The inclusion of part of a national forest within a monument
reserve under the Act of June 8, 1906, c. 3060, 34 Stat. 225, by a
proclamation of the President providing that both reservations
shall stand as to the common area but that the monument reserve
shall be dominant, and saving valid claims theretofore acquired,
withdraws such area, except as to such claims, from the operation
of the mineral land law. P.
252 U. S.
454.
The Grand Canyon of the Colorado, in Arizona, is an " object of
scientific
Page 252 U. S. 451
interest" within the meaning of the Act of June 8, 1906,
supra, empowering the President to reserve such objects as
"National Monuments." P.
252 U. S.
455.
Mineral character and an adequate discovery of mineral within
the location are essential to the validity of a mining claim, and
without these the locator has not the right of possession. P.
252 U. S.
456.
To bring a mining claim within an exception of "valid claims" in
a proclamation establishing a monument reserve, the claim must be
founded upon an adequate discovery of mineral made before the
reservation; a discovery made later can confer no rights upon the
claimant.
Id.
To support a mining location, the discovery must be such as to
justify a person of ordinary prudence in the further expenditure of
his time and means in an effort to develop a paying mine. P.
252 U. S.
459.
A decision of the Secretary of the Interior, made upon an
application to patent a mining claim within a monument reserve,
finding the land claimed not mineral in character and the location
not supported by any discovery antedating the reservation, and
therefore rejecting the application and adjudging the location
invalid, is conclusive as to the invalidity of the claim in a suit
subsequently brought by the government to enjoin the claimant from
occupying and using the land for his private purposes, and thus
obstructing its use by the public as a part of the reserve. Pp.
252 U. S. 459,
252 U. S.
464.
A mining location which has not gone to patent is of no higher
quality, and no more immune from attack and investigation, than
unpatented claims under the homestead and kindred laws, and so long
as the legal title remains in the United States, the Land
Department, in virtue of its general statutory duty and function,
is empowered, after proper notice and upon adequate hearing, to
determine whether such a location is valid, and, if found invalid,
to declare it null and void. P.
252 U. S.
460.
250 F. 943 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 252 U. S. 454
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit by the United States to enjoin Ralph H. Cameron
and others from occupying, using for business purposes, asserting
any right to, or interfering with the public use of, a tract of
land in Arizona, approximately 1,500 feet long and 600 feet wide,
which Cameron is claiming as a lode mining claim, and to require
the defendants to remove therefrom certain buildings, filth, and
refuse placed thereon in the course of its use by them as a livery
stable site and otherwise. In the district court, there was a
decree for the United States, and this was affirmed by the circuit
court of appeals. 250 F. 943.
The tract is on the southern rim of the Grand Canyon of the
Colorado, is immediately adjacent to the railroad
Page 252 U. S. 455
terminal and hotel buildings used by visitors to the canyon, and
embraces the head of the trail [
Footnote 1] over which visitors descend to and ascend from
the bottom of the canyon. Formerly it was public land, and open to
acquisition under the public land laws. But, since February 20,
1893, it has been within a public forest reserve, [
Footnote 2] established and continued by
proclamations of the President under the Acts of March 3, 1891, c.
561, § 24, 26 Stat. 1095, 1103, and June 4, 1897, c. 2, 30
Stat. 34-36, and since January 11, 1908, all but a minor part of it
has been within a monument reserve [
Footnote 3] establish by a proclamation of the President
under the act of June 8, 1906, c. 3060, 34 Stat. 225. The forest
reserve remained effective after the creation of the monument
reserve, but insofar as both embraced the same land, the monument
reserve became the dominant one. 35 Stat. 2175. The inclusion of
the tract in the forest reserve withdrew it from the operation of
the public land laws, other than the mineral land law, and the
inclusion of the major part of it in the monument reserve withdrew
that part from the operation of the mineral land law, but there was
a saving clause in respect of any "valid" mining claim theretofore
acquired. The United States still has the paramount legal title to
the tract, and also has the full beneficial ownership if Cameron's
asserted mining claim is not valid.
