delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a direct appeal under § 238, Jud. Code, from a decree dismissing a suit in equity for want of jurisdiction, the question for decision now being whether the case presented by the bill is one arising under the laws of the United States.
With considerable detail the bill alleges that the plaintiffs are the owners of a placer mining claim in Montana for which a United States patent was issued to their predecessors in interest in 1895; that they and their predecessors have been the owners and in actual possession for more than twenty years; that at the time of the application for the patent no mineral-bearing vein or lode was known to exist within the boundaries of this placer claim; that prior to its location two lode locations were made or attempted to be made covering part of it, and while the application for the patent was pending the lode claimants conformed to the mining laws of the United States by filing adverse claims in the local land office and bringing suits to establish them in a court of competent jurisdiction; that the placer claimants prevailed in those suits and certified copies of the judgments were duly filed in the local land office; that further proceedings were then had in the Land Department resulting in the issue of a patent to the placer claimants according to those judgments; and that uñder the mining laws this passed to the plaintiffs’ predecessors a full title to all land and all minerals within the boundaries of the placer claim.
The bill further alleges that notwithstanding the
There is also an allegation that the suit is one arising under the laws of the United States and the matter in dispute exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the stun or value of three thousand dollars, but there is no allegation of diverse citizenship. The prayer is that the cloud caused by the recording of the certificates of location be removed and the title of the plaintiffs quieted.
It . is conceded that the plaintiffs, being in possession, have no remedy at law and that their remedy, if any, is in equity. Our concern is not with this, but with the question whether the case is one arising under the laws of the United States. A case does so arise where an appropriate statement of the plaintiff’s cause of action, unaided by any anticipation or avoidance of defenses, discloses that it really and substantially involves a dispute or controversy respecting the validity, construction or effect of a law of Congress.
Boston &c. Mining Co.
v.
Montana Ore Co.,
In both form and substance the bill is one to remove a particular cloud from the plaintiffs’ title, as much so as if the purpose were to have a tax deed, a lease or a mortgage adjudged invalid and cancelled. It hardly requires statement that in such cases the facts showing the plaintiff’s title and the existence and invalidity of the instrument or record sought to. be eliminated as a cloud upon the title are essential parts of the plaintiff’s cause of action. Full recognition of this is found in the decisions of this and other courts.
Wilson Cypress Co.
v.
Del Pozo,
If we turn to the statutes and decisions in Montana relating to the right to maintain such suits, we find that the same rule is recognized there. Two statutes may be noticed. Both were copied from the laws of California and are found in the Montana Codes of 1907. One, § 6115, provides for the cancellation of an instrument, apparently valid but actually invalid, where there is reason to apprehend that, if not cancelled, it may prove injurious to the plaintiff. The other, § 6870, permits a suit to quiet title against an adverse claimant in the absence of conditions which formerly were deemed essential. In California suits under the former are referred to as suits to remove clouds from title while those under the latter are called suits to quiet title. The two sections are there regarded as different in both substance and purpose — the former as putting in statutory form and preserving “an old and w;ell settled rule of equity” and the latter as greatly
Thus whether we apply the general rule or the Montana rule, it is manifest that the allegations of the. bill which it is insisted must be disregarded are material parts of the plaintiffs’ cause of action, that is to say, they are important elements of the asserted right to have the recording of the certificates cancelled as a cloud upon the title.
Recorded certificates of location constitute the first muniment of the locator’s paper title, Lindley on Mines, 3rd ed., § 379, and when verified, as in the case here, are, in Montana, made prima facie evidence of all facts properly recited in them. Codes 1907, §§ 2284, 2285. So, when they are apparently valid, but under the mining laws are actually invalid, as is asserted here, they may becloud the title injuriously.
We are accordingly of opinion that the bill states a case arising under the mining laws of the United States and of which the District Court is given jurisdiction.
Decree reversed.
