Young v. Goldsteen

97 F. 303, 1 Alaska Fed. 566, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 173
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 18, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 97 F. 303 (Young v. Goldsteen) 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
Young v. Goldsteen, 97 F. 303, 1 Alaska Fed. 566, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 173 (D. Alaska 1899).

Opinion

JOHNSON, District Judge.

Thirty-nine persons, including the plaintiff, bring separate actions against the defendant, the object and purpose in each case being the same. The allegations common to all the pleadings are that the defendant, on the 6th day of February, 1899, made application in the United States land office at Sitka, Alaska, for a patent to the Bonanza lode claim, being United States survey No. 316; that the plaintiffs adversed defendant’s application for patent, and now bring their actions in this court in furtherance of said adverse, as provided by section 2326 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (30 U.S.C.A. § 30 and note). Each plaintiff claims to be the owner of one or more town lots situated within the exterior boundaries of the surveyed, platted, and (excepting only the lands embraced within mineral survey No. 316) patented town site of Juneau, in the district of Alaska. Ownership in these lots is claimed by plaintiffs by virtue of prior appropriation, occupation, improvement, and continued and undisputed and notorious possession of the nonmineral public lands of the United States in the district of Alaska, either by themselves in person or by their grantors. The plaintiffs allege that at the times mentioned in the various bills and complaints as the times when they took possession of these lots the same were-wholly unoccupied, unimproved, and unclaimed, and were a [568]*568part of the nonmineral public domain of the United States; that there is no known lode or ledge of rock in place within the exterior boundaries of the Bonanza claim carrying gold or other precious metals. There are also allegations in different complaints and bills which are peculiar to those cases, and which it may or may not be necessary to notice hereafter. The plaintiffs h^ve not, however, all pursued the same form of action. Mr. Blackett, for the plaintiff in case No. 872 and in case No. 873, has entitled his pleading a “complaint,” and has had a summons at law issued and served; but the pleading itself is in the nature of a bill in equity, and the relief asked is purely equitable. Messrs. McNair and Lewis, in case No. 885, have filed a bill in equity, .while all the remaining cases, brought by Mr. Delaney and by Messrs. Maloney & Foote and F. D. Kelsey, being Nos. 892 to 897, inclusive, and Nos. 906 to 935, inclusive, are brought on the law side of the court by complaints somewhat in the nature of actions in ejectment. However, to all these complaints and bills the defendant has interposed demurrers, all of which were argued and submitted together to the court. Various grounds of demurrer are alleged. But the principal ones, and those common to all the cases, are that the pleadings show that plaintiffs have no title or ownership in the lots in dispute, and are not entitled to any relief; that the court has no jurisdiction to hear and determine the matters and things alleged, but that the land department has the exclusive jurisdiction of the same; that these actions purport to be brought in support of adverse claims as provided in sections 2325, 2326, Rev. St. (30 U.S.C.A. §§ 29, 30, and notes), and, as such, do not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The bills in equity are further demurred to because of insufficiency in form, and the complaints because the plaintiff can have no action at law, even if entitled to relief.

By far the most serious question to be determined is whether the owner of a town lot in Alaska, unpatented, can adverse the application of one applying for a patent to a lode claim, under section 2325, Rev.St., and maintain any kind of an áction in support of such adverse, under section 2326 of the same statutes. If he cannot, then there is an end of these cases, unless the laws of Oregon, extended to this territory by an act of congress passed May 17, 1884, [569]*569are sufficient to give relief. Mr. Lindley, in his work on Mines (section 717), holds that adverse proceedings under section 2325, Rev. St., can only be maintained by a rival mineral claimant; and in support of this contention he cites ■the case of Mining Co. v. Campbell, decided by the supreme court of the United States, and reported in 135 U.S. 286-289, 10 S.Ct. 765. An examination of that case discloses the fact that both parties were claiming title to the land in dispute by virtue of separate patents issued by the United States. The plaintiff claimed through a patent to a lode, and the defendant by virtue of a patent to a placer, claim. The court’s attention was at no time called to the question of the right of a nonmineral claimant to adverse a mineral claimant. The court had in mind only the issues involved in the case before it, and the rights of nonmineral claimants were not one of them. The language of the court immediately preceding that quoted by Mr. Lindley is as follows: “A careful examination of this statute concerning adverse claims leads us to the conviction that it is not intended to affect a party who, before the publication first required, 'had himself gone through all the regular proceedings required to obtain a patent for mineral land from the United States; had established his right to the land claimed by him, and received his patent; and was reposing quietly upon its sufficiency and validity. It is true that there are no ■very distinctive words declaring what kind of adverse claim is required to be set up as a defense against the party making publication, but throughout the whole of these sections, and the original statute from which they are transferred to the Revised Statutes, the words ‘claim’ and ‘claimant’ are used. This word is, in all legislation of congress on the subject, used in regard to a claim not yet perfected by a title from the government by way of a patent.”

There is nothing in this language tending to limit the provisions of section 2325 to rival claimants of mining property. On the contrary, a fair construction of the text would be that any person having a claim, other than a patented one, adverse to the applicant for patent, might adverse the same. And, keeping in mind the question before the court, the language quoted by Lindley does not detract frbm the conclusion above reached. “It is true that there • are no very distinct words declaring what kind of adverse claim [570]*570is required to be set up as a defense against the party making publication,” say the court; and then they say that, because the word “claim,” as used by congress, means some other interest in lands than a patented one, that one claiming under a patent cannot adverse. Counsel for defendant lays much stress upon the clause in section 2326 wherein it is provided that the party, after trial, found to be entitled to the possession of the claim, may, by paying five dollars an acre, and complying with other requirements therein, stated, have patent issued to him, etc.; claiming that the language indicates almost conclusively that only mineral claimants are included within the meaning of that section. On this dine counsel asks how, if a nonmineral claimant is permitted to adverse a mineral claimant, and he be adjudged entitled to the possession of the disputed premises, is he to pay his five dollars an acre, and procure his patent ? We answer, he certainly cannot do so. That part of the section cannot apply to him. Neither can it apply to a placer claimant, where he adverses a lode claimant; nor to the owner of a lot in an incorporated town; nor to the owner of any nonmineral patented lands. Yet in all these cases the right to adverse, and to bring suit in support thereof, is conceded by counsel and sustained by the authorities. And Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
97 F. 303, 1 Alaska Fed. 566, 1899 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 173, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-goldsteen-akd-1899.