The defendants insist that the monument reserve should be
disregarded on the ground that there was no authority for its
creation. To this we cannot assent. The act under which the
President proceeded empowered him to establish reserves embracing
"objects of historic or scientific interest." The Grand Canyon, as
stated in his proclamation, "is an object of unusual scientific
interest."
Page 252 U. S. 456
It is the greatest eroded canyon in the United States, if not in
the world, is over a mile in depth, has attracted wide attention
among explorers and scientists, affords an unexampled field for
geologic study, is regarded as one of the great natural wonders,
and annually draws to its borders thousands of visitors.
The defendants also insist that, in holding the United States
entitled to the relief sought, the courts below gave undue effect
and weight to decisions of the Secretary of the Interior dealing
with Cameron's asserted claim and pronouncing it invalid. Rightly
to appreciate and dispose of this contention requires a further
statement.
The claim in question is known as the Cape Horn lode claim, and
was located by Cameron in 1902 after the creation of the forest
reserve and before the creation of the monument reserve. To make
the claim valid, or to invest the locator with a right to the
possession, it was essential that the land be mineral in character
and that there be an adequate mineral discovery within the limits
of the claim as located, Rev.Stats. § 2320;
Cole v. Ralph,
ante, 252 U. S. 286, and
to bring the claim within the saving clause in the withdrawal for
the monument reserve, the discovery must have preceded the creation
of that reserve.
Cameron applied to the Land Department for the issue to him of a
patent for the claim, and similarly sought patents for other claims
embracing other portions of the trail into the canyon. A protest
was interposed charging that the land was not mineral, that there
had been no supporting mineral discoveries, and that the claims
were located and used for purposes not contemplated by the mineral
land law, and the Secretary of the Interior directed that a hearing
be had in the local land office to enable the parties concerned --
the protestant, Cameron, and the government -- to produce evidence
bearing on the questions thus presented. Grand Canyon Ry. Co. v.
Cameron, 35 L.D. 495, 36 L.D. 66. After due notice, the hearing was
had, Cameron fully
Page 252 U. S. 457
participating in it. This was shortly after the creation of the
monument reserve. In due course, the evidence was laid before the
Commissioner of the General Land Office, and he concluded therefrom
that the claims were not valuable for mining purposes, and
therefore were invalid. The matter was then taken before the
Secretary of the Interior, and that officer rendered a decision in
which, after reviewing the evidence, he said:
"It is not pretended that the applicant has as yet actually
disclosed any body of workable ore of commercial value, nor does
the evidence reveal such indications and conditions as would
warrant the belief or lead to the conclusion that valuable deposits
are to be found, save, apparently, in the case of the Magician lode
claim. With that possible exception, the probabilities of such
deposits occurring are no stronger or more evident at the present
time than upon the day the claims were located. The evidence wholly
fails to show that there are veins or lodes carrying valuable and
workable deposits of gold, silver, or copper, or any other minerals
within the limits of the locations. Sufficient time has elapsed
since these claims were located for a fair demonstration of their
mineral possibilities."
And further:
"It follows from the foregoing that each of Cameron's
applications for patent . . . must be rejected and cancelled, and
it is so ordered."
"It is the further result of the evidence, and the department
holds, that the several mining locations, with the apparent
exception of the Magician lode claim, do not stand upon such
disclosures or indications of valuable mineral in rock in place
therein, prior to the establishment of the national monument and
the withdrawal of the lands therein embraced, as to bring them
within the saving clause of the executive order. The right of
Cameron to continue possession or exploration of those claims
Page 252 U. S. 458
is hereby denied, and the land covered thereby is declared to be
and remain part of the Grand Canyon National Monument as if such
locations had not been attempted."
Directions were given for a further hearing respecting the
Magician claim, but this is of no moment here.
