Public lands belonging to the United States, for whose sale or
other disposition Congress has made provision by general laws, are
to be regarded as legally open for entry and sale under such laws
unless some particular lands have been withdrawn from sale by
Congressional authority, or by an executive withdrawal under such
authority, either express or implied.
Under the act establishing the Court of Private Land Claims,
public lands belonging to the United States, though within the
claimed limits of a Mexican grant, became open to entry and
sale.
If the provisions of the laws of New Mexico, in force when this
location was made, were not complied with, and another location is
made before such work was done, the new location is a valid
location.
In the courts of the United States in action of ejectment, the
strict legal title must prevail, and if the plaintiff have only
equities, they must be presented on the equity side of the
court.
Although the plaintiff has no right to maintain this action, he
ought not to be embarrassed by a judgment here from pursuing any
other remedy against the defendants, or either of them that he may
be advised.
This is an action of ejectment brought by plaintiff in error to
recover certain mining property in the Territory of New Mexico. The
declaration alleges that the plaintiff, on July 10, 1893, was
entitled to the possession of a certain mine, or deposit of
mineral-bearing rock in place, situated in the Cochiti mining
district, in the County of Bernalillo and Territory of New Mexico,
and that, while so in possession, the defendants, on October 1,
1893, entered into and upon the premises and have ever since
withheld the possession of the same from the plaintiff to his
damage. All the defendants pleaded not guilty, while Pilkey added a
further plea that he was not at the time of the commencement of the
action in the possession of the premises or any part thereof. The
plaintiff demurred to this second plea, and after argument, the
demurrer was overruled. The parties went to trial upon these
pleadings, and after the
Page 181 U. S. 517
testimony had been taken, the jury, under the instructions of
the court, found a verdict for the defendants. The plaintiff
appealed from the judgment entered upon the verdict to the supreme
court of the territory, where it was affirmed, and he thereupon
sued out a writ of error from this Court.
For the purpose of the trial, the parties entered into the
following stipulation:
"It is stipulated and agreed by and between the plaintiff and
defendants in the above-entitled cause that the premises in
controversy in this case are situated within the limits of private
land claim reported as number 135 in the office of the surveyor
general of the Territory of New Mexico, known as the Canada de
Cochiti tract, as said claim was surveyed by the surveyor general,
said survey having been made and approved by Clarence Pullen,
surveyor general, on the date of June 29, A.D. 1885."
"It is further stipulated that said private land claim was never
confirmed upon report of the surveyor general, but two petitions
for the confirmation of the same were filed in the Court of Private
Land Claims, one by Joel Parker Whitney, Jose Juan Lucero, Lauriano
Lucero, Juan Cristoval Lucero, Jose de Jesus Lucero, Juan Teodora
Lucero, Jose Telesforo Lucero, Bernard S. Rodey, and Hannah Harris,
being numbered 205 of the docket of the Court of Private Land
Claims at Santa Fe, and filed March 2, 1893, and the other petition
being filed by Manuel Hurtado and Jose Antonio Gallego on the 3d
day of March, 1893, and that said petitions were consolidated in
said cases heard, and decree of confirmation rendered by said court
on the 29th day of September, A.D. 1894, a compared copy of which
decree is attached to this stipulation."
"It is further stipulated and agreed that the said premises in
controversy in this case are not included within the boundaries of
said grant as confirmed by said decree."
"It is further stipulated and agreed that an appeal was taken
from said decree by all of the said petitioners to the Supreme
Court of the United States, in which court said cause is now
pending upon said appeal and undetermined, said appeal being dated
the 11th day of March, A.D. 1895."
"It is further stipulated and agreed that the official
printed
Page 181 U. S. 518
copies of the reports of the surveyor general to Congress upon
said private land claim and all documents attached thereto may be
used upon the trial of this cause to the same effect as if they
were the original documents and archives on file in the surveyor
general's office, subject, however, to such objection as the
parties may make upon other grounds."
The plaintiff also showed upon the trial that he and one
Benjamin Johnson and the defendant Charles Pilkey on or about May
7, 1893, entered into an agreement at Albuquerque, New Mexico, by
which they agreed to form a partnership for the purpose of
discovering, locating, and operating mining claims, Pilkey agreeing
to prospect and locate such veins and lodes and placers as he might
discover containing valuable ores or minerals, in the name and for
the joint benefit of all the parties to the agreement, in the
proportion of one-third interest to himself and an undivided
two-thirds interest to the others. They were to furnish him with
tools, etc., and to pay him for some portion of his labor upon the
mines which he might discover. In pursuance of this agreement,
Pilkey started out and, among others, discovered, took possession
of, and assumed to locate the mine in question. It is claimed on
the part of the plaintiff that Pilkey, after taking possession of
and locating the mine, remained there from July 10, 1893, until
some time in October of that year, when, in connection with several
other persons, he entered into a conspiracy against his partners
and pursuant thereto ceased to do any work on the mine and
permitted other persons (defendants herein) to take possession of
it and make a relocation thereof, and that they have retained
possession ever since.
