This was an action brought by the plaintiff to determine the right to the possession of 6.82 acres of a mining claim in pursuance of the provisions of Section 2326, Rev. St. U. S., for which an application for a patent, including the ground in controversy, had been made by the defendants under the provisions of Section 2325, Rev. St. U. S., and judgment rendered in favor of the defendants, from which the plaintiff has appealed to this court.
From these findings of fact it will be seen that the Lady of the Hills lode was located, in 1877, by citizens of the United States, and was a valid location under the mining laws, and that the required amount of work was performed each year upon the claim prior to 1883, and also during the year 1887, when the claim, including the ground in controversy, was located by the defendants, and before the Alexander lode was located. It will be further noticed that in 1883 John H. Leary, one of the locators of the Lady of the Hills claim, conveyed the same to Thomas Gorman, who was at the time an alien, and that Gorman, while such alien, transferred the same to the plaintiff, a corporation capable of locating, holding and patenting mineral lands. The principal question, therefore, presented on this appeal is as to the correctness of the second conclusion of law of the court, — that the conveyance by Leary to Gorman in 1883, by reason of the fact that Gorman was an alien, was null and void, and was, in legal effect, an absolute abandonment of the Lady of the Hills claim; and that after its conveyance to Gor
The locators of the Lady of the Hills lode being found by the court below to be citizens of the United States, and therefore competent to make a valid location of that claim, and the court having further found that in making the location they complied with the laws of the Unired States, the laws of the territory, and the customs, rules, and regulations of miners in the district in which the claim was situated, they did by such location become the grantees of the United States of the exclusive right to the possession of such claim, and did thereby acquire a qualified title to the property, which they were authorized to convey to any person who might desire to purchase the same. The territorial law, as we have seen, authorized an alien to take, hold, and transfer property, real and personal, within this territory. In taking the conveyance from Leary of his interest in the Lady of the Hills claim, Gorman, therefore, violated no territorial law; and if, by reason of his alien-age, he was not authorized to hold the same, it was only as against the government of the United States, of which, we think, the government could alone take advantage. Assuming that the location of the Lady of the Hills claim, as found by the court, was good and valid at the time it was made, and the mineral lands embraced therein were withdrawn and segregated from the public domain by such location, Gorman, though a alien, could, in our opinion, take, hold, and transfer the same to a qualified person or corporation. The government had instituted no proceedings to dispossess him, and the territory had expressly permitted him to take, hold, and transfer the qualified title vested in the miner by his location. It is not claimed that when Leary conveyed his interest in the Lady of the Hills claim to Gorman he had any actual intention of abandoning the claim, and we think such a conveyance had no more the effect of abandonment than if the claim had [been conveyed by Leary to
A case in which the facts were substantially the same as in the case at bar came before the supreme court of California in Ferguson v. Neville, 61 Cal. 356. In that case the mining claim was duly located by citizens, transferred by them to aliens, who, after holding it for about a year, conveyed it to a qualified person. After such last conveyance, and while the claim was in the possession of the citizens, — the plaintiffs in that action, — the defendant’s grantors made a location of the claim. That court held that the plaintiffs acquired a good title to the claim from the aliens, and in its opinion says: “The title, therefore, passed out of the United States, and was vested in Rose & Rehberg, who, being the owners thereof, had a right to make any sale or disposition of the property not inconsistent with the laws of this state. By Article 1, § 17, of the constitution in force at that time, it was provided that ‘foreigners who are or who may hereafter become bona fide residents, of this state,shall enjoy the same rights in respect to the possession, enjoyment, and inheritance of property as native-born citizens. ’ It is admitted in the record in the case that the grantors of plaintiffs, although Chinese, were all of them bona fide residents of the State of California. It is very clear, therefore, that Wing Hung and his co-grantees were capable of taking by purchase the mining ground in controversy; and their grantors, having acquired the title of the United States to such mining ground, had a full and complete right to convey the same. * * * It is not pretended there has been an ‘inquest of office, ’ or that any steps were ever taken on behalf of the government