That decision was adhered to on a motion for review, and, in a
later decision denying a renewed application by Cameron for a
patent for the claim here in question, the Secretary said:
"As the result of a hearing had after the creation of the
national monument the department expressly found that no discovery
of mineral had been made within the limits of the Cape Horn
location, and that there was no evidence before the department
showing the existence of any valuable deposits or any minerals
within the limits of the location. . . . So far as the portion of
the claim included within the exterior limits of the national
monument is concerned, no discovery which would defeat the said
monument can have been made since the date of the previous hearing
in this case, nor do I find that one is claimed to have been made
since the former decision in any part of the alleged location."
After and notwithstanding these decisions, Cameron asserted an
exclusive right to the possession and enjoyment of the tract, as if
the lode claim were valid, and he and his codefendants, who were
acting for or under him, continued to occupy and use the ground for
livery and other business purposes, and in that and other ways
obstructed its use by the public as a part of the reserves. In this
situation, and to put an end to what the government deemed a
continuing trespass, purpresture, and public nuisance, the present
suit was brought.
The courts below ruled that the decisions of the Secretary of
the Interior should be taken as conclusively determining the
nonmineral character of the land and the absence of an adequate
mineral discovery, and also as
Page 252 U. S. 459
showing that the matter before the Secretary was not merely the
application for a patent, but also the status of the claim --
whether it was valid or was wanting in essential elements of
validity, and whether it entitled Cameron to the use of the land as
against the public and the government. As before stated, the
defendants complain of that ruling. The objections urged against it
are first that the Secretary's decisions show that he proceeded
upon a misconception of what under the law constitutes an adequate
mineral discovery, and second that, although the Secretary had
ample authority to determine whether Cameron was entitled to a
patent, he was without authority to determine the character of the
land or the question of discovery or to pronounce the claim
invalid.
As to the first objection, little need be said. A reading of
each decision in its entirety, and not merely the excerpts to which
the defendants invite attention, makes it plain that the Secretary
proceeded upon the theory that, to support a mining location, the
discovery should be such as would justify a person of ordinary
prudence in the further expenditure of his time and means in an
effort to develop a paying mine. That is not a novel or mistaken
test, but is one which the Land Department long has applied and
this Court has approved.
Chrisman v. Miller, 197 U.
S. 313,
197 U. S.
322.
The second objection rests on the naked proposition that the
Secretary was without power to determine whether the asserted lode
claim, under which Cameron was occupying and using a part of the
reserves to the exclusion of the public and the reserve officers,
was a valid claim. We say "naked proposition" because it is not
objected that Cameron did not have a full and fair hearing, or that
any fraud was practiced against him, but only that the Secretary
was without any power of decision in the matter. In our opinion,
the proposition is not tenable.
By general statutory provisions, the execution of the
Page 252 U. S. 460
laws regulating the acquisition of rights in the public lands
and the general care of these lands is confided to the Land
Department, as a special tribunal, and the Secretary of the
Interior, as the head of the department, is charged with seeing
that this authority is rightly exercised to the end that valid
claims may be recognized, invalid ones eliminated, and the rights
of the public preserved. Rev.Stats. §§ 441, 453, 2478;
United States v. Schurz, 102 U. S. 378,
102 U. S. 395;
Lee v. Johnson, 116 U. S. 48,
116 U. S. 52;
Knight v. United Land Association, 142 U.
S. 161,
142 U. S. 177,
142 U. S. 181;
Riverside Oil Co. v. Hitchcock, 190 U.
S. 316.
A mining location which has not gone to patent is of no higher
quality and no more immune from attack and investigation than are
unpatented claims under the homestead and kindred laws. If valid,
it gives to the claimant certain exclusive possessory rights, and
so do homestead and desert claims. But no right arises from an
invalid claim of any kind. All must conform to the law under which
they are initiated; otherwise, they work an unlawful private
appropriation in derogation of the rights of the public.
