Dufresne v. Northern Light Mining Co.
Dufresne v. Northern Light Mining Co.
Opinion of the Court
It was in evidence that part of the Sidelius location of No. 1 below discovery was abandoned in August, 1901. The plaintiff contended at the trial that upon the abandonment of this part of the claim the part so abandoned became open to relocation, in accordance with the provisions of section 3334 of the Revised Statutes of the United States [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1426], and that it remained vacant and unoccupied ground subject to relocation until January 3, 1904, when by virtue of the location of that date by W. A. Black it became his property, and by a conveyance later from Black his interest therein passed to the plaintiff, Dufresne.
The’ defendants maintained, on the contrary, that the abandoned part of the Sidelius claim inured to the extent of the overlap of the Wismer location upon the abandoned part of the No. 1 below claim, to the benefit of the Wismer location, and became the property of the owners thereof, their assigns and successors in interest.
The defendants cited the opinion of the Supreme Court of the United States, decided May 29, 1905, in the case of Lavagnino v. Uhlig, 198 U. S. 443, 25 Sup. Ct. 716, 49 L. Ed. 1119, in support of this legal proposition. The doctrine of the decision was new, and seemed to be so at variance with the doctrine of Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279, 26 L. Ed. 735, as to over
The Lavagnino Case was begun in the District Court of Salt Lake County, Utah, in a proceeding started to adverse and defeat an application for a patent begun by Uhlig and maintained by Uhlig and McKernan. The decision was accepted as authority governing this case because of its facts being so nearly similar to the facts of this case, and because it was difficult to give any reason why the rules of law announced in the decision should not apply in an ordinary ejectment case, as in adversing proceeding. At the time the decision, being the latest deliverance of the Supreme Court on a state of facts substantially similar to the case on trial, seemed to compel this court to follow it.
Among the reasons for a new trial filed by the plaintiff was this: Error in law occurring at the trial, and excepted to by the.plaintiff at the time, and, particularly, errors of law contained in the instructions given by the court to the jury in said cause, which were excepted to by the plaintiff in the presence of the jury.
The particular instruction to which error is imputed is instruction No. 6. In that instruction the court, following the decision in Lavagnino v. Uhlig, said, in substance, that ' the jury found that the Sidelius location was lawfully made, and afterwards the Wismer location was made according to law, but that part of it was in conflict with a part of the Sidelius location, and afterwards, in August, 1901, the Sidelius location was abandoned, that the abandoned part of the Sidelius location in conflict with and overlapped by the Wismer location became upon its abandonment part and parcel of the Wismer location, inured to the benefit of said Wismer location, and became the property of the owners thereof, their assigns and successors in interest; in other words, the instruction given taught that, upon the abandonment of a senior location, the abandonment did not operate to open to relocation
It is needless to say that the decision in the case of Belk v. Meagher has been accepted by the courts and text-book writers as authority, within the limits of its facts, since its announcement in 1881. It is supported by a clear and able opinion by the then Chief Justice Waite, and is undoubtedly in the class of leading cases on the mining law of the United States. But for the appearance of the later and apparently conflicting decision, it would have been adopted by this court as the law governing the part of the two claims in conflict in the Dufresne Case now under consideration.
To what extent is, the later case of Lavagnino v. Uhlig an authority? And was its doctrine properly applied as the law of the present case? These questions properly come up for discussion in reaching a determination of the motion now before the court.
