delivered the opinion of .the court.
In
Blackburn
v.
Portland Cold Mining Company,
By the Constitution (art. 3, sec. 2) the judicial power of the United States extends “ to all cases, in law and equity, arising under this Constitution, the laws of the United States” and to controversies “ between citizens of different States.” By article 4, s. 3, cl. 2, Congress is given “ power to dispose of and make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States.” Under these clauses Congress might doubtless provide that any controversy of a judicial nature arising in or growing out of the disposal of the public lands should be litigated only in the courts of the United States. The question, therefore, is not one of the po¥er of Congress, but of its intent. It has so constructed the judicial system of the United States that the great bulk of litigation respecting rights of property, although those rights may in their inception go back to some law of the United States, is in fact carried on in the courts of the several States. It has provided that the Federal courts shall have exclusive jurisdiction of admiralty and patent litigation, and- jurisdiction concurrent with the state courts of suits arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States. Rev. Stat. § 629; 25 Stat. 433, c. 866.
When in section 2326, Rev. Stat., Congress authorized that which is familiarly known in the mining regions as an “ adverse suit,” it simply declared that the adverse claimant should commence proceedings “in a court of competent jurisdiction.” It did not in express language prescribe either a Federal or a state court, and did not provide for exclusive or concurrent jurisdiction. If it had intended that the jurisdiction should be vested only in the Federal courts, it would undoubtedly have said sb. If it had. intended that any new rule of demarcation between the jurisdiction of the Federal and state courts should apply, it would likewise undoubtedly have said so. Leaving the matter as it did, -it unquestionably meant that the competency of
- In the present case diverse citizenship does not exist. Jurisdiction must, therefore, depend upon the question whether the suit is one arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States.
Ve pointed out in the former opinion that it was well settled that a suit to enforce a right which takes its origin in the laws of the United States is not necessarily one arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States, within the meaning of the jurisdiction clauses, for if it did every action to establish title to real estate (at least in the newer States) would be such a one, as all titles in those States come from the United States or by virtue of its laws. As said by Mr. Chief Justice Waite, in
Gold Washing & Water Co.
v. Keyes,
“ The suit must, in part at least, arise out of a controversy between the parties in regard to the. operation and effect of the Constitution or laws upon the facts involved. . . . Before, therefore, a Circuit Court can be required to retain a cause under this jurisdiction, it must in some form appear upon the record, by a statement of facts, in legal and logical form, such as is required in good pleading, that the suit is one which ‘ really and substantially involves a dispute or controversy ’ as to.a right which depends upon the construction or effect of the Constitution or some law or treaty of the United States.”
The adverse suit (Rev. Stat. sec. 2326) is “ to determine the question of the right of possession.?’ That right may or may
■ The recognition by Congress of local customs and statutory provisions as at times controlling the right of possession does not incorporate them into the body of Federal law. Section 2 of article I of the Constitution provides that the electors in each State of members of the House of Representatives “ shall have the qualifications requisite for electors of the most numerous branch of the state legislature,” but this does not make the statutes and constitutional provisions of the various States in reference to the qualifications of electors parts of the Constitution or laws of the U nited States.
On August 8, 1890, Congress enacted (26 Stat. 313, c. 728) that intoxicating liquors transported into any State or Territory “shall upon arrival in such State or Territory.be subject to the operation and effect of the laws of such State of Territory,” etc., and in
In re
Rahrer,
“ Congress has not attempted to delegate the power to regulate commerce, or to exercise any power reserved to the States, or to grant a power not possessed by the States, or to adopt state laws.”
In
Miller's Executors
v. Swann,
“ The question is not what rights passed to the State underthe acts of Congress, but what authority the railroad company had under the statute of the State. The construction of' such a statute is a matter for the state court, and its determination thereof is binding on this court. The fact that the state statute and the mortgage refer to certain acts of Congi’ess as prescribing the rule and measure of the rights granted by the State, does not make the determination of such rights a Federal question. A State may prescribe the procedure in the Federal courts as the rule of practice in its own tribunals; it may authorize the disposal of its own lands in accordance with the provisions for the sale of the public lands of the United States; and in such cases an examination may be necessary of the acts of Congress, the rules of the Federal courts, and the practices of the land department, and yet the questions for decision urnuld not be of a Federal character. The inquiry along Federal lines is only incidental to a determination of the local question of what the State has required and prescribed. The matter decided is one of state rule and practice. The facts by which that state rule and practice are determined may be of a Federal origin.”
