A federal question, suggested for the first time in a petition
for a rehearing after judgment in the highest court of a state, is
not properly raised so as to authorize this court to review the
decision of that court.
The decision in the state court in this case clearly presented
no federal question, as no right, immunity or authority under the
Constitution or laws of the United States was set up by the
plaintiffs in error or denied by the Supreme Court of the State,
nor did the judgment of the latter court necessarily involve any
such question or the denial of any such right.
Page 148 U. S. 683
Motion to dismiss. The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action of ejectment brought by the defendant in
error in the District Court of Hinsdale County, State of Colorado,
against the plaintiffs in error to recover possession of a certain
portion of the surface location of a mining claim on Ute Mountain
in said county and state. The suit grew out of conflicting and
interfering locations of mining claims by the parties. The
defendant in error was the owner or claimant of a mining location
called the "Annie Lode," while the plaintiffs in error were the
owners of a claim called the "Monitor Lode." The claim of the
latter was first located, but when the plaintiffs in error applied
for a patent, the defendant in error filed an adverse claim to a
portion of the same location, and thereafter, under section 2326 of
the Revised Statutes of the United States, and within the time
prescribed therein, the defendant in error commenced this action in
the state court to recover possession of the portion of the surface
location which was in interference and in controversy between the
parties.
In its complaint or declaration, it is alleged that it is the
owner of the Annie lode mining claim, and that defendants below had
at a certain date entered upon and ever since wrongfully held
possession of a part of said claim specifically described, and that
the action was in support of plaintiff's adverse claim to such
portion of the surface location. The answer of the defendants
(plaintiffs in error) interposed a general
Page 148 U. S. 684
denial of all the allegations contained in the complaint or
declaration.
The question presented on the trial of the controversy, under
the pleadings, was purely one of fact, and had reference to the
true direction which the Monitor lode or vein took after
encountering a fault, obstruction, or interruption at a point south
of the discovery shaft sunk thereon. It was claimed by the
plaintiff below that the true vein or lode of the Monitor claim did
not bear westwardly so as to cross the Annie lode, but that its
true direction was southeastwardly, across the line of its
location, and was not within the distance of one hundred and fifty
feet from the center of the Annie lode.
The court charged the jury fully and clearly upon this question
of fact, as follows:
"1st. The court charges you that the defendants have applied for
a patent from the United States on what is claimed by them as the
Monitor lode mining claim, in Galena Mining District, in this
county. The plaintiff company has brought this action in ejectment
in support of an adverse claim made and filed by it to a part
thereof, described in the complaint as lying within the boundaries
of what is claimed by the plaintiff as the Annie lode."
"2d. The court charges you that if the original locators of the
Monitor lode, within the time required by law, sunk a sufficient
discovery shaft thereon, posted at the point of discovery a
sufficient location notice, and properly put out their boundary
posts, marking their surface boundaries, and on June 20, 1875,
recorded their claim in the office of the county recorder by a
sufficient location certificate, in compliance with the law, and
the owners thereof have ever since then performed labor or made
improvements thereon each year to the amount of one hundred dollars
or more, then the plaintiff company's original grantor, John
Dougherty, in attempting to locate the Annie lode to include a part
of such surface ground and in sinking the discovery shaft thereon
in October, 1878, was
prima facie a trespasser in so
doing, and the plaintiff cannot recover in this action unless it
shows that he was not a trespasser in so doing. "
Page 148 U. S. 685
"3d. The court charges you that the plaintiff claims that the
Monitor lode claim was never properly located, and that the vein on
which its discovery shaft is sunk does not run down through its
surface ground, as located, to the southwest, but that it runs off
from its surface ground through its southeast side line at a point
about feet from its discovery shaft, and that by reason thereof,
Dougherty [plaintiff's grantor] was not a trespasser in locating
the Annie lode discovery shaft and a part of its surface ground
within the boundary stakes of the Monitor lode."
"9th. The court charges you that the question here is: is the
course of the Monitor vein from the discovery shaft down the
mountain towards the southwest, along the line claimed by
defendants, or off through the southeast side line of the Monitor
lode surface grounds or otherwise, as claimed by plaintiff? And the
court further charges you that upon this question the presumption
is that the course of the vein is as located, and the plaintiff
company must prove that the course of the vein is not as located;
otherwise, on this point, plaintiff cannot recover, and your
verdict shall be for the defendants."
