112 P. 59 | Cal. | 1910
The action is in ejectment. Judgment passed for plaintiff, and from that judgment and from an order denying defendant's motion for a new trial it appeals. The controversy is between a claimant to government land *561
under homestead entry, and a claimant to the same land under a purported mining location. An attempted location had been made by eight associates, defendant's grantors, under the placer mining laws. The valuable mineral sought to be discovered was oil. This was in January, 1906. A cabin was constructed upon the claim, its boundaries were marked, some bits of road built, and, in the language of appellant's brief, work had been done and improvements made upon the claim "far in excess of the requirements of the United States statutes with respect to assessment work and before any claim had been initiated by the plaintiff, they had expended in a direct and legitimate way many times over the amount required in the way of assessment work." Upon April 12, 1907, plaintiff first connected himself with the land by fulfilling all the requirements for entering it as a homestead. At that time, finds the court, no one of the defendant's grantors was in possession of the land. Appellant's first contention is that the evidence of location, occupation, and possession of the ground as a mining claim by defendants was sufficient to exclude it from entry by plaintiff upon the twelfth day of April, 1907, when his homestead entry was made. Undoubtedly appellant's contention in this respect would be correct if the location was valid and complete at the time of the homestead entry, since "actual possession of a mining claim held under a mining location is no more necessary for the protection of the title thereto, than it is for any other grant of the United States" (Belk v. Meagher,
Second, it is to be observed that the laws touching assessment work are not applicable to such an imperfect location. When the location is valid and complete, the law exacts the doing of but one hundred dollars of work per year, and when that is done all of the locator's rights are fully protected, whether he remains in possession longer than is necessary to do that work or not. But where the location is incomplete, no question of assessment work is involved. What the attempting locator has is the right to continue in possession, undisturbed by any form of hostile or clandestine entry, while he is diligently prosecuting his work to a discovery. This diligent prosecution of the work of discovery does not mean the doing of assessment work. It does not mean the pursuit of capital to prosecute the work. It does not mean any attempted holding, by cabin, lumber pile or unused derrick. It means the diligent, continuous prosecution of the work, with the expenditure of whatever money may be necessary to the end in view. Of such work, defendant's grantors were not in the prosecution up to April 12, 1907. They were not only not in the actual possession of the land, as the court finds, but the evidence discloses that what they had done was no more than to attempt to hold the land, under the theory that assessment work was adequate for that purpose. It is shown by the evidence that they were not only not engaged in the diligent prosecution of the work, but that they were not financially *564
able so to prosecute it, and were either in search of capital to enable them to do so, or in search of a purchaser to buy out such interest as it might be thought that they had. The cases ofCosmos etc. Co. v. Gray Eagle Oil Company, 104 Fed. 20 and 112 Fed. 4, [50 C.C.A. 79], are not at all in conflict with these views. To the contrary, these views and those expressed in Miller
v. Chrisman,
"A claimant of land entered under act June 4, 1897 (30 Stats. 36, [U.S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 1541]), in lieu of land situated within a forest reservation, on an affidavit stating its non-mineral character, that it was free from mining claims, and was entered for agricultural purposes, will not be granted relief in equity against another claimant in possession under an oil placer mining location, made prior to such entry, and followed up by development work, which was being prosecuted on the land when the entry was made, and resulted in valuable producing wells, where the affidavit of the entryman was also false in other particulars, the land being valueless for agricultural or grazing purposes, but situated in an oil district, and the entry being in fact made because of its supposed value for oil, although no discovery of oil had then been made thereon."
Plaintiff filing his homestead entry upon the twelfth day of April, 1907, made physical and personal entry on the fifth day of October, 1907 — within the six months limited by law. Appellant contends that plaintiff had made no "entry" within *565
the meaning of the law until he took possessionam pedis on October 5th; that up to that time he had acquired merely a preferential right of entry over those claiming under the homestead or agricultural laws, but not over those who might have entered under the mining laws. In this connection appellant expounds the different meanings which have been given to the word "entry," and concludes that the entry of a homesteader is not complete, within the meaning of the law, until he has actually gone upon the ground. But this is not the meaning of the word as employed in the statute. In "Suggestions to Homesteaders," issued by the commissioner of the general land-office, March 9, 1908 (paragraph 27, page 12), it is said: "Actual residence on the lands entered must begin within six months from the date of all homestead entries, except additional entries and adjoining farm entries of the character mentioned in paragraphs 14 and 15, and residence with improvements and annual cultivation must continue until the entry is five years old, except in cases thereafter mentioned, but all entrymen who actually reside upon and cultivate lands entered by them prior to making such entries may make final proof at any time after entry when they can show five years' residence and cultivation." Says the supreme court of the United States in Hastings etc. R.R. v. Whitney,
"A homestead entry," says the supreme court of the United States, "which is prima facie valid removes the land, temporarily at least, out of the public domain." (Hastings etc. Co. v.Whitney,
For these reasons the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Lorigan, J., and Melvin, J., concurred. *567