11 N.M. 279 | N.M. | 1902
OPINION OP THE COURT.
It is apparent that the questions presented in actions of this kind are much broader and in many particulars different from those presented in an ordinary action of ejectment. The question presented is as to who has the prior right to purchase the fee from the government. Bennett v. Harkrader, 158 U. S. 441, 447.
The suit is but a continuation of the proceedings in the Land Office, to have a determination as to which of the contesting parties is entitled to the patent. Wolverton v. Nichols, 119 U. S. 485, 488; Rutter v. Shoshone Min. Co., 75 Fed. 77.
The contestant must show every fact which would entitle him to patent except those acts necessary to initiate and prosecute an application for patent in the Land Office. Schults v. Allen, 48 Pac. (Ariz.) 960.
And the contestant must prove the filing of his adverse claim in the Land Office, and the institution of his suit in proper time, or he cannot recover, Mattingly v. Lewisohn, 8 Mont. 259.
The original declaration filed by contestant, as before stated, was a declaration in ejectment in ordinary form, and made no mention whatever of either the application for patent by applicants, or the filing of adverse claim by contestant. The plea was a plea of not guilty, and it also failed to mention any of the Land Office proceedings. Applicants urge that the declaration failing to make allegation of these facts, Avhich were a necessary part of the contestant’s case, it was error to allow an amendment of the same, bringing in these allegations, after the expiration of the thirty days within which suit must be brought in support of an adverse claim.
But it is to be observed that the act of Congress authorizing the bringing of these actions nowhere makes mention of any form of action. Any action, appropriate in form, according to the law of the particular State or Territory, may be employed. Perego v. Dodge, 163 U. S. 159; Lindley on Mines, sec. 754.
Our statute provides in express terms that an action of ejectment may be brought in support of an adverse claim in all cases, whether plaintiff is in or out of possession, and provides for the rendition of a special verdict by the jury to define the respective rights of the parties in the premises. Comp. Laws of 1897, secs. 2290, 2291.
When these two sections were enacted, as now, the statute provided that it should be sufficient for the plaintiff in ejectment to declare that on some day named, he was entitled to the possession of the premises, and that afterwards, on a day named, the defendant entered, and withholds the possession. Comp. Laws of 1897, sec.-3164.
The plaintiff may show any fact which establishes his right to the possession. Comp. Laws of 1897, sec. 3168.
The defendant, under the plea of not guilty, may show- any fact to establish that the plaintiff is not entitled to possession. Comp. Laws of 1897, sec. 3165.
It seems, therefore, in view of the foregoing statutes, that the Legislature has seen fit to declare that what might otherwise be well considered insufficient as a declaration or complaint in cases of this kind, may be employed for that purpose and shall be sufficient. It could not be that the Legislature should intend to provide the form of action to be employed, and not also intend that the same should be adequate and. complete. We are aware that more specific allegations are required by the current of authority. Lindlev on Mines, secs. 754, 755. But we are not aware of any other statute showing a specific intent to provide a given remedy, as is the case here.
We therefore hold that the original declaration filed in this case was sufficient. This conclusion obviates the remaining question on the pleadings, for if the original declaration was sufficient, it was not reversible error to allow it to be amended to set up specifically the Land Office proceedings.
of the locator’s rights after discovery of mineral and prior to the completion of his location. On July 2, 1895, contestant posted on the premises in controversy the following notice: “Location Notice: The Gold Eagle Lode discovered by the Mineral Creek Milling Company May 2, 1895, claim 750 feet easterly and 750 feet westerly from discovery. The Mineral Creek Milling Company, by L. W. Tatum, agent.”
The court instructed the jury as follows: “9. The law requires that the notice shall be filed for record and recorded within ninety days after the notice is posted, such claim so recorded shall contain the name or names of the locators, the date of the location and such a description of the claim or claims located by reference to some natural object or permanent monument as will identify the claim. When a citizen goes upon the public domain to locate a mining claim, the first notice which he posts may be an incomplete and imperfect notice and not such a notice as the law would require him to have filed for record. Still although the first notice posted at the time of discovery may be imperfect, yet if a person so discovering and posting said notice will thereafter retain possession and with diligence prosecute his work, sink his shaft and mark his boundaries and will within the ninety days after his first discovery have his claim surveyed and fully and correctly described by a notice properly made and have such notice posted and recorded, then the fact that his first or discovery notice was.imperfect under the law will not invalidate his location, if the first notice was of sufficient certainty to define the extent and nature of his claim, as to advise the public or any person reading the notice of his possession and the extent of his location it would be sufficient to protect his possession, as against any one attempting to intrude upon his possession.”
