after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.
The statement of facts discloses a title in the plaintiff (now appellee) sufficient to sustain the judgment for the recovery of possession, although no patent had been issued.
Deseret Salt Company
v.
Tarpey,
The certified copy of the records and papers in the General Land Office was competent evidence. Rev. Stat. §891. This section determines the question of competency but not of materiality. Some of the letters between the officials of the railroad company may not have been material, but there was nothing in them prejudicial. The certificate of the local land officers was competent to show that on the records of their office were no homestead, preemption or other valid claims, and that the land had not been returned or denominated as swamp or mineral land. It is true there was no positive evidence that there were no minerals in the land, and of course nothing to show affirmatively that a mine might not be discovered prior to the issue of the patent, but the same could have been said of the showing in
Deseret Salt Company
v.
Tarpey, supra.
While the question of mineral was not discussed at that time and was first fully considered in
Barden
v.
Northern Pacific Railroad,
It must also be noticed that this land was within the place limits of the. Atlantic and Pacific Company, and that, therefore, on the completion of the road, and without any «election or approval thereof by the Secretary of the Interior, the. title passed unless the tract was within the excepted classes, and there was no testimony tending to show that it was. • On the contrary, the testimony pointed in the other direction.
It is further claimed by appellant that he was protected by a statute of limitations of the Territory, paragraph 2301, Rev. Stat. Arizona, 1887, reenacted as section 2941, Rev. Stat. Arizona, 1901, which reads:
“2941 (Sec. 7.) In all cases when the party in possession claims real property by right of possession only suits to recover the possession from him shall be brought in two years after the right of action accrues and not afterwards, and in such case the defendant is not required to show title or color of title from and under the sovereignty of the' soil as provided in the preceding section as against the plaintiff who shows no better right. ”
But this applies only in cases of mere possessory rights and is- without force after the passing of the full legal or equitable title from the Government.. Such was the construction placed on the statute by'the Supreme Court of Arizona, and is undoubtedly correct, 'the language is clear. The claim of the defendant is a “rightW possession only,” and the limitation applies solely against a “plaintiff who shows no better right.” To hold that the section gives to a mere occupation of public
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land a title by prescription against one subsequently acquired from the United States would limit the full control of.the Government over its landed property and qualify or destroy the effect of its patent or grant.
Toltec Ranch Company
v.
Cook,
_ The remaining question arises under the cross complaint of the appellant, who claims a prior appropriation of all the water flowing in a subterranean stream which had' been reached by digging a well, relying on these provisions of the Arizona Revised Statutes of 1887:
"3199 (Sec. 1.) All rivers, creeks and streams of running water in. the Territory of Arizona are hereby declared public, and applicable to the purposes of irrigation and mining, as hereinafter provided. ”
“3201 '(Sec. 3.) All the inhabitants of this Territory, who own or possess arable and irrigable lands, shall have the right to construct public or private acequias, and obtain the necessary water for the same from any convenient river, creek or stream of running water. ”
We need not stop to inquire whether these sections apply to subterranean streams, because the finding of fact which' is sustained by the testimony is “ that the only water upon said land is percolating water oozing through the soil beneath the surface in an undefined and unknown channel.” Of course this excludes the idea of a “river, creek or stream of running water.”
We see no error in the record; and the judgment of the Supreme Court of Arizona is
Affirmed.