Evidence was offered at the trial for the purpose of showing
these last stated facts, which, under the objection of the
defendants, was ruled out and exceptions duly taken.
The defendants contended that the land in controversy was at all
times subject to the mining laws of the United States, and that
plaintiff did not comply with the provisions thereof or of the laws
of New Mexico applicable thereto, and that whatever right or title
he ever had in the lands had expired and become
Page 181 U. S. 519
forfeited before the defendants took possession of the land and
long before the commencement of this action.
MR. JUSTICE PECKHAM, after making the above statement of facts,
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The first question to be determined in this case is one which
arises out of the facts set forth in the stipulation between the
parties, and that is did the lands which the plaintiff claims to
recover belong at the time of the location in 1893 to the United
States within the meaning of § 2319, Revised Statutes, which
provides that
"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,"
etc.?
At the time of the location, the record shows the parties
believed the land was government land, and not within the limits of
any Mexican grant. The stipulation shows, however, that the lands
were in fact within the limits of the private land claim known as
the Canada de Cochiti grant; that the grant was never confirmed by
Congress upon the report of the surveyor general, and that two
different sets of claimants under the grant had filed their
petitions in the Court of Private Land Claims at Santa Fe, one on
the 2d and the other on the 3d day of March, 1893; that there was a
decree of confirmation rendered by the court on September 29, 1894,
and in that decree of confirmation the lands were not included
within the boundaries of the grant as confirmed by that decree. An
appeal was taken therefrom by all the parties to the Supreme Court
of the United States, where it was pending at the time the
stipulation was entered into, the appeal being dated March 11,
1895.
It therefore appears that at the time of the discovery and
location of the lode in July, 1893, the Cochiti grant was before
the
Page 181 U. S. 520
Court of Private Land Claims for adjudication, and the question
is whether, by reason of that fact, these lands were reserved from
entry and were not subject to the mineral laws of the United States
at that time. It will be noticed that, before the trial of this
case, the validity and extent of the Cochiti grant had been decided
by the Court of Private Land Claims, and this land was thereby
excluded from the limits of that grant. We know by our own records
that the decree of the Court of Private Land Claims was affirmed in
this Court, in substance, in
Whitney v. United
States, decided in May, 1897,
167 U.
S. 529. The contention on the part of the plaintiff in
error is that, while the Cochiti claim was before the Court of
Private Land Claims, and thereafter until its final determination
by this Court, no land within its claimed limits could be entered
upon under the mining laws of the United States, and if any such
entry were in fact made, it was illegal and void, and gave no
rights under the mining laws to the parties so entering, and
consequently plaintiff's possession was not subject to forfeiture
under those laws. In other words, that, while the claim was
sub
judice, all lands within its limits as claimed were withdrawn
and reserved from entry under any of the laws pertaining to the
sale or other disposition of the public lands of the United States,
and that the plaintiff, being in possession, had the right to
retain it as against defendants who entered without right or title,
and were therefore mere trespassers.
Public lands belonging to the United States, for whose sale or
other disposition Congress has made provision by its general laws,
are to be regarded as legally open for entry and sale under such
laws unless some particular lands have been withdrawn from sale by
congressional authority or by an executive withdrawal under such
authority, either expressed or implied.
Wolsey v. Chapman,
101 U. S. 755,
101 U. S. 769;
Hewitt v. Schultz, 180 U. S. 139. We
must therefore refer to the action of Congress to discover whether
lands which in fact were public lands of the United States were
reserved from sale or other disposition under its public laws
because they were included within the claimed limits but in fact
were not within the actual limits of a grant by the Spanish or
Mexican authorities before the cession of the
Page 181 U. S. 521
territory by Mexico to the United States by the Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo of February 2, 1848. 9 Stat. 922. The eighth and
ninth articles of that treaty provide that the property of every
kind belonging to Mexicans in the ceded territory should be
respected by the government of the United States, and their title
recognized.
