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Messrs. S. E. Ellsworth and John Knauf for plaintiff in error.
Messrs. Charles Donnelly, Charles W. Bunn, and Emerson Hadley for defendant in error.
Mr. Chief Justice White delivered the opinion of the court:
In Jamestown & N. R. Co. v. Jones,
In Minneapolis, St. P. & S. Ste. M. R. Co. v. Doughty,
Which of these rulings is here controlling is the single question arising for decision on this record, as will be at once seen by the following statement of the case:
The suit was commenced by the railroad to quiet its title to its right of way across a quarter section of land which had been patented by the United States to the defendant. The latter not only by answer, but by counterclaim, asserted the paramount nature of his right. The court below, affirming the action of the trial court, held that the rights of the railroad were paramount upon the conclusion that the facts found clearly brought the case within the rule established in the Jones Case. 26 N. D. 159, 143 N. W. 903. The facts as thus established were these:
That under these facts the court below was right in holding that the controversy was foreclosed by the ruling in the Jones Case we think is too clear for anything but statement. The contention that the case is controlled by the Doughty, and not the Jones Case, because the road was not complete and operating when the entryman initiated his rights, although it was then graded and was virtually ready for the ties and rails, if acceded to, would render the statute inefficacious, and dominate the substance of things by the mere shadow. The first, because as it is impossible to conceive of the completion of the road by the placing of ties and the laying of rails without presupposing the prior doing of the work of grading, it would follow that the recognition of the right of an entryman to appropriate adversely to the railroad after the grading had been done, and before the laying of the ties and rails, would render the performance of the latter useless, and would deprive the railroad, therefore, of all practical power to appropriate. The second, because, as pointed out in Stalker v. Oregon
[240 U.S. 484, 488]
Short Line R. Co.
We have not stopped to consider an intimation contained in the argument that the court erred in its finding of fact as to the state of construction of the road at the time the entry by Barlow was made, because without at all questioning our power to review the facts in so far as necessary to dispose of the Federal contention, we consider the suggestion wholly without merit, first, because we would not in any event disregard the finding of fact of the court below except upon conviction of clear error committed, for which the record here affords no ground whatever; and second, because as the finding of the court below was also the finding of the trial court, the request invites us to disregard the findings of both courts on a matter of fact in the absence of any ground for a conviction that error of fact was clearly committed.
Affirmed.
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Citation: 240 U.S. 484
No. 257
Argued: March 03, 1916
Decided: April 03, 1916
Court: United States Supreme Court
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