Cameron v. Bass

168 P. 645, 19 Ariz. 246, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 90
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1917
DocketCivil No. 1534
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 168 P. 645 (Cameron v. Bass) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron v. Bass, 168 P. 645, 19 Ariz. 246, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 90 (Ark. 1917).

Opinion

CUNNINGHAM, J.

(After Stating the Facts as Above).— Plaintiff’s right to a restraining order against one about to erect a building and threatening to exercise other acts of ownership over land would depend upon the fact whether the plaintiff had the exclusive right of possession of the land affected by the defendant’s alleged acts and threatened acts. This is elementary, and certainly needs no citation of authorities in support of the proposition.

The plaintiff bases his exclusive right of possession upon the validity of the location of the Cape Horn mining claim initiated by him on the tenth day of April, 1902. His complaint sets forth the acts of location performed by him beginning with said tenth day of April, by the discovery of mineral thereon and thereafter the other necessary acts of maintaining the boundaries of the claim on the ground, the posting and recording of the location notice, sinking of the discovery shaft, etc. The plaintiff showing his right to continue in the possession of a valid mining claim alleged that every year since the date of said location to the year in which the action was commenced he performed the necessary amount of the required annual work and labor thereon; that he performed at least $100 worth of work and improvements upon said claim each of said years, including the year 1912. The facts therein set forth are sufficient to show prima facie a right in the plaintiff to the exclusive possession of the Cape Horn lode claim.

[249]*249The defendant controverts the discovery of mineral within the boundaries of the said location, and alleges that the lands embraced within such location are nonmineral in character, and were not subject to location as a mining claim at any time, and that the United States general land office has so determined the character of such land as nonmineral. The defendant thereupon disputes the plaintiff’s exclusive right to the possession of the said portion of the surface of such location claimed by defendant, while admitting all of the facts alleged in the complaint except plaintiff’s exclusive right to the possession, and pleads the determination of the said land office as an estoppel in bar of plaintiff’s said right.

The facts set forth in the answer as conferring jurisdiction upon the general land office to determine the mineral character of such mining claim are briefly as follows: That on the twenty-fourth day of May, 1906, the plaintiff filed his application for a mineral patent for said claim in the local land office; that on the eleventh day of February, 1909, the Secretary of the Interior of the United States rejected the said application for patent, and denied the right of the said applicant, plaintiff, to the said premises; and that thereafter, on April 3, 1912, the commissioner of the general land office held said decision final.

Of course, the matter of estoppel introduced into the case by the defendant’s answer is new matter requiring a reply as such, else the facts well pleaded, setting up such new matter, are deemed admitted as true. The plaintiff has not denied the alleged decision of the Secretary of the Interior, but attempts to avoid the force of such decision: First, because the department is without jurisdiction to determine plaintiff’s right of possession; second, because in a certain action in the courts, wherein the plaintiff’s right to possession of said mining claim was involved, the court determined that plaintiff possessed the full legal right to occupy all of the ground embraced within the said location except the railroad right of way initiated by the adverse party through its predecessors in title at a time prior to the date upon which plaintiff initiated his said rights by mineral location. In other words, in the first place, the appellant does not deny the fact of an adverse decision by the general land office, but he denies the legal effect of that decision ; in the second place, he does not plead [250]*250an adjudication of the fact by a local court, but offers proof of an adjudication by such court in his favor establishing his exclusive right to the possession of the land in suit here.

In the ease of Grand Canyon Ry. Co. v. Ralph H. Cameron, decided February 11, 1909, pleaded by the defendant in estoppel, the department had before it the question of the character of the land embraced in the Cape Horn lode claim. Having considered the evidence and reviewed the authorities, Secretary Garfield said: “Upon the entire record, viewed and interpreted in the light of the leading authorities on the subject, the department is clearly of the opinion that the land is not shown to possess such mineral character and values as to justify the land department in awarding the desired patent.”

After noticing the fact of the establishing of the national monument and the withdrawal of the lands therein embraced, the Secretary says: “It is the further result of the evidence, and the department holds, that the several mining locations, with the apparent exception of the Magician lode claim, do not stand upon such disclosures or indications of valuable mineral in rock in place therein, prior to the establishment of the national monument and the withdrawal of the lands therein embraced, as to bring them within the saving clause of the executive order. The right of Cameron to continue possession or exploration of those claims is hereby denied, and the land covered thereby is declared to be and remain part of the Grand Canyon national monument, as if such locations had not been attempted.”

In the same case the appellant here, and applicant for patent therein, objected to the land office going into an investigation and a hearing urging as one of his grounds of objection “that in an action to quiet title, a final judgment in favor of Cameron had been rendered in a suit involving all the matters now at issue before the land department, which decision and judgment of the court, it was asserted, is binding upon the department.” The Secretary said: “The above objections are not well taken. The company’s so-called ‘adverse claim’ was dismissed, and the pendency of the company’s suit presented no bar to the hearing. The findings and judgment of the court in Cameron’s suit to quiet title as against the company are not binding upon the land department; that action not being an adverse suit.”

[251]*251Hence the mineral character of the land embraced within the Cape Horn lode claim was a matter essential to be determined in the proceeding before the department. That matter was inquired into, evidence pro and com, was offered, received and considered. ’ The question of fact of the mineral character of the claim was determined after a full, fair, and comprehensive trial, and on conflicting evidence the land department finally determined the essential fact so under consideration, and for all time and all purposes that determination stands as an unimpeachable record of the actual character of the land at the time the appellant commenced his mineral location, called the Cape Horn, and at all times up to and including the date of appellant’s application for patent. Unless the land department does not possess the power to determine the fact of the character of public lands, the determination reached in the patent proceeding is binding on the world. If the land department possesses the jurisdiction to inquire into and determine the fact, then its determination is conclusive, in the absence of mistake, accident, imposition, or fraud.

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Related

Cracchiolo v. State
660 P.2d 494 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1983)
Conway v. Fabian
89 P.2d 1022 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
Stapley v. Stapley
242 P. 1005 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1926)
Cameron v. United States
250 F. 943 (Ninth Circuit, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P. 645, 19 Ariz. 246, 1917 Ariz. LEXIS 90, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-bass-ariz-1917.