By the Act of July 22, 1854, 10 Stat. 308, c. 103, Congress
established the office of surveyor general of the Territory of New
Mexico, and in the eighth section of that statute, it was made the
duty of that officer, under instructions from the Secretary of the
Interior, to ascertain the origin, nature, character, and extent of
all claims to lands under the laws, usages, and customs of Spain
and Mexico. He was to make a full report of all such claims as
originated before the cession of the territory to the United States
by the treaty above mentioned, with his decision as to the validity
or invalidity of each. This report was to be laid before Congress
for such action thereon as it might deem just and proper,
"and until the final action of Congress on such claims, all
lands covered thereby shall be reserved from sale or other disposal
by the government, and shall not be subject to the donations
granted by the previous provisions of this act."
The Cochiti grant came before the surveyor general pursuant to
the provisions of the act of 1854, and therefore, by the terms of
that portion of section eight just quoted, the lands were reserved
from sale or other disposal by the government until final action by
Congress thereon. Up to March 3, 1891, Congress had taken no action
in regard to this grant, and on that day, it passed the act
establishing the Court of Private Land Claims, 26 Stat. 854, c.
539, and by its fifteenth section, Congress in terms repealed the
eighth section of the act of 1854, "and all acts amendatory or in
extension thereof, or supplementary thereto, and all acts or parts
of acts inconsistent with the provisions of this act." By this
repeal, lands which were in fact public lands belonging to the
United States, although within the claimed limits of a Mexican
grant, became open to entry and sale under the laws of the United
States unless, as is the contention of plaintiff, such lands were
reserved from
Page 181 U. S. 522
entry and sale or other disposition by the United States, by
reason of the provisions of the treaty with Mexico. We see nothing
in the terms of that treaty, either in the eighth or ninth article,
that could be construed as a withdrawal of lands which in fact were
the public lands of the United States, although contained within
the claimed limits of some Mexican grant made prior to the cession
to the United States. The mere fact that lands were claimed under a
Mexican grant when such grant did not in truth cover them would
not, by virtue of any language used in the treaty, operate to
reserve such lands from entry and sale.
We are aware that the Land Department has in some cases taken a
different view of this subject. In the Tumacacori and Calabazas
Grant, 16 L.D. 408, 423, the Secretary held that the act of 1891,
creating the Court of Private Land Claims, did not by its fifteenth
section, "either by expression or necessary implication, revoke or
annul the statutory reservations in force at the time of its
passage."
And in the Joseph Farr Claim, 24 L.D. 1, the Secretary held
that, by the terms of the treaties between the United States and
the Republic of Mexico, all lands embraced within the Mexican and
Spanish grants were placed in a State of reservation for the
ascertainment of the rights claimed under said grants, and that the
Act of March 3, 1891, continued that reservation in force, and that
it would remain so until final action is taken on the respective
claims or grants affected thereby.
We cannot agree with these decisions. In the last case, the
Secretary held, in opposition to the views expressed by his
predecessor in the earlier case, that the lands were not reserved
by virtue of the statutory reservation under the act of 1854,
because that section was repealed by the fifteenth section of the
act of 1891 without any qualification, and the repeal went to the
entire section, but he held that
"whatever may have been the purpose of Congress in making said
reservation, it is clear that all lands embraced within the claimed
limits of grants made by Mexico or Spain prior to said treaty were
in a state of reservation under the terms of the treaty itself,
independent of any reservation that might be made after such treaty
was duly ratified.
Page 181 U. S. 523
It follows that the repeal of the section of the statute
containing the reservation would not have the effect of releasing
lands reserved under treaty obligations from such reservation."
As we have already stated, there are no words in the treaty with
Mexico expressly withdrawing from sale all lands within the claimed
limits of a Mexican grant, and we do not think there is any
language in the treaty which implies a reservation of that kind.
Whatever reservation there is must be looked for in the statutes of
the United States, and we are of opinion that there is no such
reservation and has been none since the repeal of the eighth
section of the act of 1854.
In
Stoddard v.
Chambers, 2 How. 284, the action was ejectment for
lands in Missouri. The defendant claimed title under a New Madrid
certificate permitting location upon the public lands which had
been authorized to be sold under an Act of Congress approved
February 15, 1811, by which the President was authorized to sell
public lands in the Territory of Louisiana with a proviso that,
"till after the decision of Congress thereon, no tract shall be
offered for sale the claim to which has been in due time, and
according to law, presented to the recorder of land titles in the
district of Louisiana, and filed in his office, for the purpose of
being investigated by the commissioners appointed for ascertaining
the rights of persons claiming lands in the Territory of
Louisiana."
