Galloway v. Doe ex dem. Henderson

HARALSON, J.

1. This suit has relation to land» granted by Congress approved the 3d of June, 1856, under “An Act granting public lands in alternate sections to the State of Alabama to aid in the construction of certain railroads in said State,” the first section of which refers to the roads for the construction of which said lands were granted, viz., to roads “from the Tennessee river at or near Hunter’s Landing to Gadsden, on the Coosa river; from Gadsden, to connect with the Georgia line of railroads, through Chattooga, Wills and Lookout Valleys” etc.; and the lands granted were to roads to be constructed severally. The quantity of land so granted was specified in the 4th section of the act to be, “not exceeding 120 sections for each of said roads, and included within a continuous length of twenty miles of each of said roads,” to be sold, “when the Governor of said State shall certify. to the Secretary of the Interior that any 20 continuous miles of any of said roads is completed;” then, anotheiLfiuantity of lands, not exceeding 120 sections for each said roads having 20 continuous miles, *321etc., as provided for- tbe first 20 miles, and so, from time to time until said roads were completed. But it was provided, “If any of said roads is not completed within ten years, no further sale, shall be made, and the lands unsold shall revert- to the United States.” The lands granted were “every alternate section of land designated by odd numbers, for six sections in width on each side of each of said roads,” with the proviso, that if any of these odd sections in the six mile limit had before been sold or disposed of by the government, other lands of equal quantity might be selected in a manner prescribed, from lands of the United States nearest to the line of'sections above specified, but in no case further than fifteen miles from the lines of said roads. It was also provided that the lands granted for and on account of said roads severally, should be exclusively applied in construction of the road for and on account of which such lands were granted and should be disposed of only as the work progressed, and the same should be applied to no other purpose whatever.

2. The Legislature by act approved January 20th, 1858, accepted the trust conferred, with the restrictions and upon the terms and conditions contained in said act of Congress. These proposed roads came on to be incorporated, under the laws of the State, one of them from Gunter’s Landing to Gadsden on the Coosa river, as the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad Company, and others as the North East & 'South West Alabama Railroad Company and the Wills Valley Railroad Company, were later consolidated and amalgamated, by authority of the Legislature, into a corporation known as the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company. — Acts, 1868, p. 207; Swann & Billups v. Lindsey, 70 Ala. 507.

In said act of the Legislature accepting the trust of the general government as to these lands it was provided, “that so much of the lands, interests, rights, franchises, powers and privileges as are or may be granted and conferred in pursuance of said act of Congress aforesaid, to aid in the construction of a railroad from the Tennessee river, at or near Gunter’s Landing, to Gadsden on the Coosa river, are hereby disposed of, *322granted to, conferred upon and invested in the Tennessee and Coosa Railroad Company, a body corporate, created and existing under the laws of the State of 'Alabama, for the purpose and under the restrictions specified in said act of Congress,” etc.

It seems to be conceded on each side, that the lands in question were not included in the first 120 sections of tlie grant for the benefit of the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad; that they were within the conflicting primary granted limits of that road and the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad, and that they were opposite to that part of the Tennessee & Coosa Road, which lies between Gadsden and Littleton, which was completed to the latter point in 1889. These two roads then, as admitted, held undivided moieties of the lands granted to which they were equally entitled. In McCarver v. Hersberg, 120 Ala. 524, in construction of this statute, it was said: “In construing this, and similar acts of Congress, granting public lands in aid of the construction of railroads, it has become thoroughly well settled that when, by the same statute, several grants are made for the benefit of different railroads, neither priority of location, nor priority of construction gives priority of right; but where two or more roads, legally located in pursuance of the act, cross each other, or approach each other so nearly that the limits of the primary grant- for the benefit of each overlap, the grant is of equal undivided shares for the benefit of each road;” citing authorities. It was also said: “By the acceptance of the grant, the State became the trustee of the United States, and as such its application and power of disposition of the lands was limited to the purposes expressed in the act creating the trust. The act of Congress was a law, as well as a grant, and any application or disposition of the lands by the State, in violation of the terms of the act was absolutely void.” — Swann & Billups v. Lindsey, 70 Ala. 507; Same v. Miller, 82 Ala. 530.

