This is a bill in equity to control the legal title vested in the defendants by virtue of a patent of the United States, and to decree that defendants hold the title in trust for complainant, or for any other relief in equity to which complainant may he entitled. The land is within the limits of the grant to complainant of the alternate odd sections of land to aid in the construction of a railroad from the intersection of the Texas Pacific Railroad, on the Colorado river, to connect with San Francisco, California, under the acts of congress of July 27, 1866, §§ 3, 18, (14 St. 294, 299,) and of March 3, 1871, § 23, (16 St. 573.) A topographical map of the country through which this part of the Southern Pacific Railroad was to pass, was duly made by the engineers and adopted by the company, upon which map was delineated the line and route of the road so that its location appeared thereon, with reference as well to the sections of the public lands as to the towns, cities, counties, and rivers in the said region. The map, with the line and route so delineated thereon, certified by the chief engineer, president, and secretary of complainant, and under the corporate seal of the corporation, was, on April 3, 1871, duly filed with the secretary of the interior, who duly accepted it, and on said day transmitted the same to the commissioner of the general land-office, to be filed in that office, and on that day it was filed by the commissioner, in his office, whereby the line of the road was definitely located, and the grant attached to all lands at that time subject to the grant under the said several acts. On April 21, 1871, the commissioner of the general land-office transmitted a copy of said map to the receiver of the land-office at Los Angeles, which map was duly filed in that office on April 29, 1871. The road was afterwards fully completed
On November 25, 1867, defendant Dull, having all the qualifications necessary for the purpose, in good faith entered as a pre-emptor upon the land in question, with the intention of acquiring the title of the United States. He built a house on the land, and resided there, continuously, from November 15, 1867, till about June 1, 1868, —a little over six months, — when ho left the land and located in another place, in consequence of the survey made in the mean time by Hansen, hereinafter mentioned, which included the land in question, within the boundaries of Taj anta rancho, as surveyed by him, believing, as lie did, that land so situated was not open to pre-emption. In the latter part of 1872 the survey of Hansen was rejected by the government at Washington, as having been made without jurisdiction, and as being void. Thereupon, after such rejection, and a year or more after the filing of the plat as aforesaid by complainant, by which the line of the road was definitely located, Dull returned and again settled on the land, and on April 9, 1874, filed his declaratory statement in the proper land-office. The patent in question was after-wards issued to him on December 80, 1880, upon a settlement, as stated by the secretary of the interior in his opinion, to have been made in the latter part of 1872, being the settlement made on his second entry before referred to.
The survey of Hansen was made under the following circumstances: The Tajanta rancho grant, being a Mexican grant of a league of land within larger exterior Limits, having been finally confirmed under the act of 1851, a survey of the rancho, as confirmed, was made by Deputy Surveyor Hancock, in December, 1858. This survey was approved by the surveyor general, September 17, 1860, after the passage of the act of Juno 14, 1860, relating to the subject, and it is governed by that act. 12 St. 83. The notice of the survey and filing of the approved plat was published, in all respects, as required by the provisions of that act. The plat and survey wore retained in the office of the surveyor general for the time required by the act, and no application for ordering it into court, and no such order having been made, the survey became final, under the provisions of said act, in tho latter part of September, 1860, and was afterwards duly transmitted by the surveyor general to the general land-office at Washington. Some time prior to February, 1868, the confirmee of
Prior to the commencement of this suit defendant Dull conveyed the land in question, and his title, whatever it is, has passed to and become vested in defendant Scheffelin, who, prior to his purchase, caused the county records of the county of Los Angeles, in which the land iji situated, to be searched, and the legal title thereto appeared upon said records to be vested in his grantor, free from incumbrances; and said purchase was made by him without any actual knowledge, in fact, of any right, title, interest, or claim of complainant, or any other person, of, in, or to said land, or any part thereof. He purchased the land in good faith, for his own use and benefit, and paid therefor $2,500, which was the full value of the land at that time. The congressional grant to the complainant, relied on, is found. in section 23 of ffhe act of March 3, 1871, (16 St. 579,) and is in the following language:
“That, for the purpose of connecting the Texas Pacific Railroad with the city of San Francisco, the Southern Pacific Railroad Company of California is hereby authorized (subject to the laws of California) to construct a line of railroad from a point at or near Tehaehapa pass, by way of Los Angeles, to the Texas Pacific Railroad, at or near the Colorado river, with the same rights, giants, and privileges, and subject to the same limitations, restrictions, andPage 493conditions, as were granted to said Southern Pacific Railroad Company of California by the act of July twenty-seven, eighteen hundred and sixty-six.”
