A deed of a mining claim by a qualified locator to an alien
operates as a transfer of the claim to the grantee, subject to
question in regard to his citizenship by the government only.
If, in a contest concerning a mining claim under Rev.Stat.
§ 2326, one party, who is an alien at the outset becomes a
citizen during the proceedings and before judgment, his disability
under Rev.Stat. § 2319 to take title is thereby removed.
This was an action in the ordinary form of a contest between two
claimants of a quartz lode mining claim upon the lands of the
United States to determine the right to proceed in the United
States land office for patent therefor. Moses Manuel, defendant
below, made application in the land office at Helena, Montana, for
a patent for the Marshal Ney lode mining claim, which application
Iver Wulff, plaintiff below, adversely contested, basing his
contest upon his right to the premises by virtue of their location
and possession as the Columbia mining claim. This proceeding was
thereupon commenced in the District Court for Lewis and Clarke
County of the Territory of Montana, in accordance with section 2326
of the Revised Statutes.
The title of plaintiff was put in issue by the pleadings, and
the defendant filed a counterclaim charging that the Columbia
Page 152 U. S. 506
lode location was forfeited by reason of the want of required
annual work, and that the ground in controversy was unoccupied
public domain at the time of the location of the Marshal Ney. This
was denied by plaintiff in his replication.
Upon the trial, it appeared that Henry Pflaume, who was a
citizen of the United States, located the Columbia lode mining
claim July 1, 1882; that November 1, 1885, he conveyed the claim to
Fred. Manuel by deed, and that November 30, 1887, Fred. Manuel
conveyed the same property by deed to Iver Wulff, the plaintiff;
that one Alfred Manuel, who was a citizen of the United States,
located the same mining claim under the name of the "Marshal Ney,"
claiming that the Columbia lode location had been abandoned and
forfeited for the reason that no work was done thereon during the
years 1883 and 1884, and conveyed to Moses Manuel, the defendant, a
one-third interest therein October 12, 1885, and the remaining
two-thirds October 15, 1887, by deeds duly executed and
recorded.
It further appeared that Moses Manuel was born in Canada, and
came to this country when about eight years old with his father,
who he supposed had been naturalized, and that he was thus a
citizen of the United States. But the court held that he was not a
citizen, whereupon he was naturalized pending the trial, under the
provisions of section 2167 of the Revised Statutes. The district
court then nonsuited defendant upon his counterclaim, and did not
permit him to proceed with his case, upon the ground that he was
not a citizen at the time that Alfred Manuel executed to him the
deeds of conveyance of the Marshal Ney lode mining claim and at the
time the suit was commenced, holding that the attempt on the part
of Alfred Manuel to convey the mining claim operated as an
abandonment thereof. Defendant then moved that plaintiff be
nonsuited, which motion was denied, but the question raised in
respect thereof need not be examined here. Judgment was thereupon
given in favor of Wulff, and defendant took the case by appeal to
the supreme court of the state (which had been admitted into the
Union in the mean time), by which the judgment was affirmed. The
opinion of the
Page 152 U. S. 507
court will be found reported in 9 Mont. 279. The case was then
brought to this Court by writ of error.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER, after stating the facts in the
foregoing language, delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Supreme Court of Montana recognized the settled rule that an
alien may take and hold land by purchase until office found, and
that if the alien become a citizen before his alienage has been
adjudged, the act of naturalization takes effect by relation, but
held that "possessory rights to mining claims on the public domain
of the United States," although "endowed with the qualities of real
estate to a high degree," did not come within that rule.
The argument was that, as by statute mineral lands are not open
to exploration, occupation, or purchase by aliens, but only by
citizens of the United States and those who have declared their
intention to become such upon compliance with the laws and local
mining rules and regulations as to location and possession, title
and possessory rights to mining claims thus acquirable solely by
virtue of the statute, and in the manner prescribed thereby, must
be regarded as passing as by operation of law, and not as by grant;
hence, that mining claims are controlled by the rule which forbids
the alien to take or hold real estate by descent, since it is the
rule of law and not the act of the party that vests title in the
heir, and it would be an idle thing to vest title by one act of law
and then take it away by another. The court was of opinion that
upon principle, the analogy between an alien heir claiming by
descent, and an alien miner claiming under the mining laws was
complete, and that, as Moses Manuel was incapable of taking, the
conveyance to him by Alfred Manuel, who was a citizen, amounted to
an abandonment by the latter. We are unable to concur in this view.
