297 F. 273 | D. Wyo. | 1924
This is an action in ejectment, and therefore addresses itself to the law side of the court. The statement, of facts, as they may be gathered from the petition, purports to show that the plaintiff by purchase became the owner of an undivided one-eighth interest in a certain placer mining act claim known as “The Reif,” which claim it is alleged was discovered, located, and marked in accordance with’ the statutes in such case made and provided, in the year 1887 ; the lands being in what is now known as the Salt Creek oil field. It further appears that in’ 1910 other locators entered upon the lands in controversy and established a location known as “The Tank,” and that in August, 1920, the Midwest Oil Company and the Wyoming Associated Oil Corporation, the defendants herein, applied for a lease upon the premises under the Act of February 25, 1920 (41 Stat. 437 [Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, §§ 4640Í4-4640J4SS])_, using as a basis of their right to a lease of the premises the ownership by conveyance from the original owners of the Tank claim; that subsequently two separate leases were granted by the Interior Department on the north portion
The petition is attacked by demurrer, both of a special and general character. One ground of the demurrer is that two causes of action are improperly joined. This is a special ground for demurrer under the Wyoming statute. Comp. Stats. Wyo. 1920, § 5651, subd. 6. The Wyoming statute also provides as to -what causes mf action may be united in the same petition. Comp. Stats. Wyo. 1920, § 5606, subd. 6, which reads:
“Claims to recover real property, with or without damages, for the withholding thereof, the rents and profits of the same and the partition thereof.”
It seems that the application of the foregoing provision is limited, however, in that by section 5607, immediately following, it is provided:
“The causes of action so united must not require different places of trial, and, except as otherwise provided, must affect all the parties to the action.”
The question is: Does the case at bar come within the provision of the last-quoted statute ? Here we have a case in which the two defendants are holding, by virtue of leases granted by the United States, entirely separate and distinct parcels of land, to which plaintiff claims the right of possession, and from which he seeks to eject the defendants. It is not asserted in the petition that the defendant Midwest Company is claiming or withholding possession of the south parcel, or that the defendant Wyoming Associated Oil Corporation is asserting or withholding possession of the north parcel of the land in controversy, but it does appear that each of the defendants is claiming and withholding a separate parcel of the land by virtue of a lease independent of the other, although granted at the same time by the Interior Department. Manifestly, therefore, in an action in ejectment, plaintiff’s cause of action against a party defendant, asserting claim to and withholding possession of one parcel of land under a separate grant, cannot affect the other party defendant, asserting claim to and withholding possession of a separate and distinct parcel, under a different grant. In other words, there is no claim of joint possession of the land in controversy by the defendants, so as to affect all the parties to the action, which this court conceives to be the limitation ,in section 5607, supra. Greer v. Mezes, 24 How. 268, 277, 16 L. Ed. 661; Gibbons v. Martin, 10 Fed. Cas. 292. A different rule might prevail under certain circumstances in an equity suit, under the federal practice.
The general ground of demurrer, that the petition fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action under section 5651, supra, raises a number of points which have been fully and ably discussed by counsel for the litigants, which, however, will only be noticed in part. The defendants contend that plaintiff’s case presents a collateral attack upon their grant from the Department of the Interior by virtue
The situation presented here also raises the same question which has been before this court in cases recently.decided, as to whether or not the Interior Department has the exclusive jurisdiction under the Act of February 25, 1920, to determine the matter of granting the leases to owners of placer mining act claims, uppn application under that act. This court has held in Hodgson v. Mountain & Gulf Oil Co. (No. 1350) 297 Fed. 269, that when the 'Department of the Interior has recognized the ownership of a placer mining act claim for the purpose of granting a lease to the owner or owners of said claim, such action is final, unless set aside on account of fraud, jurisdictional irregularity, or errors of law upon which the decision was based. Even these causes could not be asserted in an action at law.
It is asserted in the plaintiff’s petition that tire federal Teasing Act is unconstitutional, in that it is in contravention of the “due process” clause of the Constitution. In this manner, by one sweeping aver- . ment of his petition, the plaintiff would wipe out the statute upon which rest the rights of his opponent. Counsel for plaintiff elected not to file a memorandum' brief within the time allowed by the court when the casé was argued and taken under advisement, and therefore the court must depend upon its recollection for the substance of the argument advanced upon this point. The contention in the petition seems to be that the legislation is retroactive in that it purports to affect property rights already vested, and counsel argues that the act itself in no way provides methods of giving notice to tiróse parties claiming an interest in lands affected by the legislation.
Whatever may be the character of right secured by a placer mining claimant, it is not that certain,, indefeasible right which comes from a grant of title ownership, but depends at all times upon certain acts to be continuously performed by the claimant; the fee title remaining in the United States, unlessi the claimant proceed to patent. In thé latter proceeding, rights in such a claim may be irrevocably cut off, in which the due process in based upon published notice. Golden Reward Mining Co. v. Buxton Mining Co. (C. C.) 79 Fed. 868. While the Teasing Act itself does not .provide for notice, it 'in effect gives the Interior Department the right to prescribe rules and regulations to carry the act into effect. Such rules and regulations were prescribed by the Tand Department requiring notice to be given of all applications for leases, which regulations should be given the full force and effect of statutes, when not inconsistent with or repugnant to the law itself.
Plaintiff further contends that, being the owner of a claim maintained and perfected in accordance with the requirements of the Placer Mining Act, he and his colocators have the absolute right to proceed under the provisions of that act in the maintenance and operation of the mining claim, as well as proceeding to patent thereunder, without interference through any provisions of the Leasing Act. This contention would undoubtedly be sound, were it not that the Leasing Act, in section 37 (Comp. St. Ann. Supp. 1923, § 4640%s), apparently gives the option to such a claimant to proceed under either act. This seems to be the only practicable construction of section 37, which, if correct, gives the department the undoubted right under proper due process regulations to call before it any person or persons claiming an interest in an entry upon which a lease is sought. Upon such a hearing the rights of the parties can be fully determined.
For the reasons stated, the demurrer will be sustained, and the cause dismissed, at the costs of the plaintiff, reserving to him his proper exceptions.