1. Where land withdrawn for oil and gas was entered and patented
as a homestead pursuant to the Act of July 17, 1914, the oil and
gas, together with the right to prospect for, mine, and remove them
being reserved to the United States, the patentee was not entitled,
under § 20 of the Leasing Act of February 25, 1920, to a
preference right to prospect for those minerals or to an oil and
gas lease following their discovery. P.
299 U. S.
69.
[Section 20 of the Leasing Act provides: "In the case of lands
bona fide entered as agricultural, and not withdrawn or
classified as mineral at the time of entry, . . . the entryman or
patentee, or assigns, . . . if the entry has been patented with the
mineral right reserved, shall be entitled to a preference right to
a permit and to a lease, as herein provided, in case of discovery;
. . ."]
2. An Executive Order declared that described public lands were
withdrawn from settlement, location, sale or entry, and reserved
for classification and in aid of legislation affecting the use and
disposal of petroleum lands belonging to the United States.
Held that whether or not a "classification" was thus
effected, the lands were clearly "withdrawn lands" within the
meaning of the Act of July 17, 1914, § 1, and the Leasing Act
of February 25, 1920, § 20. Pp.
299 U. S. 68,
299 U. S.
70.
3. If the merits of the cause may be determined without
prejudice to the rights of parties absent and beyond the
jurisdiction of the court, it will be done, and a court of equity
will strain hard to reach that result. P.
299 U. S.
70.
4. Where a bill entirely fails to state any cause of action in
the plaintiff, the rights of absent parties are in no way
threatened by it, and to enter upon a consideration of the question
of their indispensability would be a waste of time. P.
299 U. S.
71.
5. That the United States would be an indispensable party
defendant if the bill were good does not deprive the court of
jurisdiction to dismiss on the merits a bill which states no cause
of action against the private parties named as defendants. P.
299 U. S.
71.
80 F.2d 774 reversed.
Page 299 U. S. 66
Certiorari, 298 U.S. 647, to review a decision that the suit
must be dismissed upon the ground that neither the District Court
nor the court below had jurisdiction, in as much as the United
States was thought to be an indispensable party. The suit was to
declare a trust on certain land with respect to the right to
prospect for and remove oil and gas. The District Court decided the
case on the merits and dismissed the bill.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a suit brought by petitioner against respondents to have
impressed in his favor a trust in respect of a portion of a lease,
executed by the United States, of oil and gas lands in the
California.
The bill alleges that petitioner, since March, 1919, has been
the owner and in possession of certain legal subdivisions of §
30, township 21 south, range 17 east, Mount Diablo Meridian, Fresno
county, California, embracing 322.89 acres; that, by reason of such
ownership, he has been at all times since February 25, 1920,
entitled to a preference right for a permit to prospect on such
land for oil and minerals and, in case of discovery thereon, to a
lease under the provisions of § 20 of the Leasing Act of
February 25, 1920, 41 Stat. 437, 445, which provides:
"In the case of lands
bona fide entered as
agricultural, and not withdrawn or classified as mineral at the
time of entry, . . . the entryman or patentee, or assigns, . . .
if
Page 299 U. S. 67
the entry has been patented with the mineral right reserved,
shall be entitled to a preference right to a permit and to a lease,
as herein provided, in case of discovery."
The bill further alleges that petitioner made a
bona
fide entry of the land in question as agricultural; that the
land was not withdrawn or classified as mineral at the time of his
entry; that the entry was patented to him with a reservation of oil
and gas to the United States under the provisions of the Act of
July 17, 1914, 38 Stat. 509. In May, 1921, it is alleged, one of
the defendants illegally and wrongfully, and with knowledge of
petitioner's rights, secured a purported permit to prospect for oil
and gas on a large tract, which included the land described; that
the issue of the permit was in violation of petitioner's preference
right and operated to deny his right to procure a United States oil
and gas prospecting permit to prospect thereon and to a lease in
case of discovery, for the reason that no personal notice, as
required by regulations of the Interior Department and the
provisions of the Leasing Act, or notice of any kind, was given to
petitioner, who had no notice of the issue of such purported permit
until about the month of July, 1928. The bill further alleges that
Pacific Western Oil Company acquired from the original permittee
all his right, title, and interest in and to the permit, and that,
by reason thereof a lease was executed by the Secretary of the
Interior to that company, granting the exclusive right to drill and
explore for oil and minerals in said land; that such company is now
the legal owner of the lease, and wrongfully holds it in violation
of petitioner's prior and superior equitable rights, and that the
other respondents named have or claim, adversely to petitioner,
some interest in the lands in question and the lease covering the
same.
An amendment to the bill, made by stipulation of the parties,
alleges that petitioner's entry was made on March
Page 299 U. S. 68
6, 1919, and patent issued to him on October 7, 1925. Copies of
the entry, with Land Office indorsements, and of the patent are
attached and made part of the bill. The entry is in usual form and
concludes, over the signature of petitioner, with the words,
"Subject to provisions and reservations and limitations of Act of
July 17, 1914," and was stamped by the Land Office, "Application
made in accordance with and subject to the provisions and
reservations of the Act of July 17, 1914."
The patent expressly excepts and reserves to the United States
all the oil and gas in the lands patented, and to it, or persons
authorized by it, the right to prospect for, mine and remove
therefrom such oil and gas upon compliance with the conditions and
subject to the provisions and limitations of the Act of July 17,
1914. Section 1 of that act provides that lands withdrawn or
classified as phosphate, nitrate, potash, oil, gas, or asphaltic
minerals, etc., shall be subject to entry, if otherwise available,
under the nonmineral land laws, when made with a view of obtaining
title
"with a reservation to the United States of the deposits on
account of which the lands were withdrawn or classified . . .
together with the right to prospect for, mine, and remove the same;
. . .
