Moore v. Smaw

17 Cal. 199
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1861
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 17 Cal. 199 (Moore v. Smaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Smaw, 17 Cal. 199 (Cal. 1861).

Opinions

Field, C. J. delivered the opinion of the Court

Cope, J. concurring.

The records in these cases present for consideration the question whether a patent of the United States for land in California, issued upon a confirmation of a claim held under a grant of the former Mexican Government, invests the patentee with the ownership of the precious metals Avhich the land may contain. In the first case the complaint alleges that in March, 1860, the plaintiff was seized in fee and possessed of a tract of mineral land situated in Butte county, by virtue of a grant issued by Pio Pico, Governor of California, to Dionisio and Maximo Fernandez, on the twelfth of June, 1846, and a patent of the United States, issued on the fourteenth of October, 1857, pursuant to the Act of Congress of March 3d, 1851, for the settlement of private land claims in California; and that whilst thus seized the defendant entered upon the premises, and extracted and removed from the same large quantities of gold, of the value of four hundred dollars, “ which gold Avas a part and parcel of the said premises, and as such, Avas and is the property ” of the plaintiff; and concludes Avith a demand for damages to the amount of the alleged value of the gold thus extracted and removed. To the complaint the defendant demurred, upon various grounds, the substance of Avhich is, that the title of the plaintiff, as disclosed therein, was of such a character as to vest in him only the OAvnership of the soil, Avithout any interest in the minerals of gold and silver Avhich it contained.

In the second case the complaint alleges, that on the nineteenth of February, 1856, the plaintiff Avas seized in fee and possessed of certain premises situated in Mariposa county, and has been thus [211]*211seized and possessed ever since; that the premises contain large and valuable veins and mines of gold and gold-bearing quartz ; that in November, 1860, the defendant entered upon the premises and extracted from the soil thereof five pounds of gold and ten tons of gold-bearing quartz, of the value of $2,000, then and ever since the property of the plaintiff, and removed the same and converted them to his own use ; that' the plaintiff has demanded of the defendant the delivery of this property, which is refused, and that the defendant still unjustly detains the same ; and concludes with a demand of judgment for its possession, or for its value in case a delivery cannot be had.

The answer of the defendant admits the several allegations of the complaint, except as to the ownership of the plaintiff of the gold and gold-bearing quartz; and avers, that though the plaintiff is seized in fee of the premises, he has not now and never has had any ownership of, or property or interest in the gold or gold-bearing quartz contained in the soil thereof; and in the first count that they are “ the absolute and exclusive property of the State of California ; ” and in the second count that they are in like manner “ the absolute and exclusive property of the United States.”

The case was presented to the Court below upon an agreed statement of facts, and appears to be an amicable suit for the purpose of determining the question whether the precious metals passed to Fremont with the land in which they are contained under the patent of the United States. The agreed statement relates principally to the grant to Alvarado, under which Fremont claimed the land in Mariposa, the confirmation of his claim, and the proceedings following such confirmation, and the patent issued to him. The grant was the subject of elaborate consideration by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Fremont v. The United States, (17 How. 542) and in the report of the case it is set forth at length, together with the petition upon which it was made. It is sufficient for the present case to state, that the grant was issued to Alvarado in 1844 by Micheltorena, the then Governor of California; that it was of a tract of land known as Las Mariposas,” to the extent of ten square leagues; that Alvarado conveyed his interest in the tract to Fremont in 1847; that the validity of the grant was determined [212]*212by the Supreme Court in December, 1854, and in pursuance of the mandate of that Court, a final decree of confirmation was entered by the District Court in June, 1855 ; that in July following the ten leagues were surveyed and segregated from the general tract embraced within the exterior boundaries designated in the grant, under the direction of the Surveyor General of the United States for California ; that the survey was subsequently approved by that officer, and that upon the survey and decree of confirmation a patent was issued by the United States on the nineteenth of February, 1856, signed by the President and countersigned by the acting Recorder of the General Land office at Washington, and bearing the seal of that office. The patent refers to the grant, and the proceedings taken for the confirmation of the claim of Fremont thereunder, the judgment of the Supreme Court, and the final decree of the District Court, the survey in pursuance thereof and its approval, and concludes with the following granting clause: “ That the United States of America, in consideration of the premises and pursuant to the provisions of the Act of Congress, aforesaid, of the third of March, 1851, have given and granted, and by these presents do give and grant unto the said John C. Fremont, as alienee of Juan B. Alvarado, and to his heirs, the tract of land embraced and described in the foregoing survey, to have and to hold the said tract, with the appurtenances, unto the said John C. Fremont, as alienee of the said Juan B. Alvarado, and to his heirs and assigns forever.” This patent embraces the premises described in the complaint, from which the gold and gold-bearing quartz in controversy were extracted and removed. All claim for damages for the entry upon the premises and the disturbance of the soil are expressly waived, and the claim of the plaintiff and the defense of the defendant both made to rest exclusively upon the question, whether the plaintiff has a right of property in the gold and gold-bearing quartz for the recovery of which the action is brought.

At the time the grants to the Fernandez and to Alvarado were issued, it was the established doctrine of the Mexican law that all mines of gold and silver in the country, though found in the lands of private individuals, were the property of the nation. No inter[213]*213est in the minerals passed by a grant from the Government of the land in which they were contained, without express words designating them. By the ordinary grant of land, only an interest in the surface or-soil, distinct from the property in the minerals, was transferred. The Mexican law on this subject was derived from the Spanish law, differing from it only in the particulars occasioned by the change in the Government of Mexico following the separation of the latter country from the Spanish monarchy. Under Spain, the mines constituted the property of the crown, as part of the royal patrimony. It was so declared in various laws at an ancient period. By a law of the Partidas, which were promulgated as early as 1343, it was declared that the mines were so vested in the King that they did not pass in his grant of the land, though not excepted in terms. (Law 5, tit. 15. P. 2.) By a law of Alphonzo XI, all mines of silver and gold, and of other metals, and the produce of the same, were declared to be the-property of the crown, and no one was allowed to work them, except by special license or grant, or unless authorized by immemorial prescription.

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Bluebook (online)
17 Cal. 199, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-smaw-cal-1861.