Doe State of Alabama v. Larmore/Opinion of the Court

795818Doe State of Alabama v. Larmore — Opinion of the CourtMorrison Waite

United States Supreme Court

116 U.S. 198

Doe State of Alabama  v.  Larmore

 Argued: January 4, 1886. ---


This case cannot be distinguished in principle from St. Louis, I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. McGee, 115 U.S. 469, S.C.. ante, 123, decided at the present term. The suit was ejectment to recover the possession of certain tracts of land granted June 3, 1856, by an act of congress to the state of Alabama to aid in building a railroad 'from Gadsden to connect with the Georgia and Tennessee and Tennessee line of railroad through Chattanooga, Wills, and Lookout valleys.' 11 St. 17, c. 41. Sections 3 and 4 of this act are identical with sections 4 and 5 of the act involved in McGee's Case, and they provided that if the road was not completed in 10 years, all unsold land should revert to the United States. On the thirtieth of January, 1858, the legislature of Alabama by a joint resolution transferred this grant to the Wills Valley Railroad Company, 'to be used and applied by said company upon the terms, conditions, and under restrictions in said act of congress contained.' Sess. Laws Ala. 1857-58, p. 431. On the twenty-ninth of June, 1860, the lands involved in this suit were certified to the state by the commissioner of the general land-office under the grant, and on the twentieth of February, 1861, they were sold by the company to Larmore, the defendant, and certain other persons, who paid the purchase money and entered into possession. The proceeds of the sale were used in building the road, and on the seventh of June, 1866, the company conveyed the lands in fee-simple to the purchasers 'against the claim and title of the said Wills Valley Railroad Company, and of any person or persons claiming under said company.' The other grantees named in the deed have since conveyed all their interest to Larmore, who is now in possession. The road was not completed within 10 years after the passage of the act of congress, and on the tenth of April, 1869, another act was passed, entitled 'An act to renew certain grants of land to the state of Alabama,' (16 St. 45, c. 24,) by which this grant was 'revived and renewed.' The name of the Wills Valley Railroad Company was changed to Alabama & Chattanooga Railroad Company, in 1868, and on the second of March, 1870, the company under that name obtained from the state a loan of state bonds to aid in the completion of its road. The road was afterwards finished so as to perfect title under the original grant. On the eighth of February, 1877, the state executed a deed to John A. Billups and John Swann, trustees, which purported to convey the lands in dispute, under a compromise agreement with the railroad company, to protect the interests of the holders of the state bonds which had been loaned to the company in 1870.

The claim of the plaintiff is that, as the lands in question were not fully earned when the sale was made under which Larmore holds title, and the road was not completed within the 10 years fixed by the act of 1856, these lands, as well as those not sold at the end of the 10 years, reverted at the end of that time of the United States, and passed again to the state under the act of 1869, which is to be construed as a new grant. We held otherwise in McGee's Case, and under that ruling the act of 1869 is to be treated as an extension of the time named in the original act for the completion of the road. As between the company and Larmore the title passed under the deed of 1866, which was executed to give effect to the sale in 1861. The completion of the road within the time fixed by the new act perfected the title of the company under the original grant, and this title inured at once to the benefit of Larmore. As the judgment below sustained Larmore's title and dismissed the suit, it was right, and it is consequently affirmed.

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This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

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