[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 43, Volume 2]
[Revised as of October 1, 2004]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 43CFR2540.0-3]

[Page 129-132]
 
                    TITLE 43--PUBLIC LANDS: INTERIOR
 
    CHAPTER II--BUREAU OF LAND MANAGEMENT, DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
 
PART 2540_COLOR-OF-TITLE AND OMITTED LANDS--Table of Contents
 
         Subpart 2540_Color-of-Title: Authority and Definitions
 
Sec. 2540.0-3  Authority.




         Subpart 2540_Color-of-Title: Authority and Definitions

Sec.
2540.0-3 Authority.
2540.0-5 Definition.

[[Page 130]]

                     Subpart 2541_Color-of-Title Act

2541.1 Who may apply.
2541.2 Procedures.
2541.3 Patents.
2541.4 Price of land; payment.
2541.5 Publication; protests.

Subpart 2542_Color-of-Title Claims: New Mexico, Contiguous to Spanish or 
                             Mexican Grants

2542.1 Application.
2542.2 Evidence required.
2542.3 Publication and posting of notice.
2542.4 Patent.

           Subpart 2543_Erroneously Meandered Lands: Arkansas

2543.1 Applications.
2543.2 Appraisal of land.
2543.3 Purchase price required.
2543.4 Publication and posting.
2543.5 Patent.

           Subpart 2544_Erroneously Meandered Lands: Louisiana

2544.1 Applications.
2544.2 Appraisal of land.
2544.3 Notice to deposit purchase price.
2544.4 Publication and posting.
2544.5 Patent.

           Subpart 2545_Erroneously Meandered Lands: Wisconsin

2545.1 Qualifications of applicants.
2545.2 Applications.
2545.3 Publication and protests.
2545.4 Price of land; other conditions.

             Subpart 2546_Snake River, Idaho: Omitted Lands

2546.1 Offers of lands for sale.
2546.2 Applications for purchase.
2546.3 Payment and publication.
2546.4 Public auctions.

                   Subpart 2547_Omitted Lands: General

2547.1 Qualifications of applicants.
2547.2 Procedures; applications.
2547.3 Price of land; payment.
2547.4 Publication and protests.
2547.5 Disposal considerations.
2547.6 Lands not subject to disposal under this subpart.
2547.7 Coordination with State and local governments.



    (a) Act of December 22, 1928. The Act of December 22, 1928 (45 Stat. 
1069), as amended by the Act of July 28, 1953 (67 Stat. 227; 43 U.S.C. 
1068, 1068a), authorizes the issuance of patent for not to exceed 160 
acres of public lands held under claim or color of title of either of 
the two classes described in Sec. 2540.0-5(b) upon payment of the sale 
price of the land.
    (b) Act of February 23, 1932. The Act of February 23, 1932 (47 Stat. 
53; 43 U.S.C. 178), authorizes the Secretary of the Interior in his 
discretion to issue patents, upon the payment of $1.25 per acre, for not 
more than 160 acres of public land, where such land is contiguous to a 
Spanish or Mexican land grant, and where such land has been held in good 
faith and in peaceful, adverse possession by a citizen of the United 
States, his ancestors or grantors, for more than 20 years under claim or 
color of title and where valuable improvements have been placed on such 
land, or some part thereof has been reduced to cultivation. The act 
further provides that where the land is in excess of 160 acres, the 
Secretary may determine the 160 acres to be patented under the Act. 
Under the said act the coal and all other minerals in the land are 
reserved to the United States and shall be subject to sale or disposal 
under applicable leasing and mineral land laws of the United States.
    (c) Act of September 21, 1922. The Act of September 21, 1922 (42 
Stat. 992; 43 U.S.C. 992), authorizes the Secretary of the Interior in 
his judgment and discretion to sell at an appraised price, any of those 
public lands situated in Arkansas, which were originally erroneously 
meandered and shown upon the official plats as water-covered areas, and 
which are not lawfully appropriated by a qualified settler or entryman 
claiming under the public land laws, to any citizen who in good faith 
under color of title or claiming as a riparian owner, has prior to 
September 21, 1922, placed valuable improvements on such land or reduced 
some part thereof to cultivation.

