79 F. 598 | 8th Cir. | 1897
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The patent under which the defendants in error hold grants all the lodes or veins of ore the apexes of which are within the exterior boundaries of the Frostberg mining claim which it conveys;- and . the apex of the lode or vein in issue, at the place here in controversy, is within those boundaries. The patent to the Dunderberg claim, under which the plaintiff in error claims the title to the demanded premises, is couched in the same terms; but the apex of the vein in controversy, at the place in dispute, is not within the exterior boundaries of that claim. Upon the face of the patents, therefore, the charge of the court below, that the defendants in error held the title to the property, was right.
But both these claims were located under “An act granting the right of way to ditch and canal owners over the public lands, and for other purposes,” approved July 26, 1866 (14 Stat. 251, c. 262). That act gave the lawful claimant who complied with the provi- ' sions of the statute the. right .to the single lode or vein which he
If it be conceded, however, that there; was an adverse claim to the property described in tlie Frostberg patent, when the act of May 10, 3872. was passed, that fact could not render void any part of The grant made; by that patent. Congress did not remit the determination of the questions whether or n.ot there was an adverse claim to the Frostberg, or whether the patent to it under the act of 3872 would affect adverse rights, to the courts of law or of equity, in the first instance. On tlie other band, it vested tlie officers of
The act of July 26, 1866, provided that any claimant of a lode or vein might file a diagram of the same, so extended laterally or otherwise as to conform to the local laws, customs, and rules of miners, and might enter such tract, and receive a patent therefor, with a right to the vein or lode; that upon the filing of this diagram and the posting of the same and of a notice of intention to apply for a patent, the register of the local laud office should post and publish the notice for 90 days; that, if no adverse claim had then been filed, the surveyor general should, on the application of the party, survey the premises, make a plat thereof, designate the number and description of the location and the improvements and character of the vein, and indorse his approval thereon; and that, upon the j filing of this plat and of proof that the diagram and notice had been duly posted, the register should transmit the plat, survey and description' to the general land office, and the applicant should receive a patent for the lode and land claimed. 14 Stat. 251, 252, c. 262, §§ 2, 3. The claimant of the Frostberg lode had done all this before the act of 1872 was passed. He had designated the boundaries' of his claim. It had been surveyed and marked on the ground. His notice of intention to apply for a patent for it had been given. No adverse claim had been filed in the land office, and on February 27,1872, he had entered it for patent. When the act of 1872 was passed, he was already entitled to the Frostberg
If this action of the land department resulted from fraud, mistake, or erroneous views of the law, a court of equity might set aside the patent, or declare it to be held in trust for him who had a better right to it. Bogan v. Mortgage Co., 27 U. S. App. 346, 11 C. C. A. 128, and 63 Fed. 192; U. S. v. Winona & St. P. R. Co., 32 U. S. App. 272, 15 C. C. A. 96, 107, and 67 Fed. 948, and cases cited. But in this action at law it is, like the judgments of other special tribunals vested with judicial power, impervious to collateral attack. In the case of Steel v. Refining Co., 106 U. S. 447, 451,1 Sup. Ct. 389. which was an action of ejectment in which the plaintiffs’ title depended on a patent issued upon a claim for mineral lands within the limits of a town site, and the defense was that the patent was void, because the land was not mineral, and the patentee was not a citizen, and had not declared his intention to become such, the supreme court held that proof of these facts was inadmissible to attack the patent, and declared that the land department necessarily “must consider and pass upon the qualifications of the applicant, the acts he has performed to secure the title, the nature of the
Our conclusion is that a patent issued under and in accordance with the provisions of the act of May 10, 1872 (17 Stat. 91, c. 152; Rev. St. §§ 2322, 2328), to a mining claim located before the passage of that act, conveys the legal title to every vein or lode of mineral whose apex is within its surface lines extended downward vertically, and is not subject to collateral attack in an action at law. either on the ground that there was a claim adverse to that patent when the act of 1872 was passed, or on the ground that adverse rights were affected by its issue under the provisions of that act.
Moreover, neither the plaintiff in error nor its immediate or remote grantor was ever in a position to attack the Frostberg patent, either at law or in equity, at any time after the patent to the Dunderberg claim was issued, on September 16, 1873. Conceding, but not deciding, that the locator of the Dunderberg claim, in 1867, then had the right, under the act of 1866, to follow the Dunderberg lode in any direction from his discovery shaft in which it lay, he renounced that right when he availed himself of the benefits of the act of 1872, and accepted his patent under that statute. That act provided that he
Since the side lines of the Dunderberg claim crossed the course of the strike of the vein, they constitute end lines; and, under the patent to it, the owner of that claim was without right to the possession of that lode outside of those lines, after he obtained his patent, in 1873. Mining Co. v. Tarbet, 98 U. S. 463; Iron Silver-Mining Co. v. Elgin Mining & Smelting Co., 118 U. S. 196, 207, 6 Sup. Ct. 1177; King v. Mining Co., 152 U. S. 222, 228, 14 Sup. Ct. 510. The owner of the Dunderberg claim, therefore, had no right or interest in any lode or vein in the demanded premises at any time after 1873, and the plaintiff' in error acquired no such right or interest from him. It acquired none by its deeds of the Subtreasury or Silver Chain mining claims, because those claims were not initiated until after the Frostberg claim was located and patented. All its claims, therefore, are under grantors, immediate and remote, not one of whom was in privity with the United States, or had acquired any right to the property in controversy when it was patented to the grantors of the defendants in error in 1876. This fact is fatal to its claim to avoid the patent to the Frostberg claim, in equity as well as at law. One who was not in privity with the United States, and who had acquired no right to the land or lode when it was patented to another, cannot successfully attack such a patent, either at law or in equity. Deweese v. Reinhard, 19 U. S. App. 698, 706, 10 C. C. A. 55, 59, 60, and 61 Fed. 777, 781; Hartman v. Warren, 40 U. S. App. 245, 22 C. C. A. 30, and 76 Fed. 157,163.
It is assigned as error that the court admitted in evidence testimony given, and leases made by the defendants in error and their grantors in 1882, 1884, and 1888, which tended to show that they were in possession and exercising acts of ownership over the demanded premises subsequent to the sale of the Dunderberg, Subtreasury, and Silver Chain claims by Old, in 1879; and that it also admitted in evidence two letters from the defendant in error Robert O. Old, one to B. C. Catron, superintendent, and the other to C. A. Cameron, secretary, of the Dunderberg Company, which were written ip 1883, and in which Old asked permission to use the Tyler crosscut and shaft to enable him to lease, a part of the Frostberg lode, commencing at or near the line between that lode and the property of the Dunderberg Company, and running easterly 250 feet, together with