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Handel Lane

Court: Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
Date filed: 1916-11-14
Citations: 45 App. D.C. 389
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Lead Opinion
Mr. Justice Van Orsdel

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The provisions of the law here involved are embraced in secs. 2347 and 2348, U. S. Eev. Stat. Comp. Stat. 1913, secs. 4659, 4660. Section 2347 provides that “every person above the age of twenty-one years, who is a citizen of the United States, or who has declared his intention to become such, or any association uf persons severally qualified as above, shall, upon application to the register of the proper land-office, have the right to enter, by legal subdivisions, any quantity of vacant coal lands of the United States not otherwise appropriated or reserved by competent authority, not exceeding one hundred sixty acres to such, individual person, or three hundred and twenty acres to such association, upon payment to the receiver of not less than ten dollars per acre for such lands, where the same shall be situated more than fifteen miles from any completed railroad, and not less than twenty dollars per acre for such lands as shall be within fifteen miles of such road.”

The portion of sec. 2348, U. S. Eev. Stat. material reads as follows: “Any person or association of persons severally qualified, as above provided, who have opened and improved, or *393shall hereafter open and improve, any coal mine or mines upon the public lands, and shall he in actual possession of the same, shall be entitled to a preference-right of entry, under the preceding section, of the mines so opened and improved.”

When the case came before the Secretary for final approval, he held that relators were not “entitled to a preference right of entry,” since, upon the proofs adduced, they had not opened a coal mine within the requirements of the statute. The decision was based upon a prior departmental decision in the case of Re Brown Bear Coal Asso. 42 Land Dec. 320, wherein it was held that, “where a tract of land was classified and appraised after the opening and improving of a mine of coal thereon, the filing of a declaratory statement, and the making of the expenditure required by sec. 2348, Eevised Statutes, the applicant is entitled to purchase at the price existent at the date of the opening and improving of the mine.”

Had relators had a mine opened and improved prior to the date of classification and valuation of the land, under the ruling in the Brown Bear Cáse they would have been entitled to the land at the minimum price of $20 per acre, but, not having such a mine, it was held that they must pay the appraised price.

Counsel for relators takes the broad ground that the Secretary is without legal authority to make an appraisement of coal lands and charge entrymen in excess of the minimum price named in the statute, — $20 per acre when the land is located within 15 miles of any completed railroad, or $10 per acre when situated more than 15 miles from such railroad, — and that his action, being without authority of law, is void. It can only be on this broad contention that the petition here could be entertained.

We think, however, that the” action of the Secretary in withholding the patent to this land has not been of that purely arbitrary character which would justify the issuance of a writ of mandamus to compel the issuance and delivery of a patent. The Secretary is given by law general supervision and control of the disposition of the public lands of the United States, and, *394when not expressly limited by statute, his rulings and decision, if based upon reasonable regulations promulgated by authority of law expressly vested in him (U. S. Rev. Stat. sec. 2351, Comp. Stat. 1913, sec. 4663), or upon the construction or interpretation of a statute, will not be controlled by any extraordinary process of the courts. The jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior, as head of the Land Department, has been clearly defined in numerous decisions. In Brown v. Hitchcock, 173 U. S. 473, 476, 43 L. ed. 772, 773, 19 Sup, Ct. Rep. 485, it was held that “until the legal title to public lands passes from the government, inquiry as to all equitable rights comes within the cognizance of the Land Department.” In the earlier case of United States v. Schurz, 102 U. S. 378, 396, 26 L. ed. 167, 171, the court said: “Congress has.also enacted a system of laws by which rights to these lands may be acquired, and the title of the government conveyed to the citizen. This court has with a strong hand upheld the doctrine that so long as the legal title to these lands remained in the United States, and the proceedings for acquiring it were as yet in fieri, the courts would not interfere to control, the exercise of the power thus vested in that tribunal. To that doctrine we still adhere.”

We think, in the Tight of the rule so long adhered to in the courts of the United States, the Secretary, acting in his quasi judicial capacity, was called upon to .construe the acts of Congress here in question, and his decision is not subject to review in this proceeding. Though the construction placed upon the act of Congress may be erroneous, — a question upon which we are not called to decide, — so long as the construction was a possible one, it is not subject to review in mandamus. United States ex rel. Ness v. Fisher, 223 U. S. 683, 56 L. ed. 610, 32 Sup. Ct. Rep. 356.

Complaint is made that the relators, if denied the writ prayed in the present action, are left without a remedy. The Congress has made the decisions of the Secretary of the Interior final on all matters relating to the disposition and sale of the public lands, so long as title remains in the United States. If this *395amounts to a legislative injustice, Congress, and not the courts, can correct it. The courts are powerless to create a remedy.

The judgment is affirmed with costs. Affirmed.