract by which defendant agreed to purchase the land from the plaintiff. *Page 728
The form of this contract and many facts and much law bearing upon this case will be found set forth in Wilson v. SouthernPacific R.R. Co.,
Its conclusion is sound. It may be considered as having been definitively settled by the supreme court of the United States, in cases decided since this appeal was taken, that, by reason of the peculiar wording of the Southern Pacific R.R. grant of 1871 (its branch-line grant) that company was not entitled to select as indemnity lands, under its branch-line grant, lands lying within the granted or within the indemnity limits of the Atlantic and Pacific grant of 1866. (Southern Pacific R.R. Co. et al. v.United States,
The most important consideration which differentiates the primary grants from the indemnity grants is that the primary grants upon the filing and approval of maps of definite location took effect in præsenti by relation as of the date of the passage of the respective acts of grant. The indemnity grants being designed merely to make up deficiencies in the primary grants did not transfer title until: 1. A right to make selection had arisen by virtue of the performance of the railroad construction contemplated by the granting act; 2. After the appropriate filing of the selected indemnity lands; and, 3. After the approval of the secretary of the interior of such selections, upon which approval, by relation, the grant took effect, not as of the date of the granting act, but as of the date of selection. (Oregon California R.R. Co. v. United States,
Notwithstanding the facts above found and shown to be correctly found, that the indemnity selection was in all respects proper, the secretary of the interior restored the land so covered by the selection to the public domain. This action of the interior department followed the decision of the supreme court in the case of the Southern Pacific R.R. Co. v. United States,
The order of the secretary of the interior restoring all these lands to the public domain was based upon a mistake of law — a misconstruction of the decision of the supreme court of the United States in
The restoration by the secretary of the interior to the public domain of the selected indemnity land with the right of entry thereon may be considered as a rejection or disapproval by him of such selection. We are brought to consider the correlated rights and duties of the secretary and of the selector under *Page 732
such circumstances. The duty of the secretary in approving or rejecting such selection is not merely formal or ministerial. He has to exercise judgment and discretion first, in determining whether the selection was or was not properly made, and, second, in protecting the interests of the United States and such entrymen or others as may have claims upon any portion of the land in accordance with the laws of the United States. His action then in approving or rejecting is judicial (Northern Pacific v.Soderberg, 86 Fed. 49; Kitwan v. Murphy,
Coming thus to the correlative rights of the selector, all that has been said, of course, presupposes not only that the department has fallen into error, but that it is an error injurious to his vested rights, for, "to enable one to attack a patent from the government, it is not sufficient for him to show that there may have been error in adjudging the patent to the patentee; he must show that by the law properly administered the title should have been awarded to him. This does not mean that at the moment of time the patent issued, it should have been awarded to him. The acts performed by him may or may not have reached that completeness; but the claimant against the patent must so far bring himself within the laws as to entitle him, if not obstructed or prevented to complete his claim." (10 Ency. of U.S. Sup. Ct. Repts., p. 261.)
What, if any then, were the rights which this appellant acquired by virtue of its main-line grant selection of indemnity lands subject to selection? The trial court held that the selector acquired no rights by virtue of these facts. It is proper to say that the last utterances of the supreme court of the United States upon the subject at the time of the trial of this case were those reported in Sjoli v. Dreschel,
It results, therefore, that while by the selection thus duly made, the appellant did not acquire a perfected title, it did acquire vested equitable rights to title of which it could not be deprived by the fraud or mistake of the interior department and to which rights the courts will afford full protection when, as here, they are presented for consideration. The rejection of the selection was arbitrary and unwarranted and so appellant's equitable vested rights are superior to those of any claimants whose rights have been initiated subsequent to the filing of the due selection. Were the patentee in this case an entryman wholly dissociated from and disconnected with plaintiff, his title would still be subject to the superior equities of the appellant. Much more must this be true in the case of the vendee of plaintiff who has repudiated his contract by a failure to comply with its terms in the matter of payments (Southern Pacific R.R. Co. v. Allen,
It is apparent, therefore, that plaintiff's bill is not lacking in equity. We express no opinion upon the equitable considerations of minor consequence, — namely, whether defendant should at this date and after his repudiation of the contract, be allowed to retain title to the land by a belated performance of his contract, or whether or not he should be allowed compensation for his costs and disbursements in the matter of securing the patent, since these are questions which can properly only come before us in review of the decision which the trial court may actually make upon these questions.
It should be plain, we think, from the foregoing that the order of restoration by the secretary of the interior was not a final determination that patent should not issue to appellant. The circumstances under which respondent secured patent from the United States are such as under the plainest principles of equity make him an involuntary trustee of the appellant of the title derived under that patent.
For which reasons the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Melvin, J., Shaw, J., Lorigan, J., Sloss, J., and Angellotti, J., concurred.