From the time of the passage of that act up to May 26, 1829, it
was not questioned that all lands claimed under French or Spanish
title were reserved from sale by acts of Congress. On May 26, 1829,
this reservation ceased until it was revived by the Act of July 9,
1832, and was continued from that time until the act of 1836. The
defendant's patent was issued on July 16, 1832 -- after the time
when the reservation was revived by the Act of July 9, 1832. In
speaking of the location under his New Madrid certificate by the
defendant, the Court said (at p.
43 U. S.
318):
"His location was made on lands not liable to be thus
appropriated, but expressly reserved, and this was the case when
his patent was issued. Had the entry been made, or the patent
issued, after the 26th of May, 1829, when the reservation ceased,
and before it was revived by the act of 1832, the title
Page 181 U. S. 524
of the defendant could not be contested. But at no other
interval of time from the location of Bell until its confirmation
in 1836 was the land claimed by him liable to be appropriated in
satisfaction of a New Madrid certificate."
So in that case it appears that, unless there were a reservation
of the land by congressional action, it was not reserved in any
other way, and that, during the interval of three years when the
reservation by the act of Congress was not in operation, an entry
made during that time would have been valid, and the title of the
defendant thereunder could not have been contested.
Mineral lands are not supposed to have been granted under
ordinary Mexican grants of lands, and the act of 1891 provides that
minerals do not pass by such grants unless the grant claimed to
effect the donation or sale of such mines or minerals to the
grantee, or unless such grantee became otherwise entitled thereto
in law or in equity, the mines and minerals remaining the property
of the United States, with the right of working the same, but no
mine was to be worked or any property confirmed under the act of
1891 without the consent of the owner of such property until
specially authorized thereto by an act of Congress thereafter to be
passed. (Section 13, subdivision third, act of 1891.) This
provision makes it still plainer that, so far as regards mineral
lands, there was no intention after the passage of the act of 1891
that they should be reserved by a mere claim in a Mexican grant of
ordinary land.
Nor does the claim that the Cochiti grant was
sub
judice at the time of the location of these lands affect their
status as public lands belonging to the United States. They were
not in fact within the limits of the grant.
The case of
Astiazaran v. Santa Rita Land & Mining
Company, 148 U. S. 80, is
not in point. In that case it was held that a private claim to land
in Arizona, under a Mexican grant which had been reported to
Congress by the surveyor general of the territory, could not,
before Congress had acted on the report, be contested in the courts
of justice. It was stated (p.
148 U. S. 83)
that
"the case is one of those jurisdiction of which has been
committed to a particular tribunal, and which cannot therefore --
at least while proceedings are pending before that tribunal --
be
Page 181 U. S. 525
taken up and decided by any other."
The court further said that, Congress having constituted itself
the tribunal to finally determine upon the report and
recommendation of the surveyor general whether the claim was valid
or invalid, the proceedings were pending until Congress acted, and
while they were pending, the question of the title of the
petitioner could not be contested in the ordinary courts of
justice. This is no such case. There was no contest in any other
court by which the validity or extent of the grant pending for
decision in the Court of Private Land Claims could in any way be
affected. No court of justice had been appealed to for any such
purpose. The question was simply whether the land was public land
open to entry under the laws of the United States, and this was a
question which parties might decide at the peril of having their
acts rendered of no avail if the decision of the Court of Private
Land Claims included those lands in the grant then before it.
Nor does the case of
Newhall v. Sanger, 92 U. S.
761, apply. In that case, it was held that lands within
the boundaries of an alleged Mexican or Spanish grant which was
sub judice at the time the Secretary of the Interior
ordered a withdrawal of lands along the route of the railroad were
not embraced in the congressional grant to the company. The
decision went upon the ground that the legislation of Congress had
been so shaped that no title could be initiated under the laws of
the United States to lands covered by a Spanish or Mexican claim
until it was barred by lapse of time or rejected. The Act of March
3, 1851. 9 Stat. 631, 633, c. 41, sec. 13, which provides for the
presentation of claims under Mexican grants in California to the
commission established by the act, was referred to by the Court,
and it was held that, by reason of its provisions, the lands were
not public lands under the laws of the United States until the
claims thereto had been either barred by lapse of time or rejected.
The sixth section of the act of 1853, March 3, 10 Stat. 244, 246,
was also referred to as expressly excepting all lands claimed under
any foreign grant or title. There was no such legislation existing
in regard to New Mexico at the time of the location of this mining
claim, July, 1893. The lands were in fact and have been since their
cession to this country, public lands of the
Page 181 U. S. 526
United States, although, during the period between the passage
of the act of 1854 and that of 1891, they were not open for sale or
other disposition while the claims to such lands were
undetermined.