Inasmuch, therefore, as the “adverse suit” to determine the right of possession may not involve any question as to the construction or effect of the Constitution or laws of the United-States, but may present simply a question of fact as to the time of the discovery of mineral, the location of the claim on the ground, or a determination of the meaning and effect of certain local rules and customs prescribed by the miners of the district, or the effect of state statutes, it would seem to follow that it is not one which necessarily arises under the Constitution and laws of the United States.
As against this we are met by these suggestions: First, that a corporation created by Congress has a right to invoke the jurisdiction of the Federal courts in respect to any litigation which it may have, except as specifically restricted by some act of Congress.
Osborn
v.
Bank of United
States,
Again, it is said that this • adverse suit is one step in the administration of the laws of the United States in respect to mineral lands, and therefore it must be presumed that Congress inr tended that such step should rightfully be taken in one of the courts of the United States. This suggestion was open to the
Counsel also calls our attention to the difference in the procedure in the disposal of agricultural and mineral lands. With respect to the former all proceedings are carried on in the Land Department, and it is only after the legal title has passed by patent that inquiry is permissible in the courts, Avhile in respect to the latter the aid of the courts is invoked before the issue of a patent and in order to determine to some extent the right thereto. Noticing this distinction he also notes the fact that a contest in respect to the validity of a patent for agricultural lands can be litigated in the Federal courts, and hence draws the inference that a contest preliminary to a patent for mineral lands, and involving the right thereto, must also be 'one Avhich can be litigated in the same courts. But we think the true inference from this difference of procedure is to the contrary, because, in respect to agricultural lands, it is settled that all questions of fact are determined by the Land Department, and that after the issue of a patent only questions of -law are open for consideration in the courts, and as the laws of Congress alone determine the matter of the disposal of the public lands it follows that the questions of laAv which are thus open for consideration are those arising under the acts of Congress. While on the other hand, as Ave haAre heretofore shown, in these adverse suits preliminary to a patent of mineral lands not merely ques
Again, it is said that Congress has in these cases prescribed a specific rule of limitation which is ordinarily different from that obtaining under state statutes in .respect to action's for the recovery of possession; that it has authorized decrees in peculiar form, some partly for and partty against each of the different parties, and also some adversely to both. Act of March 3, 1881, c. 140, 21 Stat. 505;
Richmond Mining Co.
v.
Rose,
And, finally, it is said that Congress cannot confer any'jurisdiction on the state courts, that they may decline to entertain these adverse suits, and that Congress cannot compel them to do so. But here again we are met with the fact that Congress has left all controversies in respect to right of possession not exceeding $2000 in value to the state courts. It evidently pro-/ ceeded upon the supposition (which is a rightful one) that, as jay the express terms of the Constitution, article 6, clause 2, “ This Constitution, and the laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; . . . shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every State shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any State to the contrary notwithstanding,” no courts, national or state, would decline to carry'into effect the acts of Congress. Whether if a state court should refuse to act under these statutes the. matter is one which could be corrected by error in this court, is immaterial.
“ The purpose of the statute seems to be that where there are two claimants to the same mine, neither of whom has yet acquired the title from the government, they shall bring their respective claims to the same property, in the manner prescribed in the statute, before some judicial tribunal located in the neighborhood where the property is, and that the result of this judicial investigation shall govern the action of the officers of the Land Department in determining which of these claiiiiants shall have the patent, the final evidence of title, from the government.”
If every adverse suit could be taken into the Federal courts, obviously in some of the larger Western States the litigation would not be “before some judicial tribunal located in the neighborhood where the property is,” for in them- the Federal courts are often held only in the capital or chief city of the State, and at a great distance from certain parts of the mining regions therein.
So, we conclude, as we did in the prior case, that, although these suits may sometimes so present questions arising under the Constitution or laws of the United States that the Federal courts will have jurisdiction, yet the mere fact that a suit is an adverse suit authorized by the statutes of Congress is not in and of itself sufficient to vest jurisdiction in the Federal courts.
It appears that there were two cases in the Circuit Court of Idaho, that they were there consolidated for trial, and the consolidated case, taken on appeal to the Circuit Court of Appeals. Of the two original cases, No. 81, on the docket of the Circuit Court, was commenced by the appellees in that court. The other, No. 103, was commenced by the appellant in the’district court of the first, judicial district of the State of Idaho in and
The judgment of the United States Circuit Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit is reversed, and the case remanded to the Circuit Court, Northern Division, District of Idaho, with instructions to reverse its decree and enter a decree dismissing Case No. 81, and an order remanding Case No. 102 to the state court. ' .