For the particulars of the grants, it will be seen reference is made to the act of July 27, 1866, incorporating the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad, and making the provisions of that act applicable to complainant. 14 St. 292. Referring to section 18 of that act so made applicable, (Id. 299,) it appears that in consideration of the construction of the connecting railroad, therein provided for, and “to aid in its construction,” the Southern Pacific Railroad Company of California, complainant herein, “shall have similar grants of land, subject to all the conditions and limitations herein provided;” that is to say, the same grants, and upon the same terms and conditions, as are prescribed for the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad. Section 3 of the act, (Id. 294,) on substituting the name of the complainant for the Atlantic & Pacific Railroad, provides:
“That there be, and hereby is, granted to the Southern Pacific Railroad Company of California, * * * for the purpose of aiding in the construction of said railroad, * * * every alternate section of public land, not mineral, designated by odd numbers, * * * whenever, on the line thereof, the United States having full title, not reserved, sold, granted, or otherwise appropriated, and free from pre-emption or other claims or rights, at the time the line of said road is designated by a plat thereof, filed in the office of the commissioner of the general Land-office. ”
It is settled by numerous decisions that the words “that there be, and hereby is, granted” lands, in an act of congress, constitute a present grant, that can only be defeated by failure to perform the conditions subsequent, and upon proper proceedings to take advantage of tire failure to perform them. The general right to the land, in this instance, subject to the exceptions found in the act, vested at the date of the passage of the act, March 8,1871, and attached to the specific land at the moment of the filing of the plat in the office of the commissioner of the general land-office, as provided by section 3 of the act already cited. Southern P. R. Co. v. Orton, 6 Sawy. 198; Schulenberg v. Harriman, 21 Wall. 60; Leavenworth, etc., R. Co. v. U. S. 92 U. S. 741; Railroad Co. v. Smith, 9 Wall. 95; Ryan v. Central P. R. Co. 5 Sawy. 262, affirmed, 99 U. S. 383; Central P. R. Co. v. Dyer, 1 Sawy. 641; Knevals v. Hyde, 20 Alb. Law J. 370; Van Wyck v. Knevals, 106 U. S. 360; S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 336.
In the last caso ci ted the court says:
“The grant is one in preesenti; * * * that is, it imports the transfer, subject to the limitations mentioned, of a present interest in the lands designated. The difficulty in immediately giving full operation to it, arises from the fact that the sections designated" as granted are incapable of identification until the route of the road is ‘definitely fixed.’ When that route is thus established, the grant takes effect upon the sections, by relation, as of the date of the act of congress. In that sense, we say that the grant is one in preesenti. It cuts off all claims, other than those mentioned, to any portion of the lands, from the date of the act, and passes the title as fully as though the sections had then been capable of identification.”
“When a route is adopted by the company, and a map designating it is filed with the secretary of the interior, and accepted by that officer, the route is established; it is, in the language of the act, • definitely fixed,’ and cannot be the subject of future change, so as to effect the grant, except upon legislative consent. It then becomes the duty of the secretary to withdraw the lands granted from market. But if he should neglect this duty, the neglect would not impair the rights of the company, however prejudicial it might prove tó others. Its rights are not made dependent upon the issue of the secretary’s order, or upon notice of the withdrawal being given to the local land officers. Congress, which possesses the absolute power of alienation of the public lands, has prescribed the period at which other parties than the grantee named shall have the privilege of acquiring a right to portions of the lands specified, and neither the secretary nor any other officer of the land department can extend the period by requiring something to be done subsequently, and, until done, continuing the right of parties to settle on the lands as previously. Otherwise, it would be in their power, by vexatious or dilatory proceedings, to defeat the act of congress, or at least seriously impair its benefit. Parties learning of the route established — and they would not fail to know it — might, between the filing of the map and the notice to the local land officers, take up the most valuable portions of the lands. ÍTeaníess to the proposed road would add to the value of the sections and lead to a general settlement upon them. This view of the law disposes of the claim of the defendant. A map, designating the route of the proposed road, made by the engineers of the company after careful surveys, and adopted by its directors, was filed on the twenty-fifth of March, 1870, with the secretary of the interior, who accepted it, and on the twenty-sixth of that month transmitted it to the commissioner of the general land-office with directions to instruct the proper local officers to withhold from sale, or other disposition, the odd-numbered sections within the limits of twenty miles on each side of the route. ” 106 U. S. 366; S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 338, 339.