Being public land and since 1891 open to location under the
mining laws of the United States, it is further contended on the
part of defendants that the location of the claim made by Pilkey on
July 10, 1893, in behalf of himself and his two partners, Lockhart
the plaintiff herein and Johnson, became forfeited by reason of
noncompliance with the mining statutes of the United States and
also the Territory of New Mexico, and that, while such failure to
comply with the statutes continued, peaceable possession of the
land was taken and a relocation made by the defendants, and
whatever rights the plaintiff ever had under the first location
were thereby cut off.
The laws of New Mexico in force at the time when this location
was made provide that a person desiring to locate a mining claim
must distinctly mark the location on the ground so that its
boundaries may be readily traced, and must post in some conspicuous
place on the ground a notice in writing stating the names of the
locators, their intention to locate the claim, giving a description
thereof by reference to some natural object or permanent monument
so as to identify it, and must also, within three months after such
posting, cause a copy of the notice to be recorded in the office of
the recorder of the county in which the notice is posted. The
locator must, also, within ninety days from the date of taking
possession of the claim, sink a discovery shaft upon the claim to a
depth of at least ten feet from the lowest part of the rim of such
shaft at the surface, exposing mineral in place, or he shall drive
a tunnel, adit, or open cut upon such claim at least ten feet below
the surface exposing mineral in place. By the provisions of the act
of 1889, the surface boundaries of all mining claims located must
also be marked by four substantial posts or four substantial
monuments of stone set at each corner of the claim and which posts
or monuments must be plainly marked so as to indicate the direction
of the claim from each monument or post. Sec. 2286, Compiled Laws
of N.M. 1897; secs. 1 and 2, c. 25, Laws N.M. 1889.
Page 181 U. S. 527
There is no pretense in the evidence that these things were done
other than the posting of a notice upon a pile of rocks at some
point within the claim. No work was done, no monuments or posts
set, no discovery shaft sunk, nor any tunnel, adit, or open cut
driven as provided by law. It also appears that sometime about the
last of September or the early part of October, 1893, Pilkey who
was the only one of the partners who went to the land and stayed
near it at any time, left the neighborhood with his wife and came
to Albuquerque and remained there until November, 1893 and that,
while he was absent and no one in possession of the land, and on or
about October 23, 1893, four of the original defendants, Fagaly,
Walker, Leeds, and Johnson, located this claim and peaceably
entered upon and took possession of it.
If the statutes are not complied with by doing the work as
therein provided, and another locates before such work is done, it
is a valid location.
Faxon v. Barnard, 4 F. 702;
Belk
v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279,
104 U. S.
282.
It is undisputed that the requisite amount of work was not done
by the first locator, nor is there any dispute that he left the
mine, certainly early in October, 1893, and that there was no one
in possession of the land on the 23d of October, 1893, when the
above-named defendants entered upon the land, peaceably took
possession thereof, and made their location, and that in such
location Pilkey did not join, and his name was absent from the
notice, and he was not present when possession was taken by the
other defendants.
These undisputed facts are shown by the record, and upon such
evidence the court directed a verdict for the defendants. The
supreme court of the territory has affirmed the judgment entered
upon this verdict on the ground that the land was public land of
the United States and open to location under the mineral laws
thereof; that the failure of the original locator to comply with
the terms of the statutes of the United States and of New Mexico by
doing the work therein prescribed forfeited all his rights under
such location, and the peaceable location and possession by others
while such failure continued were valid, and the plaintiff
therefore showed no legal title to the mine, and consequently
Page 181 U. S. 528
could not recover in this action. Upon the facts thus stated, we
think the supreme court was right.
In the course of the trial, however, while the cause was with
the plaintiff, he offered to show certain other and further facts
which he claimed entitled him to recover the lands as against all
the defendants. The defendants objected to the evidence so offered
on the ground that it was inadmissible and immaterial in this
action, and the objection was sustained and the plaintiff duly
excepted.
