A valid subsisting mining location, such as the Comstock lode,
or an interest therein, is property distinct from the land itself,
vendible, inheritable, and taxable as such by the state,
notwithstanding the land may be unpatented by the United
States.
When the collection of a tax on such an interest is enforced by
sale, the tax deed conveys merely the right of possession, and does
not affect any interest of the United States, and the construction
of the state statutes, and the conformity thereto of the tax levy
and sale, are matters exclusively for the state court to determine,
and this Court is without jurisdiction to review its decision.
Sections 340, 341 of the laws of Colorado of 1881, taxing
interests in unpatented mining claims and making the right of
possession the subject of levy and sale, are not in conflict with
§ 4 of the Colorado Enabling Act of March 3, 1870, 18 Stat.
474, providing that no tax shall be imposed on lands or property of
the United States.
Where the federal question below was whether a tax sale deprived
the owner of his property without due process of law because the
notice, being published on Sunday, was insufficient, and the state
court did not pass on that question, but sustained the tax title
under the state statutes making tax deeds
prima facie
evidence and of limitations, the nonfederal grounds are adequate to
support the judgment, and this Court is without jurisdiction to
review it on writ of error under § 709, Rev.Stat.
37 Colo. 174 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the right of a state to tax the
possessory right in unpatented mining claims, are stated in the
opinion.
Page 208 U. S. 230
MR. JUSTICE MOODY delivered the opinion of the Court.
The plaintiffs in error brought this action in a district court
of the State of Colorado to recover from the defendants in error
the possession of an undivided interest in the Comstock Lode mining
claim, situated in that state. Both parties claimed title under
Wilhelmina Gude, who was agreed to have been the owner of the
interest in dispute, the defendants under a sale for taxes assessed
upon her interest, made August 5, 1889, and a deed in pursuance of
the sale, made August 8, 1892, and recorded August 11, 1892, the
plaintiffs under a quitclaim deed of her interest made April 5,
1894, and duly recorded. The tax title was the earlier, and
possession of the interest in dispute was held by those claiming
under that title for more than five years, which is the period of
the statute of limitations of Colorado applicable to such a case.
The plaintiffs, however, insisted that the tax title was void, and
the judge of the trial court so found, and entered judgment for the
plaintiffs, which was reversed by the supreme court of the state
and judgment for the defendants ordered. The case is here upon writ
of error to the latter court.
The plaintiffs' contention is that the tax title was void for
two reasons: first, because the property was not subject to
Page 208 U. S. 231
state taxation, as the title to the land was in the United
States, and therefore the levy of the tax was a nullity; second,
because the notice of the sale for taxes was published only in a
Sunday newspaper, and therefore the sale was a nullity. The further
contention is then made that the tax deed, for these reasons, was
void, and did not afford color of title sufficient for the purpose
of the statute of limitations.
The judgment under review, however, determined that the interest
of Wilhelmina Gude was liable to taxation under the laws of the
state, although the land on which it was located had not been
patented to her or entered for patent by her; that the possession
was the subject of the assessment, and that the right of possession
passed by the tax sale; that a tax deed was, by a state statute,
prima facie evidence
inter alia "that the
property was duly and lawfully advertised for sale;" that the tax
deed was not void upon its face, and that it constituted a
sufficient color of title to satisfy the statute of limitations;
and, finally, that, as this action was not brought within five
years after the delivery of the tax deed, it was barred by that
statute, which provided that
"no action for the recovery of land sold for taxes shall lie
unless the same be brought within five years after the execution
and delivery of the deed therefor by the treasurer."
The question for decision here is only whether this judgment
denied to the plaintiffs any federal rights duly claimed by them in
the state court, and we have no right to inquire further.
1. The title to the land on which this mining claim was located
was in the United States. It was a part of the public lands, and
although proceedings had been begun by the owners of the claim for
the acquisition of the title to the land by patent, they were not
concluded at the time of the assessment of the tax, and apparently
no patent has ever been issued. Obviously the land was not taxable
as the property of Wilhelmina Gude. The act by which the people of
the Territory of Colorado were enabled to form a state (§ 4 of
Act approved March 3, 1875, 18 Stat. 474, c. 139) provided that no
taxes
Page 208 U. S. 232
should ever be imposed upon lands or property of the United
States. The claim of federal right was based upon this statute.
But, assuming that under this statute a federal question is raised,
there was no taxation of the land in the case at bar. A statute of
Colorado authorized the taxation of mining claims, whether patented
or entered for patent or not, in these words:
"In case the mine or mining claim shall not be patented, or
entered for a patent, but shall be assessable and taxable under
this act on account of producing gross proceeds, then and in that
case the possession shall be the subject of the assessment, and if
said mining property be sold for taxes levied, the sale for such
taxes shall pass the title and right of possession to the
purchaser, under the laws of Colorado."
Laws 1887, pp. 340, 341, Mills' Anno.Stat. §§
3222-3225. The construction of this statute and the conformity to
it of the proceedings of the taxing officials were questions
exclusively for the supreme court of the state, and we have no
authority to review its determination of them. That court held that
what was assessed was not the land on which the mining claim was
located, but the claim itself -- that is to say, the right of
possession of the land for mining purposes. It is agreed that the
Comstock Lode was a "valid subsisting mining location," and, at the
time of the assessment of the tax, Wilhelmina Gude was the owner of
the undivided interest in it which is in controversy here. Such an
interest from early times has been held to be property, distinct
from the land itself, vendible, inheritable, and taxable.
Forbes v. Gracey, 94 U. S. 762;
Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279,
104 U. S. 283;
Manuel v. Wulff, 152 U. S. 505,
152 U. S. 510;
St. Louis Mining Co. v. Montana Mining Co., 171 U.
S. 650,
171 U. S. 655;
1 Lindley on Mines, §§ 535 to 542, inclusive. The state
therefore had the power to tax this interest in the mining claim
and enforce the collection of the tax by sale. The tax deed
conveyed merely the right of possession, and affected no interest
of the United States.
2. The tax deed under which the defendant in error Wood claims
title was executed in pursuance of a sale made upon
Page 208 U. S. 233
a notice published only in a Sunday newspaper. This fact does
not appear from the deed itself, as an analogous infirmity appeared
in the tax deed before the court in
Redfield v. Parks,
132 U. S. 239. The
deed upon its face was a valid instrument, and could be impeached
only by evidence
aliunde. The state court did not deem it
necessary to consider whether such a notice was sufficient, because
it held that a state statute made such a deed
prima facie
evidence of the sufficiency of the notice, and that possession
under such a deed for the prescribed period met the requirements of
the state statute of limitations. The decision therefore did not
reach the only federal question which can be imagined with respect
to this part of the case -- namely, that a sale upon such a notice
was wanting in due process of law -- but rested upon entirely
adequate grounds of a nonfederal nature. Whether the decision of
the question of state law was right or wrong, we may not consider.
It is enough that the judgment proceeded solely upon the state law,
and that the state the court below, or whether a sale upon without
reaching any federal question.
Leathe v. Thomas,
207 U. S. 93. We
need not therefore consider whether this federal question was
properly raised in the court below, or whether a sale upon such a
notice would be a denial of due process of law in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment of the Constitution.
The plaintiffs in error have shown no violation of federal
right, and the judgment of the Supreme Court of Colorado is
Affirmed.