Walker v. Hedrick

Scates, C. J.

On November 29th, 1855, plaintiff, Walker, entered the tract of land in controversy at the land office in Danville.

After the office had been closed at Danville, and transferred to Springfield, on November 27th, 1856, defendant obtained a certificate of purchase from the office at Springfield, as a preemptor, by virtue of a settlement made November 1st, 1855, on said tract, under the acts of congress of 1841 and 1853, a patent was issued to Hedrick; and Walker, with Smith, to whom he sold one-half the land, file this bill for a conveyance, and for possession. The only question is, whether Hedrick was entitled to a preemption in law, which would enable him to overreach plaintiff’s prior entry %

I am clearly of opinion that he was not, and that the allowance of a preemption was without warrant of law, and void.

It may be remarked that while the decision of the register and receiver upon the facts of settlement, cultivation, etc., is final, or only reviewable on appeal, yet their decision as to their jurisdiction of the case, or right of preemption, is open to attack in any collateral proceeding before any court having jurisdiction of the property or parties. Elliott et al. v. Perisol et al., 1 Pet. R. 340. “Yet if they undertake to grant preemptions in land in which the law declares they shall not be granted, then they are acting upon a subject matter clearly not within their jiuisdiction.” Wilcox v. Jackson, 13 Pet. R. 511; United States v. Gear’, 3 How. (U. S.) R. 120, 802; Brown’s lessee v. Clements et al., ibid. 666-7.

By the 10th section of the act of congress of 1841, Sept. 4 (2 Purple Stat. p. 1340), a right to preemptors is given, but it does not extend to, or include, “sections of land reserved to the United States, alternate to other sections granted to any of the states, for the construction of any canal, railroad, or other public improvement.” This land is on a section alternate to sections granted to the State of Illinois, for the construction of "the Illinois Central Railroad, and is reserved, in the sense of the term in that act, to the United States, and is not, therefore, subject to preemption under that act.

The act of March 3,1853 (2 Purple Stat. p. 1348), expressly ' extended the right of preemption to the alternate reserved sections so excepted in the act of 1841. But this is restricted to certain persons : “no person shall be entitled to the benefit of this act, who has not settled and improved, or shall settle and improve such lands prior to the final allotment of the alternate sections to such railroads by the general land office.”

This is in a proviso, but it effects the same modification of the right of preemption granted, as if wrought into the frame of the granting clause. If the granting clause were thus modified and made to embrace in it, the substance of the proviso, it would then read, substantially, that every person who has settled and improved, or shall settle and improve, any alternate section of land along the line of railroads, reserved to the United States from the grant to the states for such roads, and which has been, or shall be so settled and improved, “prior to the final allotment of the alternate sections to such railroads by the general land office,” shall be entitled to preempt the same, if payment therefor shall be made “ at any time before the same shall be offered for sale at auction.”

The facts of settlement and improvement must be made before a certain day—that is, before the day of final allotment of the alternate sections to the railroad; the day of payment is an extended day, the day fixed for the sale of the lands at auction. But it is impossible to construe the act in such sense, as to allow this clause extending the time of payment to the day of sale at auction, to carry forward to that day, the acts of settlement and improvement. For by such construction, the clause requiring these acts to be done before the final allotment of alternate sections to the railroad, would become inoperative and null. Beside it is manifestly against the plain sense of the whole act. It is plainly qualified and confined as a right to acts of settlement and improvement made prior to the day when the sections of the granted lands is confirmed and alloted to the railroad. No settlement and improvement made after that day will confer any such right.

That allotment was made, as is shown in the record, on the 4th day of June, 1852. Defendant’s settlement and improvement was made on the 1st day of November, 1855, more than three years after the expiration of the time, in which such acts could be made to confer that right, as fixed by the act.

The second proviso conferred a general right of preemption under the provisions of the act of September 4th, 1841, which allows, indefinitely, future acts of settlement, proof and payment for lands not reserved. But this is here confined to lands “heretofore reserved on account of claims under French, Spanish or other grants,” which have, or thereafter may be declared invalid by the supreme court of the United States. Tins tract is not shown to be of that character—else the settlement would be good.

It appears, by the date of the certificate of purchase issued to defendant, that he did not pay for the tract within twelve months after the date of his settlement, which was the 1st of ¡November, 1855, and his payment and certificate are 27th of ¡November, 1856. The fifteenth section of the act of 1841 requires the payment to be made within.twelve months. I presume the land officers would have no jurisdiction to extend the credit, but admit that the fact and time of payment are within and concluded by their decision, and are not questions of jurisdiction, reviewable collaterally; yet it is very clear that they cannot extend the time of malting settlement and improvement beyond the day of allotment. To do this, would be to make the act a general one, and open these lands indefinitely to future preemptive settlement, at any time before their actual sale. An attempt to embrace such settlement and improvement within the provisions of this act is clearly without the jurisdiction of the land officers, and cannot divest the right and title of a fair purchaser.