We do not think that the
Page 152 U. S. 508
transfer of a mining claim by a qualified locator to an alien is
to be treated as
ipso facto an abandonment, or that the
analogy of such a case to the casting of descent upon an alien can
be maintained.
Among the cases often referred to upon the general subject and
cited by the Montana supreme court is
Governeur
v. Robertson, 11 Wheat. 332,
24 U. S. 350,
24 U. S. 354.
That was an action of ejectment, and the facts were these:
plaintiff claimed under one Brantz, who, being an alien, obtained,
October 11, 1784, two grants from the Commonwealth of Virginia of
lands lying in Kentucky. He became naturalized in Maryland November
8, 1784, and his title was confirmed to him and to his heirs and
their grantees by the Legislature of Kentucky in 1796 and 1799.
Defendant claimed under a grant of Virginia made to a citizen in
1785.
This Court, speaking by Mr. Justice Johnson, among other things,
said:
"On this subject of relation, the authorities are so ancient, so
uniform, and universal that nothing can raise a doubt that it has a
material bearing on this cause but the question whether
naturalization in Maryland was equivalent to naturalization in
Kentucky. To this the Articles of Confederation furnish an
affirmative answer, and the defendant has not made it a question,
nor, indeed, has he made a question on the subject of relation
back; yet it is not easy to see how he could claim the benefit of
an affirmative answer on the question he has raised without first
extricating his cause from the effects of the subsequent
naturalization upon the rights derived to Brantz through his
patent. The question argued and intended to be exclusively
presented here is whether a patent for land to an alien be not an
absolute nullity."
"The argument is that it was so at common law, and that the
Virginia land laws, in some of their provisions, affirm the common
law on this subject."
"We think the doctrine of the defendant is not to be sustained
on either ground. . . ."
"It is clear, therefore, that this doctrine has no sufficient
sanction in authority, and it will be found equally unsupported by
principle or analogy. "
Page 152 U. S. 509
"The general rule is positively against it, for the books, old
and new, uniformly represent the King as a competent grantor in all
cases in which an individual may grant, and any person
in
esse, and not
civiliter mortuus, as a competent
grantee. Femes covert, infants, aliens, persons attainted of
treason or felony, clerks, convicts, and many others are expressly
enumerated as competent grantees. Perkins, Grant, 47, 48, 51, etc.;
Comyn's Dig. Grant, B 1. It behooves those, therefore, who would
except aliens, when the immediate object of the King's grant, to
maintain the exception."
"It is argued that there is an analogy between this case and
that of the heir or the widow or the husband, alien, no one of whom
can take, but the King shall enter upon them without office found,
whereas an alien may take by purchase and hold until divested by
office found. It is argued that the reason usually assigned for
this distinction, to-wit,
nil frustra agit lex, may, with
the same correctness, be applied to the case of a grant by the King
to an alien, as to one taking by descent, dower, or curtesy; that
the alien only takes from the King to return the subject of the
grant back again to the King by escheat. But this reasoning
obviously assumes as law the very principle it is introduced to
support, since, unless the grant be void, it cannot be predicated
of it that it was executed in vain. It is also inconsistent with a
known and familiar principle in law, and one lying at the very root
of the distinction between taking by purchase and taking by
descent. It implies, in fact, a repugnancy in language, since the
very reason of the distinction between aliens taking by purchase
and by descent is that one takes by deed, the other by act of law,
whereas a grantee,
ex vi termini, takes by deed, and not
by act of law. If there is any view of the subject in which an
alien taking under grant may be considered as taking by operation
of law, it is because the grant issues and takes effect under a law
of the state. But this is by no means the sense of the rule, since
attaching to it this idea would be to declare the legislative power
of the state incompetent to vest in an alien even a defeasible
estate."
