United States v. Marshall Silver Mining Co.

129 U.S. 579, 9 S. Ct. 343, 32 L. Ed. 734, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1712
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1889
Docket17
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 129 U.S. 579 (United States v. Marshall Silver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Marshall Silver Mining Co., 129 U.S. 579, 9 S. Ct. 343, 32 L. Ed. 734, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1712 (1889).

Opinion

. Mb. Justice Millek

delivered the opinion of the court.

The case before us originated in a bill in equity brought in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Colorado, in the name' of the United States of America, by its Attorney General,-and the District Attorney of the United States for that district, against the Marshall Silver Mining Company and the Colorado Central. Consolidated Mining Company, defendants.

The purpose of the bill was to set aside and vacate a patent issued by the government to the Marshall Silver Mining Company, for a vein or lode of mineral deposit, lying, in the Griffith Mining District, in the county of. Clear. Creek, Colorado,, known as the “Tunnel Lode, No. 5,” dated on the 8th day of June, 1874 Afterwards another • patent, including a part of the same land covered by the one just referred to, was issued to McClellan, Hist and Webster, upon what was called the “ Cayuga Lode,” on the 31st day of January, 1882.

The grounds which are set .up in the bill for vacating the first-mentioned patent are mainly such as go to show that its issue fraudulently deprived the holders of the second instrument of the right to the title of so much of the land as is covered by the conflicting boundaries described therein, so that the result of a, decree annulling the first patent would be to give to the claimants under the second the paramount title. *583 The Circuit Court, after hearing the case on the bill, two different demurrers, answers, replication, and a large amount of testimony, dismissed the suit. From that decree the present appeal was taken by the United States.

At the beginning of this term the attorney for the government filed in this court a statement that the United States had no pecuniary interest in the suit, and the officers charged with the conduct of such matters on the part of the government declined to take any farther part in the argument of the case. They did not, however, dismiss the appeal, and made no objection to its prosecution by the private parties interested in the matter, who had conducted the case from its inception. Thereupon a motion was made by the appellees and argued before the court to dismiss the appeal, which was resisted by the counsel interested in the second patent. Under all the' circumstancés, the court determined to hear it, refused the motion, and, after thorough argument, the case is now before us for decision.

The charges which are made the basis for the relief sought . here may- be comprehended under- two heads, although they are .so mingled together' in the bill ■ that it seems doubtful whether-they were intended to be considered and treated as separate propositions. The main ground is an allegation of fraud, practised upon-the parties claiming the Oayuga Lode, by collusion between those having the management of the claim to Tunnel Lode, No. 5, and certain officers of the Land Department, and particularly the register and receiver of the land office located at Central City.

The material facts are, that the claimants to both of these lodes seem to have been prospecting in that vicinity, and discovered mineral in their- different claims 'about the same time. They each had their claims staked out and.surveyed by deputy surveyors of the United States, and about the same time they each made application to the land office-for their entry, with a view of -obtaining patents therefor. Upon the applications being made for a patent upon the Cayuga lode, the' Marshall Silver Mining Company, discovering that it interfered with a portion of their claim, brought.a suit in the local court of the *584 State, under the act of Congress on that subject, Eev. Stat. § 2326, against McClellan, Eist and Webster, asserting the superiority of their claim to a patent for the land in controversy. The statute provides that the judgment in such a suit shall govern the rights of the parties in the land office. This' suit was on the docket of the court for some time, perhaps a year or more. In the. mean time Eist, one of the parties in interest under the claim to the Cayuga lode, made a disclaimer in the local land office of the proceedings taken by his partners, in the name of McClellan, Eist and Webster, and, so far as he was interested in that claim, directed-the proceedings to be dismissed. Accordingly, the register and receiver of that office made an entry dismissing the claim to the Cayuga lode and the application for a patent thereon, under the belief, as they expressed it, that such was the necessary result of the action of Eist.

One of the questions of fact which is disputed in this case is, whether McClellan and Webster had notice of these proceedings, which resulted in the dismissal of the application for a patent upon the Cayuga claim. This will be considered presently.

Not long after this order was made in the local land office the owners of the Tunnel lode, who had assumed the name, either by incorporation or as partners, of the Marshall Silver Mining Company, dismissed the suit which they had brought in the state court, contesting ■ the right of the Cayuga claimants to a' patent for the property in controversy. They obtained from the clerk of the court a certificate of such dismissal, and thereupon proceeded in the prosecution of their claim in the land office, ex pttrte. They procured from the surveyor of the United States, by his deputy, an amended survey of their claim, and it was then allowed by the local officials. It was forwarded by .them to the Commissioner of the General Land Office, who, after a full consideration of the subject, occupying nearly a year, issued to the Marshall Silver Mining Company' the' patent which is now assailed by the bill of complaint in this case. They had before taken possession of the property, and they worked the lode now in dispute for about eight years *585 and a half, without any complaint being made by the claimants of the Cayuga lode. At the end of that time these parties appeared before the Land Department, denied the validity of the order dismissing their claim, and proceeding themselves exporte, without notice, to the Marshall Silver Mining Company, procured the patent already referred to, dated January 81, 1882.

The main controversy arising out of this condition of affairs is upon the allegation that Hist was corruptly induced to apply to the register and receiver of the local land office for the dismissal of the claim in which he was an interested party, and that these officers were in collusion with him .and the claimants of the Tunnel lode in making the order which they did.

It must be conceded that there is a total failure to establish any such corrupt motive or action on the part of either the officers or Hist. What the motives were which induced Hist to make his application to the officers of the land office is not very plain, but he acted through Mr. Butler, a lawyer of character and reputation, and no evidence is introduced showing that he was imposed upon, misled, or bought up. Still less is there any evidence that the register or receiver were bribed or influenced by any improper motives in the action which they took.

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Bluebook (online)
129 U.S. 579, 9 S. Ct. 343, 32 L. Ed. 734, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1712, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marshall-silver-mining-co-scotus-1889.