Appellee, John W. Jones, brought action against appellant, State of Arizona, to require the state to issue to him a mineral lease for the purpose of extracting and removing sand and gravel from state land.
Appellee in 1958 filed 16 mining claims on state land and thereafter applied to the State Land Commissioner for a mineral lease on all of the land included within the claims. The Commissioner denied the application and appellee appealed to the superior court for a trial de novo which was had in October 1959. The court found with respect to two of the claims, Jimsey No. 1 and No. 8, that appellee had performed all acts necessary to perfect a valid mineral claim under the statutes of the State of Arizona and the regulations of the State Land Department, including the discovery thereon of a valuable mineral deposit. The court also found as a conclusion of law that the Commissioner wrongfully denied the mineral lease and that he must issue a lease to appellee.
It is contended the conclusions of law drawn by the lower court may be interpreted to mean either the court found as a matter of law that the Commissioner had no discretion to deny a mineral lease, or the Commissioner abused the discretion which was his to exercise. It is obvious that the former contention must be resolved before the latter becomes material.
Whether the Commissioner has discretion to deny an original mineral lease to an applicant who has discovered a valuable mineral deposit and performed all acts necessary to perfect a valid mineral claim depends upon the construction of A.R.S. §§ 27-231 et seq., which provide for the leasing of state lands for mineral claims, and particularly A.R.S. § 27-233(A), which states:
“The locator of a lode mining claim or claims on state lands pursuant to this article shall have a preferred right to a mineral lease of each claim within ninety days after the date of location.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Appellant contends the “preferred right” granted by this section is the same right granted by A.R.S. § 37-281 et seq., providing for the leasing of state land for agricultural, grazing and other purposes. The latter has been construed to be not an absolute right but subject to the discretion of the Commissioner. Appellee, on the other *336 hand, contends the legislature intended to distinguish between the rights of applicants for agricultural or grazing leases and the rights of applicants for mineral leases.
Pursuant to mandate embodied in Arizona Constitution, Article 10, § 3, A.R.S. the Arizona Legislature adopted in 1915 a land code providing for the leasing of state lands, Ariz.Sess.Laws 2d Spec.Sess. 1915, ch. 5. The bulk of these provisions were couched in general terms, whereas Sec. 38 dealt specifically with mining claims. Among other things, the generally worded provisions allowed the Commission to reject all bids submitted to him in the event several applicants applied to lease the same land (Sec. 31), and provided for a “preferred right of renewal” of the lease if the Commissioner deemed the continued leasing to be in the best interests of the state (Sec. 37). These sections provided the basis for the decision in Campbell v. Caldwell,
When a statute uses words whose meaning has become well-known and well-settled under judicial decision, it will be presumed that the legislature used such words in the sense justified by long judicial sanction. McDonald v. United States,
Inasmuch as the Commissioner may exercise discretion in refusing to issue a mineral lease, it becomes necessary to consider the second proposition originally posed.
Appellant contends upon a trial de novo the superior court may make independent findings of fact as to the existence of a valuable mineral deposit, whether the claim has been properly located and whether the required discovery work has been performed, but may not substitute its discretion for that of the Commissioner as to whether the best interests of the state will be subserved by issuance of the mineral lease; such discretion being revicwable only for abuse thereof. Appellee contends the superior court assumes the position of the Commissioner in all respects upon a trial de novo.
Earlier statements by the Court in Manning v. Perry,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. A provision making tile issuance of an original mineral lease mandatory under certain circumstances lias been added to the mining laws since the initiation of this suit. A.R.S. § 27-254.