[[Page 131]]

    (d) Act of February 19, 1925. The Act of February 19, 1925 (43 Stat. 
951; 43 U.S.C. 993), authorizes the Secretary of the Interior in his 
judgment and discretion to sell at an appraised price, any of those 
public lands situated in Louisiana, which were originally erroneously 
meandered and shown upon the official plats as water-covered areas and 
which are not lawfully appropriated by a qualified settler or entryman 
claiming under the public land laws, to any citizen who or whose 
ancestors in title in good faith under color of title or claiming as a 
riparian owner, has prior to February 19, 1925, placed valuable 
improvements upon or reduced to cultivation any of such lands. The coal, 
oil, gas, and other minerals in such lands are reserved to the United 
States.
    (e) Act of August 24, 1954. The Act of August 24, 1954 (68 Stat. 
789), directs the Secretary of the Interior to issue patents for public 
lands which lie between the meander line of an inland lake or river in 
Wisconsin as originally surveyed and the meander line of that lake or 
river as subsequently resurveyed, under certain terms and conditions. 
The Act of February 27, 1925 (43 Stat. 1013 43 U.S.C. 994), authorized 
the Secretary of the Interior to sell such public lands under certain 
other terms and conditions. These Acts are cited as the Act of 1954 and 
the Act of 1925, respectively, in Sec. Sec. 2545.1 to 2545.4.
    (f) Act of May 31, 1962. (1) The Act of May 31, 1962 (76 Stat. 89), 
hereafter referred to as the Act, authorizes the Secretary of the 
Interior, in his discretion, to sell at not less than their fair market 
value any of those lands in the State of Idaho, in the vicinity of the 
Snake River or any of its tributaries, which have been, or may be, found 
upon survey to be omitted public lands of the United States, and which 
are not within the boundaries of a national forest or other Federal 
reservation and are not lawfully appropriated by a qualified settler or 
entryman claiming under the public land laws, or are not used and 
occupied by Indians claiming by reason of aboriginal rights or are not 
used and occupied by Indians who are eligible for an allotment under the 
laws pertaining to allotments on the public domain.
    (2) The Act provides that in all patents issued under the Act, The 
Secretary of the Interior (i) shall include a reservation to the United 
States of all the coal, oil, gas, oil shale, phosphate, potash, sodium, 
native asphalt, solid and semisolid bitumen, and bitumen rock (including 
oil-impregnated rock or sands from which oil is recoverable only by 
special treatment after the deposit is mined or quarried), together with 
the right to prospect for, mine, and remove the same; and (ii) may 
reserve the right of access to the public through the lands and such 
other reservations as he may deem appropriate and consonant with the 
public interest in preserving public recreational values in the lands.
    (3) The Act further provides that the Secretary of the Interior 
shall determine the fair market value of the lands by appraisal, taking 
into consideration any reservations specified pursuant to paragraph 
(f)(2) of this section and excluding, when sales are made to preference-
right claimants under section 2 of the Act, any increased values 
resulting from the development or improvement thereof for agricultural 
or other purposes by the claimant or his predecessors in interest.
    (4) The Act grants a preference right to purchase lands which are 
offered by the Secretary of the Interior for sale under the Act to any 
citizen of the United States (which term includes corporations, 
partnerships, firms, and other legal entities having authority to hold 
title to lands in the State of Idaho) who, in good faith under color of 
title or claiming as a riparian owner has, prior to March 30, 1961, 
placed valuable improvements upon, reduced to cultivation or occupied 
any of the lands so offered for sale, or whose ancestors or predecessors 
in title have taken such action.
    (g) The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976.
    (1) Section 211 of the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 
1976 (43 U.S.C. 1721), authorizes the Secretary of the Interior in his 
discretion to sell at not less than fair market value to the occupant 
thereof any omitted lands which, after survey, are found to have been 
occupied and developed for a 5-year period prior to January 1, 1975.

[[Page 132]]

    (2) The Act provides that all such conveyances under the Act must be 
in the public interest and will serve objectives which outweigh all 
public objectives and values served by retaining such lands in Federal 
ownership.
    (3) Section 208 of the Act (43 U.S.C. 1718) further provides that 
the Secretary of the Interior shall issue patents subject to such terms, 
convenants, conditions, and reservations as deemed necessary to insure 
proper land use and protection of the public interest.
    (4) Section 209 of the Act (43 U.S.C. 1719) provides that all 
patents issued under the Act shall reserve to the United States all 
minerals in the lands, together with the right to prospect for, mine, 
and remove the minerals under applicable law and such regulations as the 
Secretary may prescribe, except as provided by section 209(b) of the 
Act.

[35 FR 9591, June 13, 1970, as amended at 44 FR 41793, July 18, 1979]