There being no right of preemption in the defendant on the 29tli day of ¡November, 1855, by reason of settlement and improvement, made on the 1st day of that month, the plaintiff, Walker, acquired, by his purchase, the title, or right to the title, in fee of United States, and no sale by the agents of the United States, subsequent, was authorized- by law. It is simply void.

But as the legal title has been conveyed by patent to defendant, and a patent withheld from plaintiff, Walker, a court of equity will treat him as trustee of the title, and compel him to convey to plaintiffs, who have a prior and superior equity. 2 Story Eq. Jurisp., Sec. 602; 13 Ill. R. 190.

Decree reversed, and cause remanded for decree, in conformity to this opinion.

Decree reversed.

Caton, J.

It seems to me that this whole case depends upon the meaning to be attached to the word reserved in the tenth section of the preemption, law of 1841. The lands excepted by that section from the operation of the law were designed to remain entirely, and forever, unaffected by it, as much so as if they had been described by their numbers. Unlike all previous preemption laws, this was a continuing and perpetual act, and so was the exception designed to be continuing. Ho future event is alluded to which should suspend the operation of the exception, and allow the body of the law to operate on the lands thus excepted. As to those lands, the law was designed ever to be a dead letter, or inoperative. They were, and were to continue, the same as if the law had never passed. To me it seems repugnant to the language of the act, and the manifest intention of congress, to say that the exemption was designed only to continue till the reserved lands should be again brought into market. Although it is understood that such has been the construction of the department of the interior, and that, under such construction, this preemption was allowed, neither of us can find any warrant in the language, or the policy of the law, to justify such conclusion.

The question then recurs, were the sections alternate to the sections granted to the State of Illinois, to aid in the construction of the Illinois Central Eailroad, “ reserved to the United States,” within the meaning of the tenth section of the law of 1841? The language of the grant is: “Every alternate section of land designated by even numbers, for six sections in width, on each side of said road.” Although this act does not, in terms, reserve to the United States the sections alternate to those granted, yet such is its inevitable legal effect. Had the words “ reserving the other alternate sections to the United States,” or, “ reserving to the United States the sections within the same limits, designated by odd numbers,” the legal effect would have been precisely the same. In both cases, the even sections within the prescribed limits would have been granted to the state, and the odd sections would have been reserved from the grant, or, in other words, would continue in the United States. This was the effect, and nothing more, in the case of the grant to the State of Indiana, to aid in the construction of the Wabash canal, in which the word reserved was used. An examination of all the acts of congress granting alternate sections of lands to states, to aid in the construction of internal improvements, will show that the word “reserved” or “reserving” has been sometimes used, and sometimes omitted, but its use has been rather accidental than designed, and that, whether used or not, the effect of the law has been precisely the same. In every case the title to each alternate section is granted, and the title to the sections alternate to those granted remains in the United States. Hothing more, and nothing less.

How it seems to me clear that it was the intention of congress to embrace within the exception contained in the tenth section of the act of 1841 all such alternate sections, the title to which remained in the United States, after the passage of the granting act. The language of the exception is of “ sections of land reserved to the United States, alternate to sections granted to any state for the construction of any canal, railroad, or other public improvement.” I think the word reserved here is not used in the technical sense which is sometimes ascribed to it in common assurances, but is a simple mode of description, and was simply designed to express the intention of congress not to allow preemptions upon those lands which were alternate to sections granted to states for the purposes specified. The words “reserved to” have, in this case, precisely the same meaning as would the words “ not sold by,” in the same position in the section.

That congress considered the alternate sections, not granted by the act of 1851, as reserved sections within the meaning attached to that word, when used in this class of legislation, is rendered perfectly clear by the act of 1853, granting preemptions to a part of those very reserved lands. 10 U. S. Stat. at Large, p. 244. There these very lands are, in express terms, called reserved lands, and unless these lands were excepted out of the operation of the preemption law of 1841, congress was doing a very useless and foolish thing, in making very limited provisions for preemptions on these lands, when the general law of 1841 was applicable to them, whereby all were liable to preemption by any one who should settle upon them. It is true that this may be said to be but a legislative construction of the act of 1851, and were it clearly repugnant to the manifest meaning of congress when they passed that act, could not control in its judicial'construction; but, in this case, I think it is entirely consistent with the original intention of that act.

I think the demurrer to the bill should have been overruled, and concur in the judgment proposed by the Chief Justice.