Cameron v. Weedin

226 F. 44, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1132
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedSeptember 4, 1915
DocketNo. E-9
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 226 F. 44 (Cameron v. Weedin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cameron v. Weedin, 226 F. 44, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1132 (D. Ariz. 1915).

Opinion

S AWTELLE, District Judge.

The facts as alleged in the bill are briefly as follows: That the plaintiff, Ralph H. Cameron, and other persons whose names are not disclosed, are the owners of certain nupatented mining claims mentioned in the complaint, which are located and held under the mineral laws of the United States and the state of Arizona. That neither said Cameron, nor any of his predecessors in interest, nor co-owners in said claims have ever applied for patents for any of said claims, or invoked the jurisdiction of the Interior Department for the purpose of acquiring title to the ground embraced within the limits of said claims. That there are now pending in the Department of the Interior of the United States, the General Land Office of the United States, and the United States land office at Phoenix, Ariz., certain proceedings or actions set out and described by title in said complaint, and that in each of said actions the said Cameron, plaintiff herein, is made one of the parties defendant, and the United States of America is the plaintiff or contestant. That in each of said proceedings or actions the matters sought to be litigated and determined are in substance: (1) That the land embraced within (he boundaries of each of said claims is nonmineral in character ; (2) that no discovery of a mineral-bearing vein has been made with reference to the lode and placer locations, and that no discovery of mineral of value has been made in the placer claims; and (3) that none of the claims are made in good faith for mineral purposes, but are speculative and to be used in connection with trade and business. That the defendants in this complaint, Weedin and Birdno, are, respectively, the duly appointed and acting register and receiver of the said United States land office at Phoenix.

The complaint further alleges that the said Cameron and his co-owners by operation of law obtained a vested right and property in and to all of the said claims, and of the ground embraced within their boundaries; that said alleged vested right gives to said Cameron and his co-owners a right of possession to all of said ground, and is, in effect, a grant of such right against the United States of America and all other parties; that in each of the said proceedings before the said [46]*46register and receiver at Phoenix the defendants in said proceedings, including Cameron, the plaintiff herein, filed pleas to the jurisdiction of the defendant officers, the General Land Office, and the Secretary of the Interior; that in the hearing of said proceedings held before said register and receiver on August 10, 1915, against the protest of all parties defendant, the said officers, defendants herein, overruled and denied said pleas to the jurisdiction, and that thereupon said register and receiver proceeded and are continuing to proceed with the hearings in said proceedings, over and against the protest of said Cameron and his codefendants therein; that, as a basis of said protest and plea to the jurisdiction in said proceedings, Cameron and his codefend-ants contended,' and now contend, that this court is vested with the sole and exclusive jurisdiction, right, power, and authority to hear and determine all of the charges made in said proceedings; that the action of said register and receiver in so proceeding with the hearings is, in effect, an invasion of the general jurisdiction of this court, and an attempt to take, without due process of law, and in violation of the constitutional law of the land, the property described by title in the complaint as belonging to said Cameron and his codefendants; and that the said register and receiver, defendants herein, threaten to proceed, and aré now proceeding, and will continue to proceed, with the said hearings, unless restrained by this court from so doing, to the great and irreparable damage' and injury of Cameron and his co-defendants, in that the register and receiver are taking testimony offered by the United States, and have required and are requiring the said Cameron and his codefendants, at great expense, to bring witnesses from afar, and to submit testimony to oppose the position of the United States as outlined in said charges so pending in said Phcenix land office, or, if the said Cameron and his codefendants do not so present such testimony, that they will waive right to introduce same and thereby be finally and irrevocably injured, not only in their defense in said proceedings, but in the expenditure of large sums of money, in amount not. less than $5,000.

The prayer is that the defendants herein be restrained from further proceedings in the causes and actions so pending before them; that a preliminary injunction issue restraining said defendant officers from in any way proceeding with said causes and actions until the further order of this court;' that upon final hearing of the action said defendant officers be perpetually enjoined from in any way proceeding with said causes or actions; and that the plaintiff have such further relief as the court may deem proper in the premises.

[1] A motion is made to> dismiss'on the ground, among others, that the suit does not involve a controversy properly within the jurisdiction of the court, and also on the ground that the title to the property in question is still in the United States, and that the courts are therefore without jurisdiction to interfere. In support of this contention defendants have filed herein an affidavit of John J. Birdno, one of the defendants, from which it appears that the proceedings mentioned in plaintiff’s bill as pending in the said United States land office at Phcenix were begun and are being conducted by defendants pursuant to written directions from the Commissioner of the General Lana [47]*47Office, atid that the directions given them by said Commissioner wfere given by him in compliance with personal directions of the Secretary of the interior. Plaintiff claims that the order of the Commissioner of the General Rand Office was wrong, that there is no law under which the proceedings now pending before the register and receiver can he initiated and maintained lawfully, that the local land office lias no jurisdiction of such proceedings, that they are transcending their authority and assuming powers which do not belong to them, and that on these grounds plaintiff is entitled to relief in equity.

The first question, therefore, to be considered, is whether this court has jurisdiction of the cause. It seems to me that this question must be answered in the negative. In the recent case of Plested v. Abbey, 228 U. S. 42, 33 Sup. Ct. 503, 57 L. Ed. 724, which was a suit against the register and receiver of the local land office of the United States at Pueblo, Colo., and in which plaintiffs sought injunctive relief against said land officers, restraining them from carrying out the orders of the Secretary of the Interior and the Commissioner of the General Rand Office, as in the case at bar, it was strenuously insisted that the register and receiver were acting beyond and contrary to the law, and that, being outside of the pale of the law, they were not entitled to its protection, even though the rule exists that they should not he interfered with by the courts when exercising their official functions within 1'lie law. In that case the Circuit Court entered a decree sustaining a demurrer to the bill and dismissing the cause for want of jurisdiction; the court stating that this was done- -

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Related

Cameron v. Bass
168 P. 645 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 F. 44, 1915 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cameron-v-weedin-azd-1915.