"That an alien can take by deed and can hold until office
Page 152 U. S. 510
found must now be regarded as a positive rule of law, so well
established that the reason of the rule is little more than a
subject for the antiquary."
The objection here rests, however, on the assumption that
Congress has not intended to confer any estate in respect of claims
of this character, because the right of purchase and the right of
possession are indivisible, and the validity of the location is
destroyed on the transfer of the claim to a person not authorized
to keep the location alive.
Tibbitts v. Ah Tong, 4 Mont.
536. Of course the same qualification required in those who may
purchase is required as to those who may possess; but that, in our
judgment, does not render possessory rights any the less property
susceptible of distinct ownership, nor involve the consequence that
their transfer to unqualified persons would operate a forfeiture
eo instante as for a violation of a continuing condition
precedent, so that the removal of the disqualification would not
cure the defect. If it could be properly held that the
qualification of his grantee should be regarded as at all a
condition annexed to the ownership of the qualified locator, such
condition would be a condition subsequent, and governed by the rule
laid down in
Schulenberg v.
Harriman, 21 Wall. 44.
Section 2319 of the Revised Statutes is as follows:
"All valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United
States, both surveyed and unsurveyed, are hereby declared to be
free and open to exploration and purchase, and the lands in which
they are found to occupation and purchase, by citizens of the
United States and those who have declared their intention to become
such, under regulations prescribed by law and according to the
local customs or rules of miners in the several mining districts,
so far as the same are applicable and not inconsistent with the
laws of the United States."
And by section 2322 it is provided that when such qualified
persons have made discovery of mineral lands and complied with the
law, they shall have the exclusive right to possession and
enjoyment of the same. It has therefore been repeatedly held that
mining claims are property in the fullest sense of the word, and
may be sold, transferred, mortgaged, and
Page 152 U. S. 511
inherited without infringing the title of the United States, and
that when a location is perfected, it has the effect of a grant by
the United States of the right of present and exclusive possession.
Forbes v. Gracey, 94 U. S. 762;
Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279;
Gwillim v. Donnellan, 115 U. S. 45;
Noyes v. Mantle, 127 U. S. 348.
This being so, we are of opinion on this record that, as Alfred
Manuel was a citizen, if his location were valid, his claim passed
to his grantee not by operation of law, but by virtue of his
conveyance, and that the incapacity of the latter to take and hold
by reason of alienage was, under the circumstances, open to
question by the government only. Inasmuch as this proceeding was
based upon the adverse claim of Wulff to the application of Moses
Manuel for a patent, the objection of alienage was properly made;
but this was as in right and on behalf of the government, and
naturalization removed the infirmity before judgment was
rendered.
In
In the Matter of Krogstad, 4 L.D. 564, Mr. Justice
Lamar, when Secretary of the Interior, ruled that, an alien having
made homestead entry, and subsequently filed his intention to
become a citizen, the alienage at time of entry, in the absence of
an adverse claim, would not defeat the right of purchase.
Jackson v. Beach, 1 Johns.Cas. 399;
Governeur
v. Robertson, 11 Wheat. 332, and
Osterman
v. Baldwin, 6 Wall. 116, were cited to the point
that naturalization has a retroactive effect, so as to be deemed a
waiver of all liability to forfeiture and a confirmation of title.
This seems to have long been the settled rule in the Land
Department.
Mann v. Huk, 3 L.D. 452;
Lord v.
Perrin, 8 L.D. 536. So that, if there had been no adverse
claim in the land office, Moses Manuel's application, which appears
in respect of this question to have been made in good faith, would
not have been rejected on the mere ground of alienage when he made
it. And as Moses Manuel was the grantee of a qualified locator, and
became naturalized before the order, we conclude that there was
error in the direction of a nonsuit.
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Montana is reversed,
and the cause remanded, with a direction to reverse the
Page 152 U. S. 512
judgment of the court below, and for further proceedings in
conformity with this opinion.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE, not having been a member of the Court when
this case was considered, took no part in its decision.