4. The title of the land in question was originallv in the United States. By said act of June 8d, 1850,’ it was vested in the State, of Alabama as trustee. Upon *323the completion of the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad, in 1871, the title to the undivided moiety fell to that road or company. Thereafter, the title of the undivided moiety became the property of Swann & Billups, trustees, under the debt settlement act of 1876.- — Acts 1875-76, p. 130. By their deed to James C. Anderson, dated 16th April, 1868, they conveyed the same to him, and by his deed of the 7th July, 1886, he conveyed the same to appellant T. C. Galloway.

The Tennessee & Coosa Railroad was not completed until the spring of 1891, and the title to the undivided moiety of the lands remaining in the State of Alabama under the terms of the said grant from Congress, upon the completion of the Tennessee & Coosa Raiiroad Company in that year, fell to that Company. In March, 1893, said company executed a deed conveying the lands together with other lands, to Hugh Carlisle, to Avhose title the appellee succeeded. Hugh Carlisle died without children in 1898, and without brothers or sisters except the plaintiff, his only sister.

5. Section 2794 of the Code, .as to limitations of actions in 20 years, enumerates among them, (1) “Actions at the suit of the State against a citizen thereof, for the recovery of real or personal nroperty.”

The main contention of the defendant is to the effect, that the evidence introduced by him tended to shoAV tAventv or more years of adverse possession on the part of defendant and those under Avhom he claims, and that thereby the title of the trustee, the State of Alabama, and the beneficiary, the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad Company, has been extinguished. But a plain and complete ansAver to the defense is, that the evidence sIioavs, AAdthout conflict, that this road was not completed until the year 1891, and under the act of Congress and the acceptance of the terms and conditions thereof by the State, the statute of twentv years, — conceding its application to cases of this character,' — did not' and could not commence to run, before the completion of said road. These acts, the rights of the parties thereunder, and the question of the statute of limitations was very thoroughly considered in the case of Swann & Bil *324lups v. Lindsey, supra. Quoting from and approving the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States on statutes of a like character, and directly applicable here, it was said: “The act of Congress granting lands, * * imposed conditions upon their alienation, except as to the first 120 sections, which the Territory [State] could not disregard. It declared, that the lands should be exclusively applied to the construction of the road in aid of Avhich they were granted,- and to-no other purpose whatever, and should be disposed of only as the work progressed. It provided that their sale should be made in parcels, as specified portions of the .road were completed, and only in that manner. The evident intention of Congress was, to secure the proceeds of the lands for the work designated, and to prevent any alienation in advance of the construction of the road, with the exception of the first one hundred and twenty sections. The act made the construction of portions of the road a condition precedent to a conveyance on any other parcel by the State. No conveyance in disregard of this condition, could pass title to the company.” This court added: “From the foregoing principle it is manifest, that the legal title to the lands in controversy remained in the State of Alabama, until the road was completed. Till then, the State alone could maintain suit for possession. The right of the lessors of the plaintiff to bring this action did not accrue until the completion of the railroad. This was less than ten years before this action was brought; and inasmuch as time runneth not against the State, ten years statute of limitations is no defense to the action.” — Swann & Billups v. Gaston, 87 Ala. 569; McCarver v. Herzberg, supra, In this sort of case no time runneth against the State.

The bounty of the United States government, it appears plain, cannot be run against or defeated by the statute of limitations before it reaches the hand of the designated beneficiary.

