LeClair v. Hawley

102 P. 853, 18 Wyo. 23, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 22
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 8, 1909
DocketNo. 578
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 102 P. 853 (LeClair v. Hawley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LeClair v. Hawley, 102 P. 853, 18 Wyo. 23, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 22 (Wyo. 1909).

Opinion

Potter, Chief Justice.

This is a suit brought by the plaintiff in error in the District Court in Fremont County to recover possession of certain mining ground, and for an injunction to restrain the defendants from further interfering with the premises, and from filing or recording any instruments of writing affecting the title to the same. The petition also asks for damages and that the plaintiff’s title to the lands in controversy be quieted in him as against any claim as[28]*28serted by the defendants or either of them. The several tracts of land in controversy are claimed by the plaintiff and defendants under conflicting mining locations, and are situated in the district or territory which, as a part of the Shoshone Indian Reservation, was ceded to the United States by an agreement with the Indians, ratified and amended by an Act of Congress approved March 3, 1905. The petition contains four causes of action, each alleging the location of a mining claim by the plaintiff on October 15, 1906, and that on October 24, 1906, the defendants seized possession of the premises included in said claim, and then and since excluded the plaintiff therefrom. The defendants by their answer alleged the location of their several mining claims on October 14, 1906, with the exception of one claim, which is alleged to have been located on October 15, 1906. The case was tried to the court without-a jury, and judgment was rendered for the defendants. It was found and adjudged that the several defendants were the owners and entitled to possession of the claims which had been located by them, the temporary restraining order that had been issued was dissolved, and the defendants, were awarded their costs. The plaintiff filed a motion for new trial, which was overruled, and he brings the cause to this court on error.

The evidence sustains the allegations of the pleadings as to date of location of each of the mining claims involved, and it is conceded in the brief of counsel for plaintiff in error that the location by the defendants of their several claims was prior in point of time to plaintiff’s locations, and also that the lands in controversy are mineral lands, with well defined ledges of rock in place carrying minerals exposed on all the claims, and that the defendants made their discoveries, stakdd their claims, posted the notices, and performed all the necessary acts up to the time of the commencement of the suit. But it is contended that the defendants made their discoveries and located their claims in violation of the Act of Congress and the proclamation of the President opening the ceded [29]*29lands to settlement, entry, and location, and, for that reason, that the several locations of the defendants were and are void. As to all but one of the claims located by, the defendants, it is ■ contended that, when they were located, viz.: October 14, 1906, the lands were not subject, to location under the mineral land laws of the United, States; and, further, that the defendants were not em titled- to -make any of their- locations for the reason that they had unlawfully entered upon and occupied the lands included in one or more of their claims before the same were subject to location as, mineral, lands.

In the Act of Congress aforesaid ratifying and amending the agreement with the Indians by which that part of the reservation embracing the lands in controversy was ceded and relinquished to the United States, it is stated that the United States stipulates and agrees to dispose of the ceded lands, as therein provided, under the provisions of the homestead, townsite, coal and mineral land laws, or by sale for cash; and in section 2 of the act it is provided as follows: • .

“That the lands ceded to the United States under the said agreement shall be disposed of under the provisions of the homestead, townsite, coal and mineral land laws of the United States and shall be opened to settlement and entry by proclamation of the President of the United States on June fifteenth, nineteen hundred and six, which proclamation shall prescribe the manner in which these lands may be settled upon, occupied and entered by persons entitled to make entry thereof, and no person shall be permitted to settle upon, occupy, and enter said lands except as prescribed in said proclamation until after the expiration .of sixty days from the time when the same are opened to settlement and entry,” . * * * (33 U. S. Stat. at Large, 1016-1022.)

By public resolution of Congress approved March 28, 1906, the time for the opening of the ceded lands to public entry was extended to August 15, 1906, unless the President should determine upon an earlier date for said [30]*30opening. The proclamation, of the President was dated June 2, 1906, and declared that on and after the fifteenth day of August, nineteen hundred and six, in the manner prescribed in the proclamation, ■ and not otherwise, the ceded lands would be opened to settlement, entry and disposition under the general provisions of the homestead, ' townsite, coal and mineral land laws of the United States. The proclamation then proceeded to provide for a registration of persons qualified and desiring to enter, settle upon, or acquire title to any of said ceded lands under the homestead laws, to be followed by a public drawing commencing August 4, 1906, and continuing for the necessary period to complete the same, to determine the order in which “during the first sixty days following the opening” the registered applicants would be permitted to make homestead entry of the lands; and it was declared that applications for homestead entry “during the first sixty days following the opening” could be made only by registered applicants and in the order established by the drawing. Succeeding the statement of these preliminary regulations, provision was made for entries by the registered applicants as follows:

“Commencing August fifteenth, nineteen hundred and six, at nine o’clock a. m., the applications'of those persons drawing numbers 1 to 100, inclusive, entitling them to make homestead entries, must be presented at the land office at Lander, Wyoming, in the land district in which the said lands are situated and will be considered in their numerical order during the first day, and the applications of those drawing numbers 101 to 200, inclusive, entitling them to make homestead entries, must be presented and will be considered in their numerical order during the second day, and so on, Sundays excluded, at the-rate of 100 such applications per day until and including August twenty-fifth, nineteen hundred and six; on August twenty-seventh, nineteen hundred and six, such applications will be considered in like manner at the rate of 120 per day, Sundays ' excluded, until and including September sixth, nine[31]*31teen hundred and six; on and after September seventh, nineteen hundred and six, such applications will be considered at the rate of 140 per day, Sundays excluded, until and including September eighteenth] nineteen hundred and six; on and after September nineteenth, nineteen hundred and six, such applications will be considered at the rate of 160 per day, Sundays excluded, until and including September twenty-ninth, nineteen hundred and six; and. on and after October one, nineteen hundred and six, such applications will- be considered at the rate of 170 per day, Sundays excluded, until and including October thirteenth, nineteen hundred and six, the expiration of the sixty day period.” * * *

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
102 P. 853, 18 Wyo. 23, 1909 Wyo. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leclair-v-hawley-wyo-1909.