Our statute provides: “Sec. 2286. Any person or persons desiring to locate a mining claim upon a vein or lode of quartz or other rock in place bearing gold, silver, cinnabar, lead, tin, copper or other valuable deposit, must distinctly mark the location on the ground so that its boundaries may be readily traced, and post in some conspicuous place on such location, a notice in writing stating therein the name or names of the locator or locators, his or their intention to locate the mining claim, giving a description thereof by reference to some natural object or permanent monument as will identify the claims; and also within three months after posting-such notice, canse to be recorded a copy thereof in the office of the recorder of the county in which the notice is posted. And provided, No other record of such notice shall be necessary.”
By the acts of Congress no notice of any character is required to be posted upon a mining claim, neither is any required to be recorded. Haws v. Mining Co., 160 U. S. 303; Lindley on Mines, secs. 350, 379, and authorities cited.
But in all the mining States and Territories, the porting of a notice of claim, and later a record in some form, is required by statute or local regulation. This posting of notice-of claim is to be held to be the real inception of the right of the locator. It is a declaration of his intention to appropriate the ground. Without this a discovery of mineral would be unavailing. The locator is entitled to no appreciable time after discovery to determine whether he desires to locate and claim the benefit of his discovery. Discovery and posting notice of claim therefore must be practically contemporaneous, as against a subsequent appropriator of the same ground who enters peaceably.
In most of the States provision is made for the posting of a preliminary notice of claim or discovery notice, to be followed later' by an entirely different notice meeting other requirements. See Lindley on Mines, sec. 351, et seq., and 380.
But here a preliminary or discovery notice is unknown to our laws. On the other hand there is a positive requirement of statute that the notice shall be in such form as that a copy thereof may be recorded. In other words, the first notice posted by the locator must be such a notice as will, when recorded, answer all the requirements of a valid location notice, or, as elsewhere called, location certificate.
This being true, let us inquire what are the requisites of a valid record of a location notice or certificate.
Section 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States provides: “All records of mining claims hereafter made shall contain the name or names of the locators, the date of the location, and snch a description of the claim or claims located by reference to some natural object or permanent monument as will identify the claim.” And such is the requirement of our statute, with the addition that the notice shall contain a statement of the intention to locate. While, as before stated, the acts of Congress do not require record of. a location notice, yet when the same is required by local legislation, or regulations of miners, then the requirements of •the Federal statute become operative and imperative. Brown v. Levan, 46 Pac. (Idaho) 661; Faxon v. Barnard, 4 Fed. 702; Lindley on Mines, sec. 379, and authorities cited.
A failure to comply with the terms of the United States statute must render the location notice ineffectual and void. Lindley on Mines, sec. 384.
Tested by the .foregoing rules, it is perfectly apparent that the notice of July 2, 1895,. is wholly void, and conferred no rights on contestant. It appears from the record that thereafter, within three months, contestant had a survey of its claim made, and a location notice posted and recorded, which more definitely complied with the requirements of law, but we cannot understand how this can avail contestant. The proofs show that at a time when contestant had posted no . valid notice of location, applicants peaceably entered the premises and made a location of the same. This they had a legal right to do, so far as disclosed by this record. The court therefore erred in its instruction to the jury, for. which error the applicants are entitled to a reversal of this cause.
The monuments of contestant’s location of May 2, 1895, so far as disclosed by the record, were never marked until survey was made in June following, and long after the entry by applicants. This is a positive requirement of statute. We do not see how the same can be disregarded any more than any of the other requirements of law. It was evident error on the part of the court to omit this element from its instructions to the jury.
Contestant objected to the introduction of the same and the objection was sustained, of which action by the court applicants complain. How this receipt came to be issued by the Land Office, in the face of the fact that this action was pending in support of contestant’s adverse claim, does not appear.
Section 2326 of the Revised Statutes of the United States provides that upon filing an adverse claim “all proceedings except the publication of notice and making and filing of the affidavit thereof, shall be stayed until the controversy shall be settled or decided by a court of competent jurisdiction or the adverse claim ■ waived.” This statute, upon the filing of the adverse claim, transfers the jurisdiction over the controversy from the land department of the government to the courts. The land department had no jurisdiction to act in any particular, until the controversy had been determined in the court. The issuance of this receipt, upon whatever evidence it may have been issued, was absolutely void and of no effect. It remained for tbe court to determine for itself whether or not an action was pending to determine a controversy between the parties. McEvoy v. Hayman, 25 Fed. 589; Richmond Mfg. Co. v. Rose, 114 U. S. 576. The action, of the court, therefore, in excluding the receiver’s receipt from evidence, was correct.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment of the lower court will be reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. And it is so ordered.