Tins is a suit on ttie part of the United States to vacate three patents, alleged to have been improperly issued, by mistake, to respondent, for lands, under the congressional grant to the California & Oregon Railroad Company, to aid in the construction of a railroad under the act of July 25, 1866. 14 St. 239. The patents cover, in the aggregate, something over 20,000 acres. It is alleged that, at tho time the grant attached by the definite location of the
It thus appears that the first patent sought to be vacated was issued before the final rejection of the grant; and the other two, more than two years, and two years and nine months, respectively, after its final rejection. It is insisted, on the part of the complainant, that the grant attached to the specific lands on the filing of the map of definite location, in 1867, before the final rejection of the Mexican grant, and that the lands being then sub judice, they were not public lands,and not within the terms of the grant, as held in regard to the Moquelemos grant in Newhall v. Sanger,
The only difficulty I have in the case relates to the first patent issued in 1872, before the final rejection of the claim under the Dias grant, and while the lands so selected and patented were still sub judice, and/or that reason only, at the time, not subject to selection, under the decision of Newhall v. Sanger. Tho lands embraced in this patent were also all lieu lands, situated outside the 40-mile limit of the specific grant. They are therefore in an entirely different position from those inside the 40-mile limit. Those inside the 40-mile limit, under the decision of Newhall v. Sanger, being subjudice at the time the grant attached to the specific odd sections, were not within the terms of the grant at all, but were regarded, in a certain sense, as otherwise disposed of, and the subsequent removal of tho cloud over them did not bring them within the grant; hut being reserved, or so otherwise disposed of as to prevent the attaching of the congressional grant, congress provided for supplying the deficiency, not out of these same lands after the claim should be rejected, but out of other outside lauds that should he open to grant when the selection should be made. Congress intended that the company should have
The very defense to this suit, brought long after the final rejection of the grant, and the claim now set up to the lands under these patents, is a manifestation now of an intent to select those lands. Morally and legally, the defendant is, at this time, clearly entitled to have these identical lands, there being no adverse claims to them. There is really no equity shown now in favor of the government; on the contrary, the equities,are all in favor of the defendant. The government has realized all the benefits to be derived from the construction of the road. It made the same innocent mistake, if mistake there was, made by-the defendant, whereby the defendant may lose a part of its lands, and treated these lands as subject to grant, and, having done so, it has presumably received double the ordinary price for the alternate even sections; so that it has in fact given away nothing and lost nothing. It has received all it ever would have received had the grant not been made, and the road either not been built or been built. The government is not, and it never would have been, entitled to anything more. Whereas, on the other hand, the defendant, in case of the vacation of the patent, has not got its full consideration, — has not got all the land to which it is entitled, and which the government is bound to give, — and it is now entitled to select the very same lands should the patent be vacated. In fact, the probability is that all the other lands have already been sold by the government,
The vacation of this patent would involve the necessity of issuing another for the same or an equal amount of other lands, if any there be, — of substituting a new patent for the one vacated. Courts of equity will not do a vain thing, — will nqt sustain a bill where no injury results from a mere innocent error in fact or law, upon which it is based,- — and especially where that error consists merely in doing a little earlier than it should be done a thing entirely proper to be done at the right time, and which, if now undone, must be done over again. “Courts of equity do not, any more than courts of law, sit for the purpose of enforcing moral obligations, or correcting unconscientious acts which are followed by no loss or damage.” 1 Story, Eq. Jur. 203. Much less will it interfere where no injury results, and there is only a mutual innocent mistake, there being no moral wrong, and where, to correct the mistake in favor of the party complaining, would be inequitable, and work an injury to the other party. Besides, if thesó lands are now lost, all others open to selection having at this day been disposed of, by reason of a change of circumstances the partios could not be placed in stain quo. 1 Story, Eq. Jur. 138a, 138c.
I think this patent is now within the principles established in Ryan’s Case. On these grounds the bill, as to this patent also, should be dismissed.
A large portion of the lands- — some 6,000 acres, I believe — covered by these patents, and indicated in the answer and evidence, were conveyed in fee-simple absolute, to various parties before the filing of this bill, and the defendant had, at the commencement of this suit, and it now has, no interest whatever in them. There is no party to the bill having any interest in these lands. No decree can bo made affecting those lands without having the holders or somebody having an interest in them before the court. U. S. v. Central Pac. R. Co.,
So, also, the defendant lias conveyed all of these lands, in trust, to secure the payment of ten millions of bonds issued and put upon the market. Although the respondent is interested in the residuum after paying the bonds, and is therefore a proper and doubtless a necessary party as to all the lands not absolutely convoyed, as before stated, there is no bondholder, trustee, or representative of the bond
It is but just to observe, on behalf of the government, that this suit was commenced after the decision of Newhall v. Sanger,
The answer denies that certain portions of the lands embraced in the first patent of 1871, and some embraced in the other patents, were within the exterior boundaries of the Dias grant, and alleges that they are wholly outside those boundaries. If this be so, those lands so situated are, in any event, properly patented to the defendant, and the title to them is perfect. Whether they are within the exterior boundaries of the Dias grant or not depends upon how those boundaries are located, and probably no two surveyors, if left to themselves, would have located them alike. Surveyor General Harden-burg located them in 1873, and Col. Von Schmidt again located them in 1880 under the direction and supervision of Surveyor General Wagner, and, I presume, expressly for the purposes of this suit, as I 'know of no other occasion for thejr determination; but these locations differ very widely. In my judgment, Wagner’s location is much more accurate than Hardenburg’s. Wagner’s seems to have been located upon the principles stated and approved by Mr. Justice Field in Henshaw v. Bissell,
“With the breadth of the tract stated, the quantity limited, the southern and eastern lines designated, all the elements are given essential to the complete identification of the land. A grant of land thus identified, or having such descriptive features as to render its identification a matter of absolute certainty, entitled the grantee to the specific tract named.” Id. 253.
I think, upon the principle thus stated, we have the elements from which the exterior boundaries of the Dias grant can be ascertained with reasonable certainty. It is described in his petition, and the annexed desino, which was an unusually good ’one. We find from these documents that his grant was “joining to the north with Mr. Larkin’s farm; to the south with the plains, also vacant; to the cast with lands already selected; and to the west by the mountains, — and the quantity was 11 square leagues.” Turning to the desino we find it platted in a parallelogram, as bounded on the north by Larkin’s land, beyond which we cannot go; on the east, by Jimeno’s grant; on the south, by a line drawn at right angles to the westward from Jimeno’s west line, on the south of which line the lands, for a distance of many miles, appear to be vacant. The mountains are
The bill must be dismissed on the several grounds indicated, and it is so ordered.
