Moore v. Steelsmith

1 Alaska 121
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedMarch 14, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1 Alaska 121 (Moore v. Steelsmith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moore v. Steelsmith, 1 Alaska 121 (D. Alaska 1901).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The plaintiff in this case seeks-to recover from the defendants certain mining lands situate on Jack Wade creek, in the District of Alaska, and in his-complaint alleges that on the 18th day of June, 1898, plaintiff,. [123]*123after a discovery of gold thereon, did locate and stake a mining claim upon said Jack Wade creek, in said Jack Wade Creek mining district, which said claim was then called, numbered and known as “Claim No. 5 Above Discovery,” and which extended 1,320 feet up and down stream by 660 feet wide; that said location was made by duly marking and staking the boundaries of said claim as required by law and the rules and regulations of said mining district, and by posting notice on said claim to the effect that the claim had been so located, which notice was in writing, and contained the name of plaintiff as locator, the date of location, and described the claim so that its boundaries could be readily traced. The defendants deny these several allegations, and allege a location on the 29th of September, 1898, of the same lands, after having made a discovery of gold, etc. Briefly stated, the question litigated, is, which of the parties, plaintiff or defendants, has the better right to the ground in controversy? The case was tried at Skagway, Alaska, before a jury, beginning on the 12th of July, 1900, and, after the testimony was all in, the court instructed the jury as follows:

“The plaintiff in this ease claims that, after the discovery of aurif-erous gravel on Jack Wade creek, he did, on or about the 18th day of June, 1898, locate a placer mining claim thereon of twenty acres, which said claim was called, numbered, and known as ‘Claim No. 0 Above Discovery,’ 1,320 feet up and down the stream and 660 feet wide, 330 feet on each side of the center stake, by duly marking said location on the ground so that the boundaries thereof might be readily traced on the ground.
“The defendants deny these allegations, and thereby put the plaintiff to proof.
“The defendants allege that Steelsmith and McDonald thereafter, on or about the 29th day of September, 1898, after a discovery of gold thereon, located practically the same land in two different claims or parts of claims. That they located their said claims in accordance with the laws of the United States, one of which was No. 5 Above Discovery, 1,320 feet in length and 660 feet in width. That [124]*124said location was duly marked on the ground hy stakes or monuments, so that the boundaries thereof could he readily traced on the ground. Defendants further allege that, if the plaintiff ever had a valid location of said claim, that he abandoned the same, which said abandonment has continued up to the present time. This is denied by plaintiff’s reply.
“You have this issue to try in this case, gentlemen: If the plaintiff, after the discovery of auriferous gravel on said claim, made a lawful location thereon, and has since done the necessary representation work prior to December 31, 1899, he is entitled to a verdict in this case at your hands. If, on the other hand, he did not make such discovery and legal location, then the defendants had a right to locate the same; and, if the defendants made a discovery and lawful location under the laws of the United States, under such conditions, they are entitled to a verdict.
“Let me say to you at this time that your oaths require you to take the law of this case from the court. If you will reflect for a moment, you will see how necessary this is. If I make mistakes in giving you the law, the attorneys, who are ever watchful of their clients' interests, will take timely exceptions, and my mistakes may be corrected by a higher and more efficient court. But should you undertake to decide the case upon some theory of the law existing alone in your own minds, neither court nor counsel can be advised of your conception of the law, and, should you err, the result of your action could not be remedied. You will perceive, therefore, how necessary it is, in the interest of justice, that you accept the law as given by the court, and be guided thereby in considering of your verdict
“Under the mining laws of the United States, if a citizen of the United States goes upon the unappropriated public mining lands of the United States, makes a discovery of gold therein in some appreciable amount, however small, and thereupon makes a location of a placer mining claim by so staking and marking the same that the boundaries of his claim may be readily traced upon the ground, that the amount of land so claimed does not exceed twenty acres, he thereby severs so much of said land as constitutes said mining location from the public mineral lands of the United States; and he has a right to hold and possess the mining location so made, as against all the world, except the United States. By such location, when lawfully made, the locator acquires a legal interest therein. [125]*125As long as the original locator does one hundred dollars’ worth of work on said mining claim, or puts one hundred dollars’ worth of improvements thereon, annually, the right to hold and possess said claim cannot toe successfully challenged by any one except the United States.
“The Congress of the United States has made ample provision toy law for the disposition of its mineral lands. Citizens of the United States, and those who have declared their intention to become such, may enter upon and explore such lands of the United States, for the purpose of finding mineral therein, such as gold, silver, and other precious metals. These laws are in force in the district and territory of Alaska, and we are to toe governed by them in the disposition of this case. Congress has dealt liberally by its citizens and those who have declared their intentions to become such, in authorizing them to go upon the public mineral lands, and by discovery and location of ground containing minerals, and authorizing them to acquire legal interests therein, which the law protects, and that may be possessed and conveyed as real property. The possessory right of the locator to the mineral lands of the United States, when a location thereof has been lawfully made, though the ultimate title remains in the United States, is as much property and under his control as if the fee thereof was vested in him, as long as he conforms to the laws of the United States and its requirements in the exercise of his posses-sory rights.
“As a condition precedent to the appropriation of the mineral lands of the United States by such person or persons as are lawfully entitled to make such appropriation, discovery of some of the precious metals therein is necessary. In order that you may determine, under the evidence in this ease, whether a discovery of any of the precious metals was made by the plaintiff before he made a location, if he did make one, it seems proper that the court should give some definition or explanation of the word ‘discovery’ as applicable to this case. What is meant by discovery as applied to quartz or lode claims has been frequently determined by the courts, and is easily understood.
“The Supreme Court of Idaho gave the following definition: ‘Under the requirements of the law, a valid location of a mining claim may be made whenever the prospector has discovered such indications of mineral that he is willing to spend his time and money in following with the expectation of finding ore; and a valid location of [126]

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Bluebook (online)
1 Alaska 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-steelsmith-akd-1901.