South End Mining Co. v. Tinney

35 P. 89, 22 Nev. 19
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1894
DocketNo. 1373.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 35 P. 89 (South End Mining Co. v. Tinney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South End Mining Co. v. Tinney, 35 P. 89, 22 Nev. 19 (Neb. 1894).

Opinions

*27 Bigelow, J.,

The complaint in this action has a double aspect. It states, first, a cause of action in ejectment; and, secondly, an equitable cause of action to obtain an injunction to restrain certain trespasses threatened by the defendants. To these the answer attempts to plead, among other things, an equitable defense. Of the right of the defendants to set up an equitable defense to an action for the possession of lands there can be no question, and as to this defense the case is to be tried in the same manner and upon the same principles that would apply to an original bill in equity, brought for the same purpose. (Pom. Rem. & Rem. Rights, sec. 87, et seq.; Bohcill v. Dilla, 114 U. S. 47,5 Sup. Ct. 782; Quinby v. Conlan, 104 U. S. 420; Estrada v. Murphy, 19 Cal. 248, 273; Hollinshead v. Simms, 51 Cal. 158; Treadway v. Wilder, 8 Nev. 93; Dutertree v. Shallenberger, 21 Nev. 507, 34 Pac. 449; Suessenbach v. Bank, 5 Dak. 477, 41 N. W. 662.)

2. As judgment was rendered against the defendants upon the pleadings, the question is whether the answer states any defense, and I pass to a consideration of whether, in the light Qf equitable principles, it presents facts which entitle the defendants to defeat the action, founded, as it is, upon the legal title.

It will be noticed that when the plaintiff ceased the prosecution of its application for a patent, and abandoned the mine, it had not paid for the ground, nor obtained a final certificate of purchase from the receiver of the land office. This failure prevents it from having obtained such vested rights as relieved it from the necessity of doing the annual assessment work, and distinguishes the case from Benson Mining Co. v. Alta Mining Co., 145 U. S. 428, 12 Sup. Ct. 877, and Deno v. Griffin, 20 Nev. 249, 20 Pac. 308, where it was held that by reason of completed patent applications and payment the requirement of doing the work no longer existed. Section 2324, Rev. Stat. U. S., provides that, until a patent issues, not less than $100 worth of labor shall be performed or improvements made upon a claim during each year, and upon failure to do so the claim shall be open to relocation in the same manner as though no location had ever been made. The courts have held a patent certificate issued upon final payment to be equivalent to a patent, but *28 until then abandonment, or a failure to do the annual work, subjects the claim to relocation. (Sickels, Min. Dec. 371, 384; Copp, Min. Lands, 255, 296; Ferguson v. Mining Co., 18 Copp, Landowner, 242; Mining Co. v. Gage, 17 Copp, Landowner, 39.)

Then, by reason of this abandonment and forfeiture, the Comet became subject to relocation, and while in this condition the defendants and their grantors relocated a. portion of it under the name of the “ Phoenix.” The answer shows that this relocation was made strictly in accordance with the mining laws, and there is no contention that it was not, in all respects, sufficient, nor that the defendants have not since fully complied with the laws in keeping up their title. Under these circumstances, up to the time the patent -Was issued to the plaintiff, they were vested with both the legal and equitable title to the ground as fully as it is possible to obtain such title by a location of a mine upon the mineral lands of the United States, upon which no patent has been obtained. As will be shown hereafter, in another connection, this vested in them, even as against the United States, the full beneficial ownership of the claim, which could only be lost by a failure upon their part to comply with, the mining laws. Suppose that prior to the issuance of this patent to the plaintiff it had brought this action, can there be any question that it would have been decided in favor of the defendants? There can be but one answer to this, and this shows that it is only by reason of the bare legal title, obtained by this patent, that it now has any standing, even in.a court of law.

Then the naked fact is that, while the defendants -were the full beneficial owners of this property in accordance with the laws of the United States, without notice to them, and without their knowledge, the plaintiff has, by fraud and trickery practiced in the land oifice, obtained a patent therefor; and the question is whether this fraud has been so well perpetrated, and is so well intrenched in the law, that even a court of equity can afford the' defendants no remedy. I am happy to say that in my judgment such is not the case, and, further, that any system of laws that would not afford a remedy under such circumstances would be unworthy a civilized people.

The publication and posting of the notices, which the *29 mining law requires to be made upon applications for patent, had been made long prior to the time that the-defendants located the Phoenix claim. . An adverse claim must be filed during the sixty days that these notices are given, and it was consequently impossible for them to file an adverse claim to the application'. Their rights date from ten years subsequent- 'to this. Had their ownership dated from any time prior to the publication of the notices, they would, of course, have been required to advertise the application in the land office, or they would have lost all right in the ground. But the law does not require iihpossibilities, and the fact that they did not and could not do so cuts no figure in the case. Subsequent to this, the plaintiff lost all ownership in the ground, and the defendants obtained their title; and it is upon this situation that the case must be decided.

3. Having established, at least to my own satisfaction, that previous to the patent the mine was the property of the defendants, I proceed to consider whether'by reason of that patent they have lost all right therein, which can be protected by a court of equity. • It is doubtful, although in my view quite immaterial, whether the plaintiff was guilty of any fraud upon the United States in the proceedings in the land office such as would justify the annulling and setting aside of the patent, in that the fact that they had done the annual labor is not one of the conditions of obtaining a patent; but this does not matter, and I shall not pause to consider it. Obtaining a patent to the defendant’s mine was, under the circumstairces, a positive and unequivocal fraud upon them; and, even if it were not, the answer shows such a, state of facts as make the plaintiff the holder of the patent title in trust for the owners of the mine. These are that without the publication or posting' of any notice of its intention so to do, and without the defendant’s consent or knowledge, the plaintiff has secretly and surreptitiously obtained a patent- to then-property. This is entirely sufficient to require a court of equity to hold it a trustee of that title for the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P. 89, 22 Nev. 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-end-mining-co-v-tinney-nev-1894.