Duncan v. Eagle Rock Gold Mining & Reduction Co.

111 P. 588, 48 Colo. 569, 1910 Colo. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 4, 1910
Docket5776
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 P. 588 (Duncan v. Eagle Rock Gold Mining & Reduction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duncan v. Eagle Rock Gold Mining & Reduction Co., 111 P. 588, 48 Colo. 569, 1910 Colo. LEXIS 323 (Colo. 1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court:

John T. Duncan made application through the proper United States land office for patent to certain lode mining claims designated as Survey Lot No. 17,-375, situate in Sugar Loaf Mining District, Boulder County. ,The Eagle Rock Gold Mining and Reduction Company filed an adverse, and thereafter, within the time limited by law this suit, in support thereof, claiming of Duncan’s lodes substantially all of the Black Prince, Black Prince No. 1 and Black Prince No. 2, located in 1904, as portions of its Ellmettie and Grace Lodes, located in 1898; Oro and Anna G., located in 1899; Everett, Washington and Monarch, located in 1900, and demanding damages, reasonable attorney’s fees, and expenditures in support of the adverse. By the complaint the legal right to occupy and possess said premises, and to the possession thereof was claimed, “by virtue of full compliance with the local laws and rules of miners of said mining district, the laws of the United States and of the State of Colorado, by preemption and purchase, and by actual possession as lode mining claims located on the public domain of the United States.”

*571 Duncan, defendant below, denied specifically the allegations of the complaint, and alleged title in himself to the territory in question. The replication traversed the allegations of'the answer. Upon the issues so joined, trial was had, resulting- in a verdict for plaintiff, the appellee here, for possession of the territory in dispute, $225.00 expenses and counsel fees, in support of the adverse, and $700.00 damages. Motion for new trial interposed and overruled, judgment in accordance with verdict entered, and writ of restitution ordered. From the judgment, Duncan prosecutes this appeal, and assigns numerous errors, only a few of which we deem it necessary to consider.

Appellee, to prove its corporate existence and its citizenship, introduced in evidence a certified copy of its articles of incorporation showing that it was' duly organized and existing, as a corporation, under and by virtue of the laws of the state of Colorado. No other proof of the citizenship of its stockholders was made, and it is contended that citizenship in that respect was not established. It appears from Jackson v. The White Cloud Gold Mining and Milling Co., 36 Colo. 122, that the proof, upon the matter in question, was sufficient.

Appellee acquired some of its claims by purchase, and the others by location. Of the former were the Ellmettie and the Grace. The Ellmettie location certificate was filed by F. J. Rogers and "William Capp, and an aifiended certificate thereof by William and M. L. Capp. The Grace location certificate was filed by William Capp. There was no evidence that Rogers, or either of the Capps, at the time of making the respective locations, or the conveyance of the claims to appellee, were citizens, or had declared their intention of becoming citizens, of the United States. Appellant contends that the. *572 appellee could not sustain its adverse as to- these two claims, because it failed to prove the citizenship of the original locators, and in support of his contention cites several authorities.

In Lee v. Justice Mining Co., 2 Col. App. 112,. after announcing the. statutory rule that none but citizens of the United States, and those who have' declared their intention to become such, can acquire any right to- public mineral lands, it is held that an alien cannot acquire such an interest in a mining claim .upon the public domain, by location, as can be sold, and upon which a subsequent title can be predicated. That case was carried to this court, however, and in 21 Colo. 260 was overruled, it there being held that the court of appeals was in error in assuming that the record in the case presented a question as to the right of an alien to acquire by location a transferable interest in a mining claim, as that question could not, under the facts there presented, be raised. •

In Thomas v. Chisholm, 13 Colo. 105, the title to a mining claim, based upon a prior location made by one Joseph Hudson and the Kansas City Mining and Smelting Company, a corporation, and by them assigned or conveyed to Chisholm, the defendant, was under consideration in an adverse suit, and it was expressly held necessary to allege and prove the citizenship of the original locator or locators, as well as the citizenship of the successful party to the action.

Appellee contends, notwithstanding these decisions, that the citizenship of the original locator is' material only where he continues to be the claimant-to the time of the institution, and determination, of' an adverse suit. It must be conceded that many authorities so- hold. Such is the doctrine announced in Morrison’s Mining Eights (12th ed.), p. 286; Lind *573 ley on Mines, '§ 233, and other authorities. We are constrained, however, to adhere to the doctrine, heretofore announced by this court, until there is a specific holding to the contrary by the United States Supreme Court. Appellee insists that such pronouncement has already been made by that tribunal, and that the doctrine of Thomas v. Chisholm, supra, has been overturned in McKinley Creek M. Co. v. Alaska M. Co., 183 U. S. 563, 571, and Manuel v. Wulff, 152 U. S. 505.

We are of the opinion that neither of the cases go to the extent claimed by appellee. Manuel v. Wulff holds that a deed of a mining claim, by a qualified locator, to an alien, operates as a transfer of the claim to the grantee, subject to question in regard to his citizenship by the government only, and if such alien becomes a citizen, or declares his intention to become such at any time before judgment in a contest concerning such mining claim, the alien’s disability to take title is thereby removed. In that case, on page 511, it is said: “We are of opinion on this record that, as Alfred Manuel (the original locator) was a citizen, if his location were valid, his claim passed-to his grantee, not by operation of law, but by virtue of his conveyance, and that the incapacity of the latter to take and hold by reason of alienage was, under the circumstances, open to question by the government only. Inasmuch as this proceeding was based upon the adverse claim of Wulff. to the application of Moses Manuel for a patent, the objection of alienage was properly made, but this was as in right and on behalf of the government, and naturalization removed the infirmity before judgment was rendered. * * * And as Moses Manuel was the grantee of a qualified locator, and became naturalized before the order, we conclude that there was error in the direction of a nonsuit. ’ ’

*574 McKinley Creek Mining Co. v. Alaska Mining Co., supra, does not appear to be an adverse, but rather a controversy in which the Federal government was neither directly nor indirectly interested. After reciting that, in Manuel v. Wulff, supra,

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Bluebook (online)
111 P. 588, 48 Colo. 569, 1910 Colo. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duncan-v-eagle-rock-gold-mining-reduction-co-colo-1910.