R. C. Buch v. Rogers C. B. Morton, as Secretary of the Interior

449 F.2d 600
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 29, 1971
Docket24608_1
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 449 F.2d 600 (R. C. Buch v. Rogers C. B. Morton, as Secretary of the Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. C. Buch v. Rogers C. B. Morton, as Secretary of the Interior, 449 F.2d 600 (9th Cir. 1971).

Opinion

BROWNING, Circuit Judge:

Appellee’s mining claim to a parcel of public domain land in San Bernardino County, California, was held invalid by the Secretary of Interior on the ground that when the claim was filed the land had been classified for disposition under the Recreation and Public Purposes Act of 1954, 43 U.S.C. §§ 869 to 869-4 (1964), 1 and, in consequence, was not *602 open to entry or location under the mining laws. R. C. Buch, 75 I.D. 140 (1968).

Appellee filed suit in the district court to review and set aside the Secretary’s decision. The district court granted summary judgment in his favor. Buch v. Hiekel, 298 F.Supp. 381 (C.D.Cal. 1969). The Secretary appeals. We reverse.

The facts are detailed in the reported decisions of the Secretary and the district court. The following summary will suffice for review.

On August 12, 1964, the land office manager of the Riverside District Land Office of the Bureau of Land Management filed a statement in the case file that described the land in question and stated that it was “classified as proper for lease and/or sale under the provisions of the Recreation and Public Purposes Act, for recreational purposes.” The statement was filed without public or other notice. It made no mention of segregation or withdrawal from entry. The action was noted on a supplemental plat filed with the appropriate plat survey but was not recorded on the tract books. No other action was taken at any time by any other officer of the Interior Department to classify, withdraw, reserve, or segregate the land.

On November 2, 1965, appellee filed notice of the location of his claim, subsequently amending the notice on November 3, 1966, and March 7, 1967. On April 12, 1966, the District Land Office declared appellee’s claim void ab initio because the parcel had been “segregated” and thereby “withdrawn” from mineral entry when classified for recreational purposes in 1964. The Bureau of Land Management and the Secretary of Interior upheld that determination.

Appellee then filed the present action. Appellee’s principal contentions are: (1) that the Secretary’s authority to classify the lands arose from section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act, 43 U.S.C. § 315f, 2 and was subject to the first proviso in that section, namely, “That locations and entries under the mining laws * * * may be made upon such with *603 drawn and reserved areas without regard to classification”; (2) that the Secretary was bound to follow the procedures established by the regulations for classifying public land under section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act (see 43 C.F. R. subpart 2411), and that he failed to do so; (3) that the Secretary’s classification authority had not been delegated to the land office manager; and (4) that in view of the last sentence of 43 U.S.C. § 869(a), the classification should be deemed to have terminated eighteen months after it was made, in the admitted absence of an application for purchase or lease of the parcel. The district court granted summary judgment on all four grounds.

I

We consider first whether, assuming a proper classification of these lands for disposition under the Recreation and Public Purposes Act had been made, they nonetheless remained open to location and entry under the mining laws in accordance with the proviso of section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act. 3

The Recreation and Public Purposes Act of 1954 originated in the Recreation Act of 1926, reproduced in the margin. 4

The predecessor statute applied only to public domain lands in the states, and did not apply to such lands in Alaska, then a territory. One of the purposes of *604 the 1954 amendments was to include the latter lands within the Act.

Prior to 1954 the Secretary of Interi- or had authority under section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act to classify lands in the states for disposition under the Recreation Act. The Taylor Grazing Act, however, like the Recreation Act prior to 1954, applied only to lands in the states. It was therefore necessary to grant the Secretary authority to classify the newly included Alaskan lands for disposition under the Act. This was accomplished by the following sentence in section 869 (a): 5

“The Secretary may classify public lands in Alaska for disposition under sections 869 to 869-4 of this title.” The next two sentences of section 869(a) read as follows:

“Lands so classified may not be appropriated under any other public land law unless the Secretary revises such classification or authorizes the disposition of an interest in the lands under other applicable law. If, within eighteen months following such classification, no application has been filed for the purpose for which the lands have been so classified, then the Secretary shall restore such lands to appropriation under the applicable public land laws.”

It is clear from the first of these two sentences that Alaskan lands classified by the Secretary for disposition under the Recreation and Public Purposes Act of 1954 are not subject to location or entry under the mining laws. The question is whether this sentence also applies to public lands in the states, as the government contends; or whether, as appel-lee argues, such lands are subject to the proviso of section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act and therefore remain open to entry under the mining laws.

There are substantial arguments for both positions.

A natural reading of the pertinent statutory language supports appellee’s construction. The three sentences of the 1954 Act would ordinarily be read as conditioning one another, thus limiting the second and third sentences to Alaska by implication, as the first is limited expressly. And since, as both parties agree, section 7 of the Taylor Grazing Act is the source of the Secretary’s authority to classify lands in states other than Alaska for disposition under the Act of 1954, it would seem only reasonable that this authority be limited in accordance with the clear and unequivocal language of section 7. Moreover, language in a letter from the Assistant Secretary of Interior attached to the Senate report strongly suggests that the third sentence, like the first, is applicable only to Alaskan lands. 6

We conclude, nonetheless, that the second sentence, barring lands classified for disposition under the 1954 Act from appropriation under any other public land law, is applicable to all lands so classified, not only in Alaska but in the other states as well.

The sentence in question is phrased in general terms, not limited to Alaska.

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Bluebook (online)
449 F.2d 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-c-buch-v-rogers-c-b-morton-as-secretary-of-the-interior-ca9-1971.