So, in this' case, the plat, duly approved by the engineers, and adopted by the proper officers of the company, was filed in the office of the commissioner of the general land-office on April 3, 1871, and on thqt day the title of complainaüt vested, as to all the odd sections within the prescribed distance, of which the land in question was a part of one, to which, at the time, there was no existing vested right in another, or which was not, at the time, within some other exception of the grant. Thenceforth, it was not in the power of any officers of the governmentj by any action of theirs, to divest, or in any way limit or modify, the rights of complainant so vested under the act of congress. The title of the complainant having vested on April 3, 1871, it attached to the land in question, unless it is within one of the exceptions found in the act. The ground mainly relied on to bring it within one of these exceptions is that on that day the land in question was within the exterior limits of the Tajanta grant, subjudice at the time,' and therefore not subject to grant within the rule established by the supreme court in Newhall v. Sanger, 92 U. S. 761. If the Tajanta grant had been finally located before that date, then it' was no longer subjudice, and the lands, being outside the limits of
The question, then, is, when did the location of the Taj anta grant become final? We have seen from a statement of the facts that the Hancock survey was made prior to the passage of the act of June 14, 1860, (12 St. 33,) and was approved by the surveyor general, September 17, 1860, after its passage, and that the effect of the proceeding is determined by that act. The publication of notice was duly made, and the survey and plats were retained for inspection in the office of the surveyor general for the term prescribed by the act. No application was made to order it into court, in pursuance of the provisions of the act, and no such order was made. The survey thereby became final under the act, after which it was transmitted to the commissioner of the general land-office. The effect of a survey thus become final is declared, by the explicit, express terms of the statute, in language so clear that it cannot be misunderstood, and that is susceptible of but one construction. It is as follows: “And the said plat and survey, so finally determined by publication, order, or decree, shall hare the same effect and validity in law as if a patent for the. land so surreyed had been issued by the United States.” The language is in the alternative, and puts a survey, become final by publication, upon the same footing with one made finai by an “order or decree” of the court, and makes it, in express terms, in its le¿;al effect, the equivalent of a patent. This act took away tho entire jurisdiction of the commissioner of the land-office, which existed under prior statutes, to revise or reject or confirm surveys of Mexican grants, and transferred it to the courts, where parties interested, not satisfied vptli a, survey, were required to make an application to order it into court; and also made the survey and location final, by default of the parties interested, if no such application should be made. When this survey thus became final under the act, it was res adjudícala on the location, and there was no authority or jurisdiction in the land department, or in any other officer of the government, to in any way interfere with it. There remained but the mere ministerial duty of issuing the patent, which would be convenient pvidenee of title, already fully vested under the statutes by the survey, which had become final under the act, and been made equiva-' lent to a patent. "Upon this survey becoming final under the nro-
Says the court, in Bissell v. Henshaw, 1 Sawy. 585: “The proceeding is one somewhat of the nature of a proceeding in rem under the statute, in which all parties are bound to intervene and protect their interests. If not, there could be no object in this provision of the act.” And the supreme court, in affirming the same case on appeal, said: “By the proceedings thus authorized, the approval of the survey brought before the court had, as against claimants, under floating grants, the force and.conclusiveness of a judicial determination in a suit in rem, and all such claimants were concluded by it. * * * If the defendants, or those under whom they hold, failed to appear and contest the survey, they cannot now be heard in this action to question its correctness.” 18 Wall. 268, 269. These were cases where the survey had been ordered into court and notice given, and thereupon the survey had been confirmed by order of court; but the statute makes a survey which becomes final after publication, without application to order it into court, equally final and conclusive. It is still in the nature of a proceeding in rem, and all who object to the survey must apply, within the time prescribed by the act, to have it ordered into court for judicial examination,- or in default thereof they will in like manner be concluded on the expiration of the time. In this case the survey became final under the act on the expiration of the time, and everybody is concluded. The United States on one side, and the confirmee on the other, were, in fact, parties to the record and to the survey; and as to both the Hancock survey became final, and thereafter the matter ceased to be subjudice.
