The general mining law of 1872 permits citizens to explore the
public domain and search for minerals and, if they discover
"valuable mineral deposits," to obtain title to the land on which
such deposits are located. The Mineral Leasing Act (Act), enacted
in 1920, withdrew oil shale from the general mining law and
provided that thereafter oil shale would be subject to disposition
only through leases, except that a savings clause preserved valid
claims existent at the date of passage of the Act. Upon complaints
by the Department of the Interior (Department) alleging that
respondents' claims for oil shale deposits located prior to the Act
were invalid, a hearing examiner ruled the claims valid on the
ground that the Department's 1927 decision in
Freeman v.
Summers, 52 L.D. 201, wherein it was held that "present
marketability" is not a prerequisite to the patentability of oil
shale deposits as "valuable mineral deposits," compelled the
conclusion that oil shale is a valuable mineral subject to
appropriation under the mining laws, despite substantial evidence
that oil shale operations were commercially infeasible. The Board
of Land Appeals reversed, holding that oil shale claims located
prior to 1920 failed the test of value because, at the time of
location, there did not appear as a present fact a reasonable
prospect of success in developing an operating mine that would
yield a reasonable profit. It rejected prior departmental
precedent, particularly
Freeman v. Summers, as being
inconsistent with the general mining law, and therefore unsound. On
appeal, the District Court reversed and held the claims valid,
finding that Congress had implicitly "ratified" the rule of
Freeman v. Summers, and that, in any event, the Department
was estopped from departing from the longstanding
Freeman
standard. The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held: The oil shale deposits in question are "valuable
mineral deposits" patentable under the Act's savings clause. The
Act's history and the developments subsequent to its passage
indicate that the Government should not be permitted to invalidate
pre-1920 oil shale claims by imposing a present marketability
requirement on such claims. The Department's original position, as
set forth in Instructions, issued shortly after the Act became law,
authorizing the General Land Office
Page 446 U. S. 658
to begin adjudicating applications for patents for pre-1920 oil
shale claims, and later enunciated in
Freeman v. Summers,
is the correct view of the Act as it applies to the patentability
of pre-1920 oil shale claims. Pp.
446 U. S.
663-673.
591 F.2d 597, affirmed.
BURGER, C.J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
WHITE, BLACKMUN, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS, JJ., joined.
STEWART, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which BRENNAN and
MARSHALL, JJ., joined,
post, p.
446 U. S.
673.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BURGER delivered the opinion of the Court.
The general mining law of 1872, 30 U.S.C. § 22
et
seq., provides that citizens may enter and explore the public
domain, and search for minerals; if they discover "valuable mineral
deposits," they may obtain title to the land on which such deposits
are located. [
Footnote 1] In
1920, Congress altered this
Page 446 U. S. 659
program with the enactment of the Mineral Leasing Act. 41 Stat.
437, as amended, 30 U.S.C. § 181
et seq. The Act
withdrew oil shale and several other minerals from the general
mining law and provided that thereafter these minerals would be
subject to disposition only through leases. A savings clause,
however, preserved "valid claims existent at date of the passage of
this Act and thereafter maintained in compliance with the laws
under which initiated, which claims may be perfected under such
laws, including discovery." [
Footnote 2]
The question presented is whether oil shale deposits located
prior to the 1920 Act are "valuable mineral deposits" patentable
under the savings clause of the Act.
I
The action involves two groups of oil shale claims located by
claimants on public lands in Garfield County, Colo., prior to the
enactment of the Mineral Leasing Act. [
Footnote 3] The first group of claims, designated Mountain
Boys Nos. 6 and 7, was located in 1918. In 1920, a business trust
purchased the claims for $25,000, and in 1924 an application for
patent was filed with
Page 446 U. S. 660
the Department of the Interior. Some 20 years later, after
extended investigative and adjudicatory proceedings, the patent was
rejected "without prejudice" on the ground that it was not then
vigorously pursued. In 1958, Frank W. Winegar acquired the claims
and filed a new patent application. In 1964, Winegar conveyed his
interests in the claims to respondent Shell Oil Company.
The second group of claims, known as Harold Shoup Nos. 1-4, was
located in 1917. In 1923, the claims were acquired by Karl C.
Schuyler, who, in 1933, bequeathed them to his surviving spouse. In
1960, Mrs. Schuyler incorporated respondent D. A. Shale, Inc., and
transferred title to the claims to the corporation. Three months
later, the corporation filed patent applications.
In 1964, the Department issued administrative complaints
alleging that the Mountain Boys claims and the Shoup claims were
invalid. The complaints alleged,
inter alia, that oil
shale was not a "valuable mineral" prior to the enactment of the
1920 Mineral Leasing Act.
The complaints were consolidated and tried to a hearing
examiner, who, in 1970, ruled the claims valid. The hearing
examiner observed that, under established case law, the test for
determining a "valuable mineral deposit" was whether the deposit
was one justifying present expenditures with a reasonable prospect
of developing a profitable mine.
See United States v.
Coleman, 390 U. S. 599
(1968);
Castle v. Womble, 19 L.D. 455 (1894). [
Footnote 4] He then reviewed the
history
Page 446 U. S. 661
of oil shale operations in this country and found that every
attempted operation had failed to show profitable production. On
the basis of this finding and other evidence showing commercial
infeasibility, the hearing examiner reasoned that, "[i]f this were
a case of first impression," oil shale would fail the "valuable
mineral deposit" test. However, he deemed himself bound by the
Department's contrary decision in
Freeman v. Summers, 52
L.D. 201 (1927). There, the Secretary had written:
"While at the present time there has been no considerable
production of oil from shales, due to the fact that abundant
quantities of oil have been produced more cheaply from wells,
there is no possible doubt of its value and of the fact that it
constitutes an enormously valuable resource for future use by the
American people."
