Vankirk Land & Construction Co. v. Green

DOWDELL, J.

— This canse was tried lipón an agreed statement of facts. Based upon this agreed statement of facts, the general charge requested in writing was refused to the .plaintiff and given for the defendant. ' 1 -

The land in question was émbracéd in the grant1 of the United States government to the Mobile & Girard Bailroad Co,, in the act of Congress of June 3d, 1856; and the agreed statement of facts show’s -that the grant-was duly accepted by the State of Alabama as trustee in accordance with the terms and provisions of said act-of congress making1 the grant; that the line of said railroad company was duly laid'olit and located, and that prior to January lát, 1890, eiglity-fOur infles 1 of said' railroad, from Girard to Troy,' Ala.; had been construct1' ed and was' in operation. It is further shown that the land in controversy was opposite to- and. coterminous with the eighty-four miles which had been constructed and in operation, though not opposite to and coterminous with the first twenty miles of said road. And it is further shown that said railroad as constructed was also in operation on the 29th day of September, 1890, the date of the act of congress commonly 'known as the “forfeiture act,” and that in June, 1890, the Mobile &■ Girard Bailroad Company by deed conveyed said land *352to the plaintiff; and on this title the plaintiff relied for recovery.

The defendant for recovery relied upon a certificate of homestead entry issued to him from the land office at Montgomery, Ala., in the year 1893, and further claimed that under and by virtue of the act of congress approved September 29, 1890, the land in question was forfeited to the government and was restored to the public do-, main and made subject to homestead entry. It is fur-, ther contended by the appellee that under said forfeit-, ure act of congress, in the allotment of the lands made to the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co.-by the land commissioner and approved by the Secretary of the Interior, as the land in question was not embraced in such allotment, the same became thereby forfeited to the government and restored to the .public domain.

These several acts of congress relating to the original, grant and to the forfeiture of lands under, said grant have been heretofore under consideration, both by the Supreme Gourt of the United States and this court. It has been definitely settled that by the act of June 3d, 1856, the title to the lands passed in praesenti, and the conditions expressed in them were conditions subsequent and not precedent, and that a forfeiture could only be worked by direct legislative action or judicial, proceedings.— United States v. Tenn. and Coosa Railroad Co., 176 U. S. 242.

The fact that the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co. was not completed within the time prescribed in the grant did not of itself operate to forfeit the title to said lands nor to deprive it of the right to dispose of said lands, as. a proposition of law, has been definitely settled in the following cases: Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 44; R. R. Land Co. v. Courtwright, 21 Wall. 310; United States v. So. Pacific R. R. Co., 146 U. S. 570; U. S. v. Tenn. and Coosa R. R. Co., supra.

By the provisions of the forfeiture act of 1890, lands embraced under this original grant and opposite to and coterminous with that part of the railroad then constructed and in operation were excluded from the forfeiture, and by the terms of said act whatever of right, *353title or interest there was in the United States government was confirmed to the railroad company or its ven-dees. The land in controversy, as shoAvn by the agreed statement of facts, being opposite to and coterminous with that portion of the railroad constructed and in operation at the date of the forfeiture act of September, 1890, the title to the same remained in the original grantee under said act, or if it had been previously conveyed, then in such vendee, and could not be divested by act of the land commissioner in leaving it out of the allotment made by such commissioner under the provisions of said act, nor can the courts be concluded by his construction of said act. On a similar state of facts it was held by this court, having under consideration the effect of the act of congress of September, 1890, in the case of Dudley v. Gallups, 128 Ala. 236, that by the provisions of said act the title to the lands lying opposite to that part of the road constructed and in operation prior to and at the time of the passage of said act, was confirmed to the grantee or his vendee, and was thereby withdrawn from the public domain, and could not be opened to homestead entry. On the authorities above cited, Ave think it clear that the general charge should have been given as requested by the plaintiff and refused to the defendant. In actions of ejectment or the corresponding statutory action of trespass to try titles, the question is one of legal title, and the doctrine of equitable estoppel has no application. It was never intended to be asserted in Dudley v. Gallups, supra, as contended by counsel, that an equitable estop-pel could be set up against the legal title in a court of law in the action of ejectment.

The deed from the Mobile & Girard Railroad Co. to the plaintiff was by agreement admitted in evidence “without proof of execution,” “but subject to legal exceptions.” No exception was made in the court below, and therefore objections raised for the first time in this court will not be considered.

The record sufficiently shows that the trial was had and judgment rendered at an adjourned term of the court, and that the order prescribing the time within which the bill of exceptions might be signed is suffi*354ciently shown to have been made by he court in term time. 'The motion to strike the bill of 'exceptions we think is therefore without merit.

For the error pointed out the judgment of the circuit court will be reversed and the cause remanded.