96 F. 7 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1899
The case made by the bill in this suit is altogether different from that presented by the bill in the suit of Mining Co. v. Miller, 96 Fed. 1, the demurrer to which has just been sustained. In the present suit the bill alleges that the complainants, eight in number, and each, according to the averments oí the bill, a citizen of the United States, and of lawful age, having discovered valuable deposits of petroleum oil upon a certain quarter section of land within the Coalinga mining district, in Fresno county, Cal., associated themselves for the purpose of locating, claiming, holding, and working in common the said quarter section of land as a placer mining claim, and accordingly did on January 1, 1893, distinctly mark the said claim on the ground, with monuments of stone placed at each of the four corners of the location, with stakes and monuments between the corners at points of prominence, and in such manner that the boundaries thereof were distinctly marked on the ground, and that the said claim was thus located by them with reference to the monuments and stakes, as well as with reference to the permanent monuments that had been established by the government in its previous survey of the land; that at the same time the complainants, as such locators, posted upon the claim a notice of
The prayer of the bill asks that the defendant the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company be decreed to hold the title to the property
Whether the patent thus alleged to have been issued by the officers of the United States to the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company is valid or invalid, and, if valid, whether the title thereby conveyed should be decreed to be held in trust for the complainants, and decreed to be conveyed to them, manifestly depends., according to the averments of the bill, upon the proper application of the laws of the United States to the facts. The case made by the bill therefore necessarily presents a federal question, of which this court has undoubted jurisdiction. The demurrer and exceptions to the bill are overruled, with leave to the defendants to answer within 20 days.