The controversy, of which the novel doctrine of the Supreme Court of the United States in the Lavagnino Case is the outcome, arose in proceedings in Utah begun by Lavagnino to defeat the application of Uhlig and McKernan for a patent. Uhlig and McKernan aimed to procure a patent for two claims, called the “Uhlig No. 1” and “Uhlig No. 2.” Lavagnino filed his adverse claim to a portion of each of said claims, basing his right to the possession of the disputed parts, primarily, upon a relocation of a claim which had nine years before been located as the “Levi P. Claim.” The annual labor upon the Levi P. had not been done for the year 1897, and the claim was relocated January 1, 1898, by J. Pew son Smith, Jr., upon the theory that the nonperformance of the annual labor had worked a forfeiture of the Levi P. Claim. He gave the claim
In considering the decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Lavagnino v. Uhlig et al., it must be kept in mind that the court was called upon to determine the rights of an applicant for a patent to mining land as against an adverse-claimant to the same, or part of the same, land. The true inquiry for the court was, what were the relative rights of the parties to the adverse proceedings as involved therein at the date of the filing of the adverse claim in the Land Department ? The decision is the result of the court’s construction of section 2326 of the Revised Statutes of the United States [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1430], apart from the construction of any other section of the mining laws. That section defines the procedure by which an adverse claimant of mining land may enter “a court of competent jurisdiction,” and set in motion its machinery “to determine the question of the right of possession,” raised by the conflicting allegations of the applicants for a patent and of the adverse claimant. It further declares the legal effect upon an adverse claimant of his failure to thus assert and maintain- his rights to the property in conflict. It creates no new rights; it simply announces how one asserting rights adverse to another may lose them by his failure or default to comply with the requirements of the section. The action of Lavagnino v. Uhlig et al. was brought in conformity to that section, and its object and aim was to settle the rights, in conflict between the contesting parties thereto only. True, the judgment rendered by the court would, by the implied terms of the statute, settle the rights of the applicant as against the whole world, if no other adverse proceedings were begun
“A location can only be made when the láw allows it to be done. Any attempt to go beyond that will be of no avail. Hence a relocation on lands actually covered at the time by another valid and subsisting location is void; and this not only against the prior locator, but all the world, because the law allows no such thing to be done. * * * A location to be effectual must be good .at the time it is made. * * * Congress has said in unmistakable language that what has once been located under the law shall not be relocated until the first location has expired.” Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 284, 285, 26 L. Ed. 735.
This law applies as well in the Ravagnino Case to the junior location as to the Smith or Ravagnino location.
In Lavagnino v. Uhlig, reported in 198 U. S. 456, 25 Sup. Ct. 720 (49 L. Ed. 1119), the court argues that, if the owners of the Uhlig claim had applied for a patent, and the owners of the Eevi P. had not adversed the application, upon the establishment of a prima facie right in the owners of the Uhlig claim an indisputable presumption would have arisen that no conflict claims existed to the premises described in the Uhlig location notice; and further argues that the same result would have arisen had the owner of the Eevi P. adversed the application for patent based upon the Uhlig locations, and then failed to prosecute, and thus waived such adverse claim. In both of these supposed instances the necessary consequence would have been a determination in favor of the applicant, so far as the rights of third persons were concerned, that the land was not unoccupied public land of the United States.
The last step in the court’s reasoning is that, since in these instances the land claimed in common would have to be declared under the statute not unoccupied public lands, a like result would arise (as the greater includes the lesser) from the forfeiture of the claim of the senior locator, because of the impossibility of the senior locator to successfully adverse after the forfeiture is complete.
In any view proper to be taken of that decision and case, however, I am of the opinion, for the reasons outlined herein, that the case is authority to be followed only in cases disclosing facts either the same as, or similar to, the facts therein. Its authority is limited in its range, and weakened by the fact that the points decided by the court on its way to the propositions at the last decided were not made the subject of argument at the hearing of the case; by the fact that no effort was made to show the want of harmony between the doctrine announced and the doctrine of Belk v. Meagher; because it stands upon a construction of one section of a general statute, rather than of the whole statute; and because the appellate court had other and more conclusive grounds upon which to have placed its decision of the case, and did not resort to them.
In following at the trial the apparent leading of the decision in the Lavagnino Case, and in instruction No. 6 adopting the main doctrine of that case as the law in part controlling the verdict of the jury, I am now convinced there was error, and a new trial is now ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DUFRESNE v. NORTHERN LIGHT MINING CO.
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