The facts which the plaintiff sought to prove are briefly these:
after Pilkey and the plaintiff and Johnson had entered into their
agreement, and while Pilkey was, pursuant to its provisions,
engaged in prospecting, he discovered the mine in question and
located it in the name of himself and his partners, and thereafter
and before the expiration of the ninety days in which to do the
necessary work on the claim, he and the other defendants conspired
together and agreed that he should do no work on the mine within
the statutory time, and after the expiration of that time and a
forfeiture had been incurred by a failure to comply with the
statutes the other parties, defendant should relocate the mine,
comply with the laws in regard to doing the work upon it, and
thereby obtain the ownership thereof, and that, pursuant to such
conspiracy, he did neglect to do the necessary work within the
statutory time, the defendants relocated the mine, entered into the
possession thereof and did the necessary work thereon and have
remained in possession ever since. The plaintiff therefore claims
that Pilkey, being one of the conspirators with the other
defendants and also a copartner of plaintiff, could not be a party
to a hostile relocation of the mine, and that any such relocation
by others under an agreement with him was illegal, and gave no
right or title to defendants, and that the prior possession of
plaintiff, through his copartner, continued in law, and, as against
the defendants, such possession gave plaintiff a good title, they
being, on account of their fraud, mere trespassers upon the
land.
Much of the testimony thus given is denied on the part of
Pilkey, but, as all of it was rejected by the court, we must assume
its truth for the purpose of determining the case.
Page 181 U. S. 529
It is clear that the statutes providing for a location of mining
lands were not complied with by Lockhart or his partners. There is
no dispute on that subject. When peaceable possession of the mine
which Pilkey had abandoned was taken and the relocation was made by
the defendants Fagaly, Walker, Leeds, and Johnson, and in their own
names, whatever legal title to the mine the plaintiff Lockhart had
by virtue of the prior location by defendant Pilkey was cut off.
The plaintiff has now brought this purely legal action of
ejectment, and must recover upon the strength of his legal title or
not at all. It is undisputed that whatever possession Pilkey had
ever taken of the land in question had been in fact abandoned by
him as early as the first of October, 1893. Lockhart had never had
any other than constructive possession of the land based upon the
alleged actual possession of his copartner, and when the latter
abandoned such actual possession, left the mine, and came to
Albuquerque, the constructive possession of plaintiff ceased at the
same moment. When the four defendants who took possession of and
relocated the mine went on the land on October 23, 1893, they found
it vacant, and when they took peaceable possession of the vacant
land before any resumption of work upon the claim by plaintiff or
in his behalf, the latter's legal title, whatever it had been,
ceased. It is not a case, therefore, of a prior possession under
color of law or title being sufficient as against an ouster by a
mere trespasser. There has been no ouster, but, on the contrary, a
complete abandonment of possession. Whatever may be the equities of
the plaintiff in regard to this land as against the defendants, he
has certainly no legal title to the mine or any part thereof and,
in this purely legal action, he must fail.
In the courts of the United States in an action of ejectment,
the strict legal title must prevail, and if the plaintiff have only
equities, they must be presented and considered on the equity side
of the court.
Foster v. Mora, 98 U. S.
425,
98 U. S. 428;
Johnson v. Christian, 128 U. S. 374,
128 U. S. 382.
The law of New Mexico is to the same effect. N.M.Comp.Laws, §
3160, and following sections.
Whatever the rights of the plaintiff may be (and as to what
Page 181 U. S. 530
they are, we express no opinion), it is clear that, on this
record, he cannot maintain an action of ejectment. If he have
rights as a copartner or cotenant with Pilkey, and he claims that
the acts of the latter inure to his benefit in any way, his rights
under such circumstances can be enforced in equity.
Turner v.
Sawyer, 150 U. S. 578,
150 U. S.
586.
In relation to mining, it has been held that the remedy in the
case of a claim in the nature of that which the plaintiff herein
sets up is against the copartner or cotenant, by an action for a
breach of his contract or to establish and enforce a trust in the
claim as relocated against the parties relocating.
Saunders v.
Mackey, 5 Mont. 523;
Doherty v. Morris, 11 Colo.
12.
In this case, it will be seen that the relocation on behalf of
some of the defendants did not contain Pilkey's name, and hence he
never had any legal title under that location. He denies that he
had any interest in the mine under the relocation, and asserts that
it was not made in his interest or for his benefit. Although the
plaintiff has no right to maintain this action, yet he ought not to
be embarrassed by a judgment here from pursuing any other remedy
against the defendants or either of them that he may be advised,
and in order to avoid any complication of that nature which
possibly might result from an absolute affirmance of the judgment
of the supreme court of the territory, we modify the terms of that
judgment by providing that it is entered without prejudice to the
enforcement by other remedies, of the rights, if any, which the
plaintiff may have against the parties defendant or either of them,
and as so modified, such judgment is
Affirmed.