Provided, That All applications to locate, select,
enter, or purchase under this section shall state that the same are
made in accordance with and subject to the provisions and
reservations of this Act."
C. 142, 38 Stat. 509.
There was also attached to the stipulation a copy of an order of
withdrawal made by the President December 30, 1910, as follows:
"It is hereby ordered that the following described lands be, and
the same are hereby withdrawn from settlement, location, sale, or
entry, and reserved for classification and in aid of legislation
affecting the use and disposal of petroleum lands belonging to the
United States, subject to all of the provisions, limitations,
exceptions, and conditions
Page 299 U. S. 69
contained in the Act of Congress entitled 'An Act to authorize
the President of the United States to make withdrawals of public
lands in certain cases,' approved June 25, 1910. . . ."
Among the lands described is the land here in question.
In the District Court, respondents moved to dismiss the bill on
the grounds: first, that it did not state facts sufficient to
constitute a valid cause of action in equity or at law against them
or either of them; second, that the United States was an
indispensable party to a complete determination of the suit; third,
that petitioner was guilty of laches and his cause of complaint was
stale. The District Court denied the motion without prejudice to a
renewal later and, after answer by respondents, proceeded to a
hearing on the merits. After such hearing, it held that petitioner
was not entitled to a preference right nor to a lease of the lands
in question; that respondents Kettleman Oil Corporation and Pacific
Western Oil Company were the owners in equal proportions of the oil
and gas lease executed by the Secretary of the Interior to the
latter company, and that petitioner be denied all relief.
An appeal followed to the Court of Appeals. That court, without
passing upon the merits, held that the United States was an
indispensable party, which could not be sued for lack of its
consent, for which reason that court and the district court were
without jurisdiction, and upon that ground it dismissed the suit.
80 F.2d 774.
The case presented by the bill comes to this: petitioner asserts
a preference right to prospect for oil and other minerals and, if
successful, to obtain a lease under § 20 of the Leasing Act of
1920, in virtue of his homestead entry in 1919 and patent in 1925.
It appears, however, from the allegations of his bill and the
exhibits attached, that the entry was subject to the provisions of
the Act of July 17, 1914, among which is the limitation
reserving
Page 299 U. S. 70
to the United States all oil and minerals in the lands entered
on account of which the lands so entered had been withdrawn or
classified "together with the right to prospect for, mine, and
remove the same." The lands here in question, when entered, were
within the terms of the executive order of 1910, by which order
they were "withdrawn from settlement, location, sale or entry, and
reserved for classification. . . ." Whether a "classification" of
the lands was effected by the order we need not determine, since it
is clear that they were "withdrawn" by the definite and unambiguous
words of the order; and, as shown by the bill, it is enough to
exclude complainant from the privileges of the act of 1920 that the
lands were either withdrawn or classified. It follows that the
motion to dismiss on the first ground stated was well taken, and
should have been granted and the case ended without a hearing,
which the district court unnecessarily ordered, evidently out of
abundance of caution.
Since, plainly, the bill of complaint did not state a cause of
action, the United States could have no interest in the case
requiring its presence as a party, and the inquiry as to whether it
was an indispensable party, which would have been entirely proper
under a good bill, was here wholly gratuitous.
The rule is that, if the merits of the cause may be determined
without prejudice to the rights of necessary parties, absent and
beyond the jurisdiction of the court, it will be done, and a court
of equity will strain hard to reach that result.
West v.
Randall, 2 Mason, 181, 196, Fed.Cas.No.17,424 (opinion by Mr.
Justice Story);
Cole Silver Mining Co. v. Virginia & G.H.W.
Co., 1 Sawy, 685, 689, Fed.Cas.No.2,990 (opinion by Mr.
Justice Field); Story's Equity Pleadings, 8th ed., §§ 77,
96.
And see 11 U. S. Clark's
Executors, 7 Cranch 69,
11 U. S. 98;
Elmendorf v.
Taylor, 10 Wheat. 152,
23 U. S.
167-168.
Cf. Equity Rule 39.
Page 299 U. S. 71
We refer to the rule established by these authorities because it
illustrates the diligence with which courts of equity will seek a
way to adjudicate the merits of a case in the absence of interested
parties that cannot be brought in. While the rule as stated is
intended for the benefit of a plaintiff whose bill sets forth a
cause of action which he should, if possible, be given an
opportunity to prove, the principle it embodies applies with equal,
if not greater, reason to a case like this where the bill entirely
fails to do so. In such a case, the obvious reply of the court to a
suggestion that other parties are indispensable is that, since the
bill states no cause of action against any one, the rights of
absent parties are in no way threatened by it, and to enter upon a
consideration of the question of their indispensability would be a
vain waste of time.
If it be urged that the United States is an indispensable party,
and hence that the court may not proceed even to inquire whether
the bill states a cause of action, the answer is that good sense
suggests precisely the contrary. For a mere inspection of the bill
at once discloses that it states no cause of action and therefore
the United States is not an indispensable party, since it cannot be
prejudiced by, and has no interest requiring protection in, a
proceeding which at the threshold is seen to be without substance.
Nothing is to be gained by an inquiry into the status of absent
parties when it is certain upon the face of complainant's bill that
in no event will he be entitled to a decree in his favor.
We are of opinion that the Court of Appeals should have disposed
of the case in accordance with that view, and that the District
Court should have dismissed the bill upon the first ground stated
in respondent's motion. Upon the question whether, upon a good
bill, the United States would be an indispensable party we deem it
unnecessary to express an opinion.
Page 299 U. S. 72
The decrees of both courts below must therefore be reversed, and
the cause remanded to the District Court with directions to enter a
decree in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE took no part in the consideration or decision
of this case.