United States v. Texas (1896)

E815456

United States v. Texas (1896) was a U.S. Supreme Court case that addressed a boundary dispute involving the State of Texas and the federal government over territory along what is now the Texas–Oklahoma state line.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
United States v. Texas (1896) canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (34)

Predicate Object
instanceOf U.S. Supreme Court case
legal case
branchOfLaw constitutional law
federal jurisdiction
public land law
citationJurisdiction United States Reports NERFINISHED
concerns ownership of land between Texas and federal territory
sovereignty over territory along the Red River
constitutionalContext Article III original jurisdiction over controversies to which a state is a party
federal supremacy in determining boundaries involving federal territory
country United States of America
court Supreme Court of the United States
defendant State of Texas NERFINISHED
disputeType boundary dispute
territorial dispute
hasPartyRole Texas as constituent state of the Union
United States as federal sovereign
involves Red River boundary
Texas–Oklahoma border NERFINISHED
jurisdiction federal question jurisdiction
language English
legalIssue extent of state versus federal territorial claims
interpretation of prior boundary treaties and statutes
locationOfDispute Red River region NERFINISHED
area along present-day Texas–Oklahoma state line
party State of Texas NERFINISHED
United States NERFINISHED
plaintiff United States NERFINISHED
relatedTo Texas–Oklahoma boundary disputes NERFINISHED
later Red River boundary litigation
resultType authoritative interpretation of boundary instruments
subjectMatter allocation of territorial sovereignty
state–federal boundary
timePeriod late 19th century

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Texas–Oklahoma state line relatedCourtCase United States v. Texas (1896)