"10th. The court charges you that it is not sufficient that the
plaintiff merely raises a doubt in your minds as to whether the
Monitor vein runs as the lode is staked or not. The plaintiff must
satisfy you by a preponderance of the testimony that the lode does
not run as staked; otherwise, upon this question, you will find for
the defendants."
"11th. The court charges you that the discoverer and prior
locator of a lode or vein has a right to stake his lode according
to his best judgment as to where it runs."
"12th. Such prior locator has a right to move and change his
boundary stakes upon his limits to suit himself at any time the
legal limits to suit himself at any time within sixty days after
the date of his location or discovery notice."
"14th. The court charges you that when a vein branches in its
course, a prior locator has a legal right to follow with his
location whichever branch of it he chooses at the time of making
such location."
"16th. The court instructs the jury in the law of this case
Page 148 U. S. 686
that if the locators of the Monitor mine made the location on
the Monitor lode or vein and staked it as running down the mountain
in the direction of the Annie vein in controversy, and uniting
therewith or running parallel thereto, substantially through the
center of the surface ground of the Monitor lode claim, the said
Monitor locators or their assignees are entitled to the whole of
said claim as staked, even if the alleged Enterprise vein crosses
said Monitor vein and runs in the course of the Monitor vein as
staked, provided that at such crossing the said veins course so
together that it is simply conjectural that said Monitor lode is
crossed by said so-called Enterprise vein, and does not continue in
its course as staked."
"18th. The court instructs you that it is of no consequence
where the so-called Annie vein runs, in any part of its course, if
Dougherty [the plaintiff's grantor] was a trespasser in locating
it. A trespasser's location is entirely void."
The court then refused to give the following instructions for
the plaintiffs in error:
"13th. The court charges you that a prospector, in locating his
vein, is not required to follow it through a fault or other
obstruction which interposes solid country rock in its course, but
in such cash he may follow with his location any vein that
continues on from the point of such obstruction in the general
course of his original vein."
"15th. The court charges you that if a prospector, in locating
his lode, discovered by a first location, secures continuous vein
matter substantially along through the center of his surface ground
in a continuous general direction, and so that the extension of his
end lines will include between them all of his surface ground, he
will hold the same, and every part thereof, against all subsequent
claimants."
It thus appears that the question at issue, under the pleadings
and at the trial, was as to the true course of the Monitor lode or
vein down the mountain south of its discovery shaft. The jury found
the following verdict in favor of the defendant in error: "We, the
jury, find the issues joined for the plaintiff, and that it is the
owner of and entitled to the possession of the ground described in
the complaint."
Page 148 U. S. 687
The plaintiffs in error moved for a new trial on the ground of
error in the charge to the jury and because of the refusal of the
court to instruct the jury as requested, and for various reasons,
such as the admission of improper testimony offered by the
plaintiff below, and the refusal to admit proper testimony offered
by the defendants below, and other alleged errors and
irregularities committed in the progress of the trial which are not
brought under review in the present case.
A new trial being refused, an appeal was taken to the Supreme
Court of Colorado, which held that there was no error in the
instructions given to the jury nor in the refusal to give those
requested by the plaintiff in error, and affirmed the judgment of
the lower court. The Supreme Court of Colorado rested its judgment
and affirmance upon the general proposition that the trial court
had correctly stated to the jury the principal point in
controversy, and had left it properly to them to determine as a
matter of fact what was the course of the Monitor lode. The supreme
court said:
"The controlling issue in the case, we think, was fully
understood by the jury, and was clearly stated by the court in the
9th instruction, viz.:"
"The principal point in the controversy is upon what vein was
the Monitor claim located or what is the course of said vein? The
defendants allege and seek to prove that the location was made upon
a vein which runs from the discovery shaft of the Monitor across
and towards the vein upon which the Annie claim was located, while
the plaintiff asserts and seeks to prove that the location was made
upon a vein which runs from the Monitor shaft down and nearly
parallel with the Annie lode, and which enters into or connects
with the Ule lode. This is the principal point in controversy, and
to determine which claim is best supported by testimony and reason
is the province and duty of the jury."
After the decision had been rendered by the supreme court of the
state, a petition for rehearing was presented by the plaintiffs in
error, which for the first time sought to present the question
whether section 2322 of the Revised Statutes of the United States
gave to the appellants "the exclusive right
Page 148 U. S. 688
of possession" and enjoyment of all other veins and lodes having
their apexes within the Monitor surface ground, which would give to
these appellants, beyond all question, the so-called Enterprise,
that is alleged to "cross" the Monitor on the surface, and
certainly a vein that is thus our own cannot be used, by one who
has no interest either in the Monitor or Enterprise title, to
create any question of lode crossing between them, or any other
question of conflict. Under such circumstance, there is but one
grant, and it is all the Monitor grant and its rights and title,
and such grant is in no wise severable into a part Monitor and a
part Enterprise, no separate life or vitality being given to the
said so-called Enterprise.
