Keystone Manganese & Iron Co. v. Martin

132 U.S. 91, 10 S. Ct. 32, 33 L. Ed. 275, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1844
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 11, 1889
Docket51
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 132 U.S. 91 (Keystone Manganese & Iron Co. v. Martin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Keystone Manganese & Iron Co. v. Martin, 132 U.S. 91, 10 S. Ct. 32, 33 L. Ed. 275, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1844 (1889).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blatchford

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a suit in equity, brought in the Circuit Court- of the United States for the Eastern District of Arkansas, by Matt Martin against The Keystone Manganese and Iron Company.

The bill alleges that the plaintiff, owning a piece of land in Independence County, Arkansas, conveyed it, in June, 1853, with other lands, to one Smith and his heirs forever, subject to the condition that Martin retained to his heirs, representatives and assigns “ a perpetual and- unlimited right in fee to all the stones and minerals that may be in or upon said lands, and full and unquestioned power and right to enter said lands for the purpose of digging, quarrying and mining upon said lands, with full power and right of ingress and egress thereto and therefrom, and upon said lands to remain and erect buildings thereon, and to use such timber and other materials as may be convenient and proper for the excavation, preserva *92 tion, manufacture and removal of such stones and minerals and improvements as may be connected with the working of said stones and minerals, it being well understood by the parties hereto that the right of sale, and all else is hereby conveyed to said Thomas C. Smith, except the right to the stones and minerals on said lands, which, with all needful and proper rights and privileges to obtain, prepare for market ana remove the same, are expressly reserved from sale.” The deed was executed by Martin alone.

The bill further alleges that ever since said deed the plaintiff has been and now is in the possession of the mineral and ore in and upon the land; that there are large and valuable deposits of manganese therein; and- that the defendant, in December, 1885, unlawfully entered upon said mineral deposits and began to mine and remove therefrom the manganese, and had carried it away, to the value of more than $5000.' It prays for an injunction restraining the defendant from the commission of further trespasses during the pendency of the suit; that an account be had of the quantity and value of the ore taken by the defendant from the land; and that it be decreed to account to the plaintiff therefor, and be perpetually enjoined from further trespassing upon the mineral and ore in the land.

, The defendant put in an answer, setting up its right to mine and remove the manganese ore by. virtue of its having obtained such right, for a specified period of time, from persons who hail become the owners of the land through a sale of it> for the non-payment of taxes, and also setting up a statute of limitation.

After a replication, proofs were taken on both sides, and the Circuit Court decided in favor of the plaintiff upon the ground that, under'the laws of Arkansas in force at the time the taxes were assessed, for the non-payment of which the land was sold, it was necessary that the mine, having been separated from the surface soil, should be separately assessed, and it could .not be sold for taxes, except upon such an assessment ; a,nd that neither the mine, nor the mineral in it, was, in the present case, assessed or sold. The court made a decree *93 perpetually enjoining the defendant from entering upon or removing the mineral or*any part thereof from the land, and further ordering that an account be taken of the quantity and value of the mineral and- ore already removed by the defendant from the land, and that the defendant account to the plaintiff for its value, and appointing a master to take said account and to hear evidence and report the same to the court. From that decree the defendant has appealed to this court, and the case has been argued by the appellee on its merits, and submitted on a printed brief by the appellant.

We think that the decree is not a final decree, and that this court has no jurisdiction of the appeal. The decree is not final, because it does not dispose of the entire controversy between the parties. The bill prays only for an injunction and an account of the quantity and value of the ore taken from the land by the defendant. The injunction is granted, but the account remains to be taken. The case is- not one where nothing remains to be done by the court below except to execute ministerially its decree. In all cases like the one before us this court has uniformly held that the decree was not final and was not appealable.

The principal cases in which it has held that the decree was not appealable,- because not final, are the following; The Pal myra, 10 Wheat. 502; Perkins v. Fourniguet, 6 How. 206; Pulliam v. Christian, 6 How. 209; Barnard v. Gibson, 7 How. 650; Craighead v. Wilson, 18 How. 199; Beebe v. Russell, 19 How. 283; Humiston v. Stainthorp, 2 Wall. 106; Railroad, Co. v. Swasey, 23 Wall. 405 ; Bostwick v. Brinkerhoff, 106 U. S. 3; Grant v. Phœnix Ins. Co., 106 U. S. 429; Dainese v. Kendall, 119 U. S. 53; Parsons v. Robinson, 122 U. S. 112; while the decree has been held final, for the purposes of an appeal, in Ray v. Law, 3 Cranch, 179 ; Whiting v. Bank of the United States, 13 Pet. 6; Forgay v. Conrad, 6 How. 201; Bronson v. Railroad Co., 2 Black, 528; St. Louis Iron Mt. &c. Railroad v. Southern Express Co., 108 U. S. 24; Ex parte Norton, 108 U. S. 237; Winthrop Iron Co. v. Meeker, 109 U. S. 180.

In The Palmyra, a prize case, the captors had filed a libel in *94 the District Court, and that court had dismissed it, without costs and damages against the captors. The Circuit Court affirmed the decree of restitution, with costs ,and damages. The libellants having appealed to this court, the appeal was dismissed, on the ground that the decree of the Circuit Court was not final, Chief Justice Marshall saying : “ The damages remain undisposed of, and an appeal may still lie upon that part of the decree awarding damages. The whole' cause is not, therefore, finally determined in the Circuit Court; and we are of opinion that the cause cannot be. divided so as to bring up successively distinct parts of it.”

In Perkins v.

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Bluebook (online)
132 U.S. 91, 10 S. Ct. 32, 33 L. Ed. 275, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keystone-manganese-iron-co-v-martin-scotus-1889.