United States v. Keitel, ante, p.
211 U. S. 370,
followed; the rule therein stated as to fraudulent entries of coal
lands under §§ 2347-2350, Rev.Stat., by qualified persons
for the benefit, and as agents of, disqualified persons, applies
not only to cash entries, but also to entries under preferential
rights by persons opening and developing mines on the lands
entered.
The preferential right under §§ 2348, 2349, Rev.Stat.,
is not in and of itself the equivalent of an entry uncontrolled by
the prohibitions expressed in the statutes relating to entries of
coal lands, but is simply
Page 211 U. S. 400
a privilege to make the statutory entry of a particular tract in
preference to others.
157 F. 396, reversed.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
A demurrer having been sustained to an indictment found against
the present defendants in error, this writ of error was prosecuted
on behalf of the United States under the authority of the Act of
March 2, 1907, 34 Stat. 1246, c. 2564.
The five persons named as defendants were accused of having at
Durango, Colorado, entered into an unlawful conspiracy to defraud
the United States of more than 3,500 acres of coal lands, eighteen
tracts of which land were particularly described. The purpose and
object of the conspiracy was averred to have been the obtaining of
the title to the lands for a Colorado corporation, styled the
Calumet Fuel Company, in a quantity far greater than the
corporation could lawfully acquire. The lands were averred to
be
"all then and there lands of the United States, chiefly valuable
for the deposit of coal therein, situated within said land
district, and open to entry and purchase as coal lands at the said
land office, under the laws of the United States relating to the
entry and sale of coal lands, and the rules and regulations then in
force, which had theretofore been made under authority of said laws
of the Commissioner of the General Land Office, with the approval
of the Secretary of the Interior."
The means by which
Page 211 U. S. 401
the lands were to be fraudulently acquired were substantially as
follows: persons qualified to enter coal lands were to be procured
who would be furnished by the conspirators or the corporation with
the means to purchase such lands upon antecedent agreements that
the lands, when acquired, should be conveyed as directed by the
conspirators, each entryman to make the application to purchase and
the final entry, and, in so doing, to make affidavit, in which,
among other things, it would be falsely stated that the entryman
was making the entry for his own use and benefit, and not directly
or indirectly for the use or benefit of any other person, whereby
the local land officers would be deceived, etc. Forty-nine separate
overt acts were charged to have been done in furtherance of the
conspiracy. In six of the paragraphs relating to the commission of
overt acts, the making of affidavits at purchase concerning six of
the eighteen tracts enumerated in the body of the indictment was
alleged, and the affidavits were set forth verbatim. In each
affidavit, besides asserting citizenship, no previous exercise of a
right to purchase, and stating the character of the lands, the
applicant declared that he had expended a small sum (in one
instance fifty dollars, in the others fifteen or twenty dollars) in
developing a mine on the particular tract, that the applicant was
in actual possession of the mine, and that the entry was made for
his own use and benefit, and not indirectly for the use or benefit
of any other party. The remaining overt acts concerned the
borrowing of the money to make the purchases, the furnishing of the
money to the entrymen to make the payments, the execution of deeds
by the entrymen, the surveying of certain of the lands, an
affidavit as to the distance of some of the lands from a completed
railroad, etc.
Among other grounds of demurrer to the indictment was one
asserting that no offense was stated therein. The demurrer was
sustained "for reasons given on consideration of the first count in
case No. 2022,
United States of America v. F. W. Keitel et
al." The decision thus made the basis of the
Page 211 U. S. 402
ruling was that reviewed in case No. 286, which we have just
decided,
ante, p.