In this case the surveyor general, on the application of the con-firmee, was, long subsequently, directed by the department at Washington to examine the record, and, if still within the jurisdiction of 'the surveying department, to make a new survey; and thereupon a
The court, after a full discussion of the question, says:
“The publication and approval of the Hancock survey, in the absence of any application to have it returned into tile district court, had the same effect and validity in law as if a patent for the land so surveyed had been issued by the United States. After that, tiie grant was in no sense sub judice. * « * It was the duty of the surveyor general to transmit said survey to the general land-olflce, and of that office to forthwith issue the patent for the land in accordance with said survey. The grant thereby became segregated from the lands lying outside said survey.” Page 398.
Such is the unanimous judgment of the supreme court of California, in hank, with respect to a part of this identical section, situated precisely like tlio part now in dispute; and I have no doubt of the correctness of the ruling. If those unauthorized and void acts of the claimant, and subordinate officers of the land-office, can continue the grant in a sub judice condition after a survey becomes final under the statute, then the same result would follow similar acts years after the issue of a patent upon a confirmed claim, and the lands would never be finally segregated from the public domain.
The only other exception suggested, within which the land in question can fall, is that defendant Dull, at the date of the filing of the plat, had initiated a pre-emption right, which he afterwards, in good faith, followed up till he obtained a patent. But Dull was not living on the land at the time of the filing of the map by complainant. He
The only remaining question is whether the defendant Scheffelin is protected as a bona fide purchaser for value, without notice of complainant's title; and I think he is not. The grant to complainant was made by a statute of the United States in prcesenti, which could only be defeated by .the failure to perform the conditions subsequent. But those conditions were fully performed, and the title became fully vested under the statutory grant, and only the mere ministerial duty remained, to issue the patent, as evidence of title to the complainant. The complainant became the owner of the land, having all the beneficial interest in it, and I think, also, the legal interest, for a title can pass by statutory grant as well as by patent. There was, at most, left in the United States the naked, dry legal title held in trust for complainant, and a patent to any other party, if effective to pass the legal title at all, would be a violation of that trust. But there was no power in the officers of the United States to execute a patent, under the circumstances of this case, to Dull; and the patent is void on that ground. There is, in this ease, no right acquired under re
In cases where questions of fact are to be determined by the land-office upon parol or other evidence extrinsic to and dehors the record, in order to ascertain whether a statutory grant has attached to a par
“It is fully conceded/that, when those officers [officers of the land-office] decide controverted questions of fact, in the absence of fraud or impositions or mistake, their deci^ons on those questions are final. * * * But we are not prepared to concede that when, in the application of the facts as found by them, they, by misconstruction of the law, take from a party that to which he has acquired a legal right under the sanction of those laws, the courts are without power to give relief. ”
Again:
“The secretary, or rather the assistant secretary, as appears by the record, rejected Towsley’s claim on the sole ground that he had previously filed a declaratory statement- of his intention to claim a pre-emption of another tract of land which he had voluntarily abandoned; and it is clear that, but for this construction of the statute on that subject, Towsley would have received the patent which was awarded to Johnson.” Id. 87, 88.
This doctrine, that relief may be granted where injury has resulted from a misconstruction of the law applicable to the known facts by the officers of the land department, has been repeatedly affirmed since; as in Shepley v. Cowan, 91 U. S. 340; Moore v. Robbins, 96 U. S. 535, 536; and other cases. Now, that is precisely what was done in this case. Upon the known, undisputed, and recognized state of facts disclosed by their own records, the secretary of the interior and commissioner of the land-office erred in their construction of the law applicable to the case, holding that, upon the facts and statutes under which the survey became final, the survey did not become final till the rejection of the Hansen survey in 1872; whereas, under the law, it did become final’upon the completion of the publication of notice published of the Hancock survey in 1860; and they erred in further holding that the grant continued to be subjudice till 1872, whereas, under the law properly construed, it ceased to be subjudice in 1860. But for this error of law, upon the conceded facts, the patent would have been awarded to complainant instead of to Dull. This brings the case exactly within the decisions cited. Besides, the ease of Van Wyck v. Knevals, 106 U. S. 360, S. C. 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 336, is exactly in point in this case, and settles the question, if it were otherwise doubtful; but it is not. There must be a decree for complainant, as prayed in the bill, with costs; and it is so ordered.