Cates v. Producers' & Consumers' Oil Co.

96 F. 7, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3206
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California
DecidedJune 12, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 96 F. 7 (Cates v. Producers' & Consumers' Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cates v. Producers' & Consumers' Oil Co., 96 F. 7, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3206 (circtsdca 1899).

Opinion

BOSS, Circuit Judge.

The case made by the bill in this suit is altogether different from that presented by the bill in the suit of Mining Co. v. Miller, 96 Fed. 1, the demurrer to which has just been sustained. In the present suit the bill alleges that the complainants, eight in number, and each, according to the averments oí the bill, a citizen of the United States, and of lawful age, having discovered valuable deposits of petroleum oil upon a certain quarter section of land within the Coalinga mining district, in Fresno county, Cal., associated themselves for the purpose of locating, claiming, holding, and working in common the said quarter section of land as a placer mining claim, and accordingly did on January 1, 1893, distinctly mark the said claim on the ground, with monuments of stone placed at each of the four corners of the location, with stakes and monuments between the corners at points of prominence, and in such manner that the boundaries thereof were distinctly marked on the ground, and that the said claim was thus located by them with reference to the monuments and stakes, as well as with reference to the permanent monuments that had been established by the government in its previous survey of the land; that at the same time the complainants, as such locators, posted upon the claim a notice of [8]*8its location, signed by them, and which contained the date of location, a description of the claim by reference to the monuments and by reference to its government subdivision, and designated it the “Anderson Placer Mining Claim,” which notice was on the 1st day of January, 1893, duly filed and recorded in the office of the mining district in accordance with the rules and regulations thereof, and in all respects as required by the laws of the United States; that on December 29, 1894, in accordance with the requirements of the act of congress of July 18, 1894, providing for the suspension of assessment work upon mining claims for that year, the said locators caused a notice under oath to be filed and recorded in the office of the miffing district, describing the said mining claim, and stating that the locators claimed it, and intended in good faith to hold and work the said claim; that during the year 1895 the complainants, as such association, commenced to work upon and improve the claim, and, because there was no water thereon for. the necessary use of engines and machinery, they in that year caused a water pipe to be laid from an existing and. adjacent source of water supply to, and to b£ constructed upon, their said claim, at an expense of more than $100, for the purpose of working the claim by the construction of oil wells, the construction of which pipe line was necessary for its working and development; that such work and labor thereon exceeded in cost the sum of $100, and that due proof thereof was made under oath, and recorded in the office of the county recorder of the county in which the land is situated, in accordance with the laws of the United States and of the state of California; that thereafter, and while the complainants were in the' exclusive and peaceable possession and ownership of the said mining claim, to wit, in July, 1895, Frank Barrett, I. L. McLean, Hart H. Barrett, K. W. Brown, J. J. Bright, J. A. McGlurg, Sr., Julia Barrett, and A. Barieau, acting for and in behalf of the said Frank Barrett and J. A. McClurg, and not otherwise, well knowing the right of the complainants in the premises, unlawfully and with force and violence entered upon the said mining claim, and, well knowing that the same was not open to exploration, location, or claim as mining ground, did post a pretended notice of location, claiming the same as the “Princess Petroleum Placer Miffing Claim,” and that neither the said locators nor their assigns, nor any other person or persons, caused the said notice to be filed or recorded in the office of the mining district within which the land is situated, or as required by the rules and regulations thereof; that in January, 1896, and in pursuance of said pretended location of 1895, and not otherwise, and while claiming possession under the said illegal and violent entry as aforesaid, the defendants and their grantors did fraudulently and with force and violence break up, destroy, and carry away the pipe line constructed by the complainants, and with threats of bodily injury and violence ever thereafter prevented the complainants from entering upon, working, or improving the said claim; that by the act of congress approved February 11,. 1897 (29 Stat. 526), the United States recognized, approved, and confirmed the location, claim, and right of the complainants to the said mining claim; that in the [9]*9year 1895 the said locators of the 1895 location conveyed all of their interest in the claim to the defendant the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company; that on the 15th day of ‘November, 189(5, that company executed a pretended lease of the premises to J. A. Ghanslor and Henderson Hayward, by the terms of which lease the lessor undertook to authorize the lessees to construct and operate certain oil -wells upon said land for a royalty of one-tenth of all the oil produced therefrom; that on April 20, 1897, Ohanslor and Hayward transferred all their interest in the lease to the defendant Coalinga Oil Company; that the defendant Coalinga Oil Company claims some interest in the premises by virtue of that lease, or a renewal thereof, the nature of which is not known to the complainants; that since the ñrst of the year 189(5, to the present time, the defendants have continued to construct and to operate oil wells upon the said quarter section of land, and have extracted therefrom and sold during that period an amount of oil of the value of more than $10,000, and are still continuing to operate wells now constructed by them, and to construct other wells, and, unless enjoined by this court, will extract from the land all the petroleum and mineral oils therein, to the great and irreparable injury of the complainants; that on the 10th day of January, 1898, the defendant the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company, and its officers and agents, combined and conspired together, and with divers other persons to complainants unknown, to illegally and fraudulently procure from the United States a patent to the said quarter section of land, to be issued to the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company, in violation of the rights of the complainants, such patent to be covertly obtained, without the complainants receiving any knowledge thereof, and without their having an opportunity to be heard before the United States land office or to contest the issuance of such patent; that the Producers’ & Consumers’ Oil Company and its co-conspirators, without complying with the laws of the United States, and without taking the necessary jurisdictional steps therefor, did procure from the officers of the interior department of the United States a patent for the land, in due form, to the Producers’ &

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 F. 7, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cates-v-producers-consumers-oil-co-circtsdca-1899.