Of course, the Land Department has no power to strike down any
claim arbitrarily, but, so long as the legal title remains in the
government, it does have power, after proper notice and upon
adequate hearing, to determine whether the claim is valid and, if
it be found invalid, to declare it null and void. This is well
illustrated in
Orchard v. Alexander, 157 U.
S. 372,
157 U. S. 383,
where, in giving effect to a decision of the Secretary of the
Interior cancelling a preemption claim theretofore passed to cash
entry, but still unpatented, this Court said:
"The party who makes proofs, which are accepted by the local
land officers, and pays his money for the land has acquired an
interest of which he cannot be arbitrarily dispossessed. His
interest is subject to state taxation.
Carroll v.
Safford, 3 How. 441;
Witherspoon v.
Duncan, 4 Wall. 210. The
Page 252 U. S. 461
government holds the legal title in trust for him, and he may
not be dispossessed of his equitable rights without due process of
law. Due process in such case implies notice and a hearing. But
this does not require that the hearing must be in the courts, or
forbid an inquiry and determination in the Land Department."
And to the same effect is
Michigan Land & Lumber Co. v.
Rust, 168 U. S. 589,
168 U. S. 593,
where, in giving effect to a decision of the Secretary cancelling a
swamp land selection by the State of Michigan, theretofore approved
but as yet unpatented, it was said:
"It is, of course, not pretended that, when an equitable title
has passed, the Land Department has power to arbitrarily destroy
that equitable title. It has jurisdiction, however, after proper
notice to the party claiming such equitable title, and upon a
hearing, to determine the question whether or not such title has
passed.
Cornelius v. Kessel, 128 U. S.
456;
Orchard v. Alexander, 157 U. S.
372,
157 U. S. 383;
Parsons
v. Venzke, 164 U. S. 89. In other words, the
power of the department to inquire into the extent and validity of
the rights claimed against the government does not cease until the
legal title has passed."
True, the mineral land law does not, in itself, confer such
authority on the Land Department. Neither does it place the
authority elsewhere. But this does not mean that the authority does
not exist anywhere, for, in the absence of some direction to the
contrary, the general statutory provisions before mentioned vest it
in the Land Department. This is a necessary conclusion from this
Court's decisions. By an Act of 1848, the title to public land in
Oregon then occupied as missionary stations, not exceeding 640
acres in any instance, was confirmed to the several religious
associations maintaining those stations, but the act made no
provision for determining where the stations were, by whom they
were maintained, or the area occupied. The Land Department
proceeded to a determination of these questions in the
Page 252 U. S. 462
exercise of its general authority, and in
Catholic Bishop of
Nesqually v. Gibbon, 158 U. S. 155,
158 U. S.
166-167, where that determination was challenged as to a
particular tract, it was said:
"While there may be no specific reference in the Act of 1848 of
questions arising under this grant to the Land Department, yet its
administration comes within the scope of the general powers vested
in that department. . . . It may be laid down as a general rule
that, in the absence of some specific provision to the contrary in
respect to any particular grant of public land, its administration
falls wholly and absolutely within the jurisdiction of the
Commissioner of the General Land Office, under the supervision of
the Secretary of the Interior. It is not necessary that with each
grant there shall go a direction that its administration shall be
under the authority of the Land Department. It falls there unless
there is express direction to the contrary."
And in
Cosmos Exploration Co. v. Gary Eagle Oil Co.,
190 U. S. 301,
190 U. S. 308,
where a claimant asserting a full equitable title under the lieu
land provision of the Forest Reserve Act of 1897, questioning the
authority of the Land Department to inquire into and pass on the
validity of his claim and sought to have it recognized and enforced
by a suit in equity, it was said:
"There can be, as we think, no doubt that the general
administration of the Forest Reserve Act, and also the
determination of the various questions which may arise thereunder
before the issuing of any patent for the selected lands, are vested
in the Land Department. The statute of 1897 does not in terms refer
any question that might arise under it to that department, but the
subject matter of that act relates to the relinquishment of land in
the various forest reservations to the United States, and to the
selection of lands, in lieu thereof, from the public lands of the
United States, and the administration of the act is to be governed
by the general system adopted by the United States for the
administration of
Page 252 U. S. 463
the laws regarding its public lands. Unless taken away by some
affirmative provision of law, the Land Department has jurisdiction
over the subject."
