The Act of April 28, 1904, § 1, c. 1772, 33 Stat. 525,
provided that the locator of unsurveyed coal land in Alaska "shall
have opened or improved a coal mine;" upon an application for
patent, the Secretary of the Interior construed this as requiring
that the work done evince a purpose to open or improve a producing
mine, and, examining the undisputed facts as to the work relied on,
which consisted of more or less superficial excavations exposing
coal, found that it was done for prospecting purposes and that it
did not satisfy the statute.
Held not arbitrary even if
erroneous, and not subject to revision by mandamus. P.
250 U. S.
552.
Held further that the Secretary's discretion in the
matter was not foreclosed by rulings in earlier cases as to what
constitutes the opening or improvement of a mine, said to have been
relied on in the making of the locations, but the effect of which
is found not to be inconsistent with the decision complained of. P.
250 U. S.
553.
46 App.D.C. 443 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Petition for mandamus to require the Secretary of the Interior
and the Commissioner of the General Land Office
Page 250 U. S. 550
to approve and pass to patent the application of the petitioner
for certain coal claims, or to show cause why they have not done
so.
Respondents replied that they are constituted by law the sole
agents of the government in the administration and disposal of the
public lands by and through the means appointed by Congress, and
have exclusive jurisdiction to determine the validity of all claims
or applications to enter or acquire any part of them, and that the
discharge of that duty involves judgment and discretion.
And further replied that petitioner sought to acquire title to
the coal claims under the Act of April 28, 1904, c. 1772, 33 Stat.
525, and the Act of May 28, 1908, c. 211, 35 Stat. 424, by virtue
of the locations set out in the petition. That the locations came
on to be heard and that they, respondents, after considering all of
the evidence and applying the law thereto, found and determined
that the locations involved were invalid, the locators not having
opened or improved any mine or mines of coal on any of the tracts
of land in controversy, as required by the cited statutes, and that
petitioner was not entitled to purchase the same, and thereupon
respondents, in the exercise of their discretion and judgment,
rejected the application.
Hence, they prayed that the rule against them be discharged and
the petition dismissed.
Petitioner demurred to the reply on the ground that it did not
set forth any substantial or legal defense. The demurrer was
overruled, and, petitioner electing to stand upon it, the rule to
show cause was discharged and the petition dismissed. The judgment
was affirmed by the court of appeals.
The question in the case therefore is direct -- that is, the
power of the Land Office under the cited statutes and the facts
recited in the petition. This power, we may say at the outset,
necessarily is something more than ministerial, the mere yielding
to and registry of any demand,
Page 250 U. S. 551
and yet, on the other hand, not arbitrary, without statutory
direction or regulation by settled rules and principles. In other
words, the Land Office is like any other tribunal, its institution
and purpose defining and measuring its power, the determining
elements being those of fact and law, upon which necessarily
judgment must be passed.
What are the elements of fact and of law in the present case? As
set forth in the petition, they are these:
Sections 2347 to 2352 of the Revised Statutes provide for the
entry of vacant coal lands, 160 acres to an individual, 320 acres
to an association, who have
opened and improved, or shall
"
open and improve [italics ours], any coal mine or mines
upon the public lands" (§ 2348).
These sections were extended to Alaska by an act passed June 6,
1900, c. 79631 Stat. 658, and the latter act was amended by the Act
of April 28, 1904,
supra, § 1 of which provides:
"That any person or association of persons qualified to make
entry under the coal land laws of the United States, who shall have
opened or improved [italics ours] a coal mine or coal
mines on any of the unsurveyed public lands of the United States in
the district of Alaska may locate the lands upon which such mine or
mines are situated. . . ."
Section 2 of the act provides for the application for and issue
of patent.
The Act of May 28, 1908, provides for the consolidation of
claims and their inclusion in a single claim. It is otherwise of no
importance.
It will be observed that the only substantial difference between
the sections of the Revised Statutes and the act extending them to
Alaska is that, by the former, the right of location is granted to
one or those "who have opened
and improved" a mine or
mines and "who have opened
or improved" a mine or
mines.
Petitioner in great volume asserts locations under the
Page 250 U. S. 552
Act of April 28, 1904, to which locations it has succeeded. The
facts concerning them are not in dispute, but whether what was done
constituted an opening or improvement of mines and constrained a
decision other than that given by the Land Office is in
dispute.
Eight locations were made, all of which were conveyed by the
asserted locators to petitioner in March, 1909. Surveys were made
of the locations, which surveys were duly examined and filed in the
proper land office in Alaska, and in 1909 petitioner paid to the
Treasurer of the United States $10 for each acre surveyed, in the
aggregate $9,905.74, and made application to the then Secretary of
the Interior through the local land office for a patent, tendering
due proof of the locations of each applicant. Notice was
posted.
April 26, 1912, at the local land office (Juneau), under the
direction of the Commissioner of the General Land Office,
proceedings were instituted against the application of petitioner
upon the ground, among others, that neither of the claimants, prior
to making the locations or at any time thereafter and prior to
filing notice of the locations, opened or improved any mine or
mines of coal on any of the tracts of land, as required by the Act
of April 28, 1904.
Proofs were taken upon the charges, and the register and
receiver sustained them and decided and recommended that the
application for a patent be rejected.