There is no distinction between adverse holding in its application to ten and twenty years. The effect of *325the statute in either ease, is that at the end of the period fixed by the statute, a grant is presumed to the adverse holder from the true owner. Here the true owner, the State, could not grant contrary to the limitations prescribed by the act of Congress, and the Legislature had no more authority to put that period at twenty, than at ten or any other number of years. This defense was, therefore, unavailing to the defendant, and under the undisputed evidence, it was not a question for the jury as contended, but one which the court was authorized and bound to determine.

6. The exhibits to the bill were intended as evidence. not of title in the plaintiff, but to show that at the -time of the grant the lands were vacant as they show, and subject to the grant. The title was established otherwise. Their purpose, again, was to show that the lands embraced in the adjustment list were within the conflicting limits of the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad and the Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad. They appear to be properly certified. Indeed no argument is made to the contrary, nor is argument made against the introduction of maps designated as A and B. But it is said that the adjustment list marked C was not pronerlv introduced, because it shows the adjustment of lands granted to the Coosa & Tennessee Railroad Company, instead of to the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad Co. This exception is technical rather than» meritorious, and indeed may be regarded as a self-corrective clerical misprision. There was no such land grant company under the act of Congress to which the adiustment list applies, as the Coosa & Tennessee Railroad Co. Bv reference to the act of Congress and to the several acts of the Legislature on the subject, it appears that the lands granted to aid the construction of a railroad from the Tennessee river at or near Gun-ter’s Landing to Gadsden on the Coosa river, are disposed of and invested in the Tennessee & Coosa Railroad Co. We judicially know from thesie several public enactments on the subject, that they refer to the latter company, and there is no evidence, either in the acts themselves or elsewhere, of a corporation, or com*326pany called tlie Coosa & Tennessee Rivers R. R. Co., to which the act of Congress by any sort of construction could be made to refer. So, it abundantly appears that the two designations refer to one and the same company, and that they are identical in meaning.

7. .It is objected to the general charge in favor of plaintiff, that the demise under which he recovered,— numbered 3,- — avers that the Tenn. & C. R. R. Co. on the last day of January, 1885, leased to John Doe for a period of nineteen years, the land in controversy; that it appears that the said railroad was not completed until the Spring of 1891, long after the date of the making of said lease, and that the company had no right of entry at that time and no right to lease the lands. -For this reason if is argued that the plaintiff had no right to recover on that demise.

Though the demise is a fiction, the plaintiff must count on one which, if real, would support his action. The lessor is supposed to have been capable of making a demise, at the time when one is alleged to have been made, and when the. suit was commenced. — Tyler on Ejectment, 382, 383. It has been well said, that in ancient practice, an actual entry on the lands in question,' was made by the lessor, and then the lease was sealed and delivered. “In modern practice an actual entry is not necessary, nor is it made, because by the form of the «procedure, it is to be confessed on the trial; but the right to make an actual entry is indispensable, for if the claimant has not a right to enter, he cannot have a right to make, a demise of the lands. Hence, it is a fixed rule, that the day on which the demise is alleged to have been made, must be subsequent to the time when the claimant’s right of entry accrues. And it follows, that if the demise is stated to have been made anterior to the accrual of the right of entry, the plaintiff must necessarily fail, because the lease, which is an indispensable though imaginary part of his title to recover; is not confessed to have legal efficacy and operation, although for the purpose of the trial, it is' confessed to exist. De facto■ only, not de jiirc, it is admitted.” — 1 *327Den. v. McShanCe, 13 N. J. Law, 36, 37, and cases there cited; Den v. Bordine, 20 N. J. Law, 394; Binney v. C. & O. C. Co., 8 Peters, 201, 218; 7 Ency. PI. & Pr. 327, note 1, and authorities there collated. Here, as appears, the demise is laid in 1.885, and the lessor did not acquire title, as is admitted, until in the spring of 1891. Not having the title at the time the demise was laid, the court erred in giving the general charge for the plaintiff and in refusing a like charge for defendant; and for this error the. judgment must he reversed.

"Reversed and remanded.