There is in the mineral land law a provision referring to the
court's controversies between rival mineral claimants arising out
of conflicting mining locations (Rev.Stats. §§ 2325,
2326), but it does not reach or affect other controversies, and so
is without present bearing.
Creede & Cripple Creek Mining
Co. v. Uinta Tunnel Mining Co., 196 U.
S. 337,
196 U. S. 356
et seq.
It is rightly conceded that, in the case of a conflict between a
mining location and a homestead claim, the department has authority
to inquire into and determine the validity of both and, if the
mining location be found invalid and the homestead claim valid, to
declare the former null and void and to give full effect to the
latter, and yet it is insisted that the department is without
authority, on a complaint preferred in the public interest, to
inquire into an determine the validity of a mining location, and,
if it be found invalid to declare it of no effect and recognize the
rights of the public. We think the attempted distinction is not
sound. It has no support in the terms of the mineral land law, is
not consistent with the general statutory provisions before
mentioned, and, if upheld, would encourage the use of merely
colorable mining locations in the wrongful private appropriation of
lands belonging to the public.
Instances in which this power has been exercised in respect of
mining locations are shown in the Yard case, 38 L.D. 59, and the
Nichols-Smith case (on rehearing) 46 L.D. 20; instances in which
its exercise has received judicial sanction are found in
Lane
v. Cameron, 45 App.D.C. 404, and
Cameron v. Bass, 19
Ariz. 246, 168 P. 645, and an instance in which its existence
received substantial, if not decisive, recognition by this Court is
found in
Clipper Mining Co. v. Eli Mining Co.,
194 U. S. 220,
194 U. S. 223,
194 U. S.
234.
Page 252 U. S. 464
The argument is advanced that the department necessarily is
without authority to pronounce a mining location invalid, because
it has within itself no means of executing its decision, such as
dispossessing the locator. But this is not a proper test of the
existence of the authority, for the department is without the means
of executing most of its decisions in the sense suggested. When it
issues a patent, it has no means of putting the grantee in
possession, and yet its authority to issue patents is beyond
question. When it awards a tract to one of two rival homestead
claimants, it has no means of putting the successful one in
possession or the other one out, and yet its authority to determine
which has the better claim is settled by repeated decisions of this
Court. And a similar situation exists in respect of most of the
claims or controversies on which the department must pass in
regular course. Its province is that of determining questions of
fact and right under the public land laws, of recognizing or
disapproving claims according to their merits, and of granting or
refusing patents as the law may give sanction for the one or the
other. When there is occasion to enforce its decisions in the sense
suggested, this is done through suits instituted by the successful
claimants or by the government, as the one or the other may have
the requisite interest.
Whether the tract covered by Cameron's location was mineral and
whether there had been the requisite discovery were questions of
fact, the decision of which by the Secretary of the Interior was
conclusive in the absence of fraud or imposition, and none was
claimed.
Catholic Bishop of Nesqually v. Gibbon, supra;
Burfenning v. Chicago, St. Paul, etc., Ry. Co., 163 U.
S. 321,
163 U. S. 323.
Accepting the Secretary's findings that the tract was not mineral
and that there had been no discovery, it is plain that the location
was invalid, as was declared by the Secretary and held by the
courts below.
Page 252 U. S. 465
Of other complaints made by the defendants it suffices to say
that, in our opinion, the record shows that the government was
entitled to the relief sought and awarded.
Decree affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
The Bright Angel Trail.
[
Footnote 2]
Originally the Grand Canyon Forest Reserve, and now the Tusayan
National Forest.
[
Footnote 3]
Called the Grand Canyon National Monument.