Upon an appeal to the Commissioner, the decision of the local
officers was approved after a circumstantial review of the case,
and again, upon appeal from the Commissioner's decision, by the
Secretary of the Interior.
All of the officers decided that the acts of Congress
contemplated as a basis of a valid location the opening and
developing of a producing mine of coal, and that work performed
upon a claim for prospecting purposes does not fulfill the
requirement. And that such was the character of the work done upon
the claims in question was the deduction
Page 250 U. S. 553
of the officers. "Shallow surface cuts and openings" the work
was denominated, and not made "for the purpose of the opening or
improving of a producing coal mine or mines."
The characterization, purpose, and effect thus ascribed to the
work of the claimants are contested, and it is insisted that the
amount and effect of the work done constituted an opening and
improving of mines and constrained an opposite conclusion and
judgment from that of the Land Office, and it is insisted, indeed,
that a contrary conclusion was constrained not only by the
provisions of the statutes, but by previous rulings of the
department, under the assurance of which the locations were made,
and thereby acquired the quality of vested rights to be recognized
by the issue of patent as a matter of course -- an irresistible
right therefore having legal remedy in mandamus. It is hence
insisted that
"the respondent [Secretary of the Interior] and his said
subordinates have erred not in the facts, but in their
interpretation and construction of the acts of Congress and of the
law pertaining to coal mines in or under public lands of the United
States in Alaska and to the rights of location, application, and
patent thereof by locators and their assigns . . . , and thereby
exceeding his and their powers and jurisdiction."
The contention is repeated in petitioner's brief in various
ways, and illustrations. cases besides are cited with the assertion
that in such situation there is no room for the exercise of
"discretion," but that it is the imperative duty of the Secretary
to issue a patent, the right to it having become vested.
Undoubtedly there may be cases in which rights had actually
accrued and nothing remained to the Secretary but their
recognition, and counsel have collected and urged such as they deem
in point,
* but the present
case lacks
Page 250 U. S. 554
their essential condition. The decision of the local land
officers and that of the Commissioner and Secretary disproves the
assumption that counsel make that there was only an interpretation
and construction of the acts of Congress. On the contrary, there
was a painstaking consideration and review of the evidence and a
determination of its probative strength, and the deduction was that
what was done was for prospecting purposes merely, and did not
satisfy the requirements of the acts of Congress -- a purpose to
open or improve a mine or mines. And necessarily there is a
difference in the purposes, a difference between a mere discovery
or exposition of a vein of mineral and its development. Counsel's
contention confounds the difference and insists that it is
established by the rulings in prior cases in the department that a
mine is opened or improved by an "actual excavation of the earth,
whether by open cut or tunnel, so as to expose a vein of coal,
which is the coal mine." And this, it is contended, has become a
principle of decision and has the insistent quality of
stare
decisis -- commanding a specific conclusion, superseding by
its automatism any discretionary function in the land officers.
It is not necessary to review the cases. It is enough to say
that they have not the inflexibility ascribed to them. And this can
be illustrated. Counsel speak of exposition of a vein by a "cut or
tunnel." How deep or extensive must either be to invoke the
principle? And is the principle confined to such, or is it
applicable whatever the kind or extent of the work -- by any
disturbance of the surface or without any disturbance if the vein
be above the surface?
Page 250 U. S. 555
Manifestly judgment in all cases must be exercised -- judgment
not only of the law, but what was done under the law, and its
sufficiency to avail of the grant of the law.
In
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock, 190 U.
S. 316, it was said that Congress has constituted the
Land Department the administrator of the public lands and for the
discharge of this duty invested it with judicial functions which
are not subject to review by injunction or mandamus. This was
repeated and applied in
Ness v. Fisher, 223 U.
S. 683.
Counsel contest the application of these cases and distinguish
them from that at bar by the difference between ministerial and
judicial action, and assert
"that the Secretary has essentially altered the law by
converting the essential terms of it, upon which our rights are
based, to terms of another meaning, and that that is an arbitrary
act which the courts can control and overrule."
If the accusation were true, the conclusion might follow, but
the accusation is not true. We rest on this declaration. It would
extend this opinion too much to trace through the ingenuity of
counsel's reasoning in a very long brief and the citation and
analysis of many cases the distinction they rely on -- that is, the
distinction between formal and discretionary action. Undoubtedly
there is that distinction.
Lane v. Hoglund, 244 U.
S. 174. But where there is discretion, as we think there
is in this case, even though its conclusion be disputable, it is
impregnable to mandamus.
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock and
Ness v. Fisher, supra.
Judgment affirmed.
* Cudney v. Flannery, 1 L.D. 165; M., K. & T. Ry. v. Buck
(L.D. unreported); Miner v. Mariott, 2 L.D. 709; Milne v.
Ellsworth, 3 L.D. 213; Henry W. Fuss, 5 L.D. 167; Oliver v. Thomas,
5 L.D. 289; Watts v. Forsyth, 5 L.D. 624; Williams v. Loew, 12 L.D.
297; James B. Weaver, 35 L.D. 553; Roy McDonald, 36 L.D. 205;
Oliver v. Bates, 36 L.D. 423; Bertram C. Noble, 43 L.D. 75; Fisher
v. Heirs of Rule, 43 L.D. 217; Siletz Indian Lands, 42 L.D. 244;
Rough Rider and Other Lodge Mining Claims, 42 L.D. 584.