The application for rehearing being denied, the present writ of
error was brought to have the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Colorado reviewed and reversed. The defendants in error have moved
to dismiss the writ or affirm the judgment. The motion to dismiss
is based upon several grounds. The principal and only ground which
need be noticed, however, is that the record presents no question
of a federal character such as will give this Court jurisdiction to
review the judgment complained of.
It is plainly manifest that neither the pleadings nor the
instructions given and refused present any federal question, and an
examination of the opinion of the supreme court affirming the
action of the trial court as to instructions given, as well as its
refusal to give instructions asked by the defendants below, fails
to disclose the presence of any federal question. It does not
appear from the record that any right, privilege, or immunity under
the Constitution or laws of the United States was specially set up
or claimed by the defendant below, or that any such right was
denied them, or was even passed upon, by the supreme court of the
state, nor does it appear from anything disclosed in the record
that the necessary effect in law of the judgment was the denial of
any right claimed under the laws of the United States.
The decision of the Supreme Court of Colorado in no way brought
into question the validity, or even construction, of any
Page 148 U. S. 689
federal statute, and it certainly did not deny to the plaintiffs
in error any right arising out of the construction of the federal
statutes. It was said by THE CHIEF JUSTICE, in
Cook County v.
Calumet & Chicago Canal Co., 138 U.
S. 635,
138 U. S.
653:
"The validity of a statute is not drawn in question every time
rights claimed under such statute are controverted, nor is the
validity of an authority every time an act done by such authority
is disputed."
The attempt to raise for the first time a federal question in a
petition for rehearing, after judgment, even assuming that the
petition presented any such question, is clearly too late. It has
been repeatedly decided by this Court that a federal question, when
suggested for the first time in a petition for rehearing after
judgment, is not properly raised so as to authorize this Court to
review the decision of the highest court of the state.
Texas
& Pacific Railway Co. v. Southern Pacific Railroad,
137 U. S. 48,
137 U. S. 54;
Butler v. Gage, 138 U. S. 52;
Winona & St. Peter Railroad v. Plainview, 143 U.
S. 371;
Leeper v. Texas, 139 U.
S. 462.
In the case of
Doe v. City of
Mobile, 9 How. 451, it was held that under the
twenty-fifth section of the Judiciary Act, this Court "cannot
reexamine the decision of a state court upon a question of boundary
between coterminous proprietors of lands depending upon local
laws."
The question involved in the present case turned largely upon
the provisions of § 3149, Mills' Annotated Stats. of Colorado
1788 and the decisions of the Supreme Court of that state
construing the same, as shown by the case of
Patterson v.
Hitchcock, 3 Colo. 533, which limited the width of mining
claims to 150 feet in width on each side of the center of the lode
or vein at the surface. The controverted question in the case at
bar turned upon which direction the Monitor lode properly ran south
of the discovery shaft, and it being found by the jury that the
lode or vein did not bear westwardly toward the Annie lode, but
southeastwardly and across the western side line of the Monitor
claim at a distance exceeding 150 feet from the center of the Annie
lode, it followed that the claim of the plaintiff below was
sustained,
Page 148 U. S. 690
and the jury accordingly returned its verdict that the plaintiff
below was entitled to the possession thereof.
The question thus presented and decided involved no construction
of any federal statute, nor did it become necessary to determine
the rights of the parties under the federal mining statutes.
In
Roby v. Colehour, 149 U. S. 159,
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, speaking for the Court, said:
"Our jurisdiction being invoked upon the ground that a right or
immunity, specially set up and claimed under the Constitution or
authority of the United States, has been denied by the judgment
sought to be reviewed, it must appear from the record of the case
either that the right so set up and claimed was expressly denied,
or that such was the necessary effect, in law, of the
judgment."
Applying this rule to the case at bar, there is clearly
presented no federal question, for no right, immunity, or authority
under the Constitution or laws of the United States was set up by
the plaintiffs in error, or denied by the Supreme Court of
Colorado, nor did the judgment of that court necessarily involve
any such question, or the denial of any such right. We are
therefore of opinion that the motion to dismiss is well made, and
should be allowed, and it is accordingly so ordered.
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE FIELD did not sit in this case, or take part in its
decision.