211
U. S. 370. As pointed out in the opinion in that case,
the court below, in quashing the indictment there considered,
treated it as relating solely to cash entries made under the
provisions of § 2347, Rev.Stat. If the indictment in this case
is also to be so treated, it clearly follows from the ruling which
we have made in the previous case that the court erred in
sustaining the demurrer. But it is insisted on behalf of the
defendants in error that this case differs from the
Keitel
case because the conspiracy here charged did not concern cash
entries, so-called, but embraced only entries of coal lands made by
persons who had secured, by the opening and developing of mines and
the filing of declaratory statements, as provided in § 2349,
preferential rights of entry. If it be certain that the court below
had construed the indictment as solely relating to strictly cash
entries, then, under the views expressed in the
Keitel
case, the contention now made as to the true significance of the
indictment would not be open upon this record. It does not,
however, follow that the court below interpreted the indictment
here as relating solely to cash entries, because it referred to the
reasons given for quashing the first count of the indictment in the
Keitel case as affording the basis for its action in
sustaining the demurrer to the indictment in this. We say this
because it may well be that the court deemed that the construction
which it gave to the statutes as applied in the
Keitel
case to cash entries was applicable, even although the indictment
in the case was concerned with preferential entries. In any event,
in applying the ruling which it made in the
Keitel case to
this, the court below must have construed the conspiracy charged in
the indictment as relating to all or any of the following classes:
1, to the procuring of the making of original cash entries by
qualified entrymen in their own names while secretly acting as
agents for a disqualified person; 2, to the procuring of qualified
persons to take possession and improve coal lands and to file
declaratory statements, with the ultimate object and purpose of
entering the lands for the
Page 211 U. S. 403
benefit of disqualified persons; and, 3, to cause persons in
whose favor preference rights to enter coal lands had arisen to
exercise such rights by purchasing the land ostensibly for
themselves, but in reality for the benefit of disqualified persons,
and to pay for the same with money furnished by those persons under
an obligation to convey the land to them.
The first two of these classes are so obviously controlled by
the construction of the statute which we have just announced in the
Keitel case, as to demonstrate beyond contention that the
court below erred in its ruling on the demurrer. The third class
is, we think, also necessarily governed by the construction which
we have given the statute in the
Keitel case. It being
settled in that case that the prohibition against more than one
entry of coal lands by the same person prohibits a qualified person
from entering such lands apparently for himself, but in fact as the
agent of a disqualified person, it follows that the prohibition
embraces an entry made by one through the procurement and for the
benefit of another, although the entryman had previously initiated
a preference right to enter the land for his own account. The mere
preference right obtained as the result of taking the steps
enumerated in §§ 2348 and 2349, Rev.Stat., including the
filing of the declaratory statement, is, as described in §
2348, simply "a preference right of entry, under the preceding
section, of the mine so opened and improved." Turning to §
2347, the preceding section referred to, it will be seen that the
entry therein provided for is the cash entry made by applying to
purchase the land, and contemporaneously therewith making payment
for the same, which entry, as we have decided in the
Keitel case, excludes the right of a qualified person to
make the entry in his own name with the money and for the benefit
of a disqualified person. When it is considered that the preference
which the statute allows is but a right within the time limited in
the statute to make the entry authorized by § 2347, it cannot
be held, without destroying that section, that the obtaining of
such mere right of preference authorized the making not only of
an
Page 211 U. S. 404
entry which the statute permitted, but as well one which the
statute forbade. All the argument which seeks to demonstrate that
the provision which gives the right to be preferred in making an
authorized entry endows with the authority to make an illegal
because prohibited entry rests upon a mere misconception of the
nature and character of the right of preference for which the
statute provides. The argument assumes that the right of preference
is, in and of itself, the equivalent of an entry, not controlled by
the prohibition which the statute expresses, when in truth and in
fact the right of preference is merely a privilege given to make
the statutory entry of a particular tract of coal land in
preference to others. And the misconceptions upon which the
argument rests concerning the nature and character of the
preference right for which the coal land statutes provide, when
duly appreciated, at once demonstrate the irrelevancy of previous
rulings of this Court concerning the right of an entryman after
entry, or after the doing of acts made by the statute equivalent to
an entry, to dispose of the land embraced within the entry.
It follows from the construction which we have given the
statutes in the opinion delivered in the
Keitel case, No.
286, just decided, and for the reasons here stated, that the court
below erred in sustaining the demurrer to the indictment.
Reversed and remanded for further proceedings in conformity
to this opinion.