"It is not necessary, in order to constitute a valid discovery
under the general mining laws sufficient to support an application
for patent, that the mineral
in its present situation can
be immediately disposed of at a profit."
Id. at 206. (Emphasis added.) The hearing examiner
ruled that
Freeman v. Summers compelled the conclusion
that oil shale is a valuable mineral subject to appropriation under
the mining laws, and he upheld the Mountain Boys and Shoup claims
as valid and patentable.
The Board of Land Appeals reversed. Adopting the findings of the
hearing examiner, the Board concluded that oil shale claims located
prior to 1920 failed the test of value because, at the time of
location, there did not appear "as a
present fact . . . a
reasonable prospect of success in developing an operating mine that
would yield a reasonable profit." (Emphasis in original.) The Board
recognized that this conclusion was at odds with prior departmental
precedent, and
Page 446 U. S. 662
particularly with
Freeman v. Summers; but it rejected
that precedent as inconsistent with the general mining law, and
therefore unsound. The Board then considered whether its newly
enunciated interpretation should be given only prospective effect.
It found that respondents' reliance on prior rulings was minimal,
and that the Department's responsibility as trustee of public lands
required it to correct a plainly erroneous decision. [
Footnote 5] Accordingly, it ruled that its
new interpretation applied to the Mountain Boys and Shoup claims,
and that those claims were invalid.
Respondents appealed the Board's ruling to the United States
District Court for the District of Colorado. The District Court
agreed with the Board that, by not requiring proof of "present
marketability," the decision in
Freeman v. Summers had
liberalized the traditional valuable mineral test. But it found
that Congress, in 1931 and again in 1956, had considered the
patentability of oil shale and had implicitly "ratified" that
liberalized rule. Alternatively, the District Court concluded that
the Department was estopped now from departing from the
Freeman standard, which investors had "relied upon . . .
for the past half-century."
Shell Oil Co. v.
Kleppe, 426 F.
Supp. 894, 907 (1977). On these grounds, it reversed the
Board's ruling and held that the claims at issue were valid.
The Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit affirmed. 591 F.2d
597 (1979). It agreed with the District Court that the
"different treatment afforded all oil shale claims as to the
'valuable mineral deposit' element of a location became a part of
the general mining laws by reason of its adoption and approval
Page 446 U. S. 663
by both Houses of Congress"
in the years after 1920.
Id. at 604. And it held that
the Department now must adhere to the
Freeman rule. We
granted certiorari because of the importance of the question to the
management of the public lands. 444 U.S. 822 (1979). We affirm.
II
The legislative history of the 1920 Mineral Leasing Act shows
that Congress did not consider "present marketability" a
prerequisite to the patentability of oil shale. [
Footnote 6] In the extensive hearings and
debates that preceded the passage of the 1920 Act, there is no
intimation that Congress contemplated such a requirement; indeed,
the contrary appears. During the 1919 floor debates in the House of
Representatives, an amendment was proposed which would have
substituted the phrase "deposits in paying quantities" for
"valuable mineral." That amendment, however, was promptly withdrawn
after Mr. Sinott, the House floor manager, voiced his objection to
the change:
"Mr. SINOTT. That language was put in with a great deal of
consideration, and we would not like to change from 'valuable' to
'paying.'
There is quite a distinction. We are in line
with the decisions of the courts as to what is a discovery, and I
think it would be a very
Page 446 U. S. 664
dangerous matter to experiment with this language at this
time."
58 Cong.Rec. 7537 (1919) (emphasis added). An examination of the
relevant decisions at the time underscores the point. Those
decisions are clear in rejecting a requirement that a miner must
"demonstrat[e] that the vein . . . would pay all the expenses of
removing, extracting, crushing, and reducing the ore, and leave a
profit to the owner,"
Book v. Justice Mining Co., 58 F.
106, 124 (CC Nev. 1893), and in holding that "it is enough if the
vein or deposit
has a present or prospective
commercial value.'" Madison v. Octave Oil Co., 154 Cal.
768, 772, 99 P. 176, 178 (1908) (emphasis added). Accord,
Cascaden v. Bartolis, 146 F. 739 (CA9 1906); United States
v. Ohio Oil Co., 240 F. 996, 998 (Wyo.1916); Montana Cent.
R. Co. v. Migeon, 68 F. 811, 814 (CC Mont. 1895); East
Tintic Consolidated-Mining Co., 43 L.D. 79, 81 (1914); 2 C.
Lindley, American Law Relating to Mines and Mineral Lands §
336, pp. 768-769 (3d ed.1914). See generally Reeves, The
Origin and Development of the Rules of Discovery, 8 Land &
Water L.Rev. 1 (1973).
To be sure, prior to the passage of the 1920 Act, there existed
considerable uncertainty as to whether oil shale was patentable.
[
Footnote 7] That uncertainty,
however, related to whether oil shale was a "mineral" under the
mining law, and not to its "value." Similar doubts had arisen in
the late 19th century
Page 446 U. S. 665
in regard to petroleum. Indeed, in 1896, the Secretary of the
Interior had held that petroleum claims were not subject to
location under the mining laws, concluding that only lands
"containing the more precious metals . . . gold, silver, cinnabar
etc." were open to entry.
Union Oil Co., 23 L.D. 222, 227.
The Secretary's decision was short-lived. In 1897, Congress enacted
the Oil Placer Act authorizing entry under the mining laws to
public lands "containing petroleum or other mineral oils." Ch. 216,
29 Stat. 526. This legislation put to rest any doubt about oil as a
mineral. But because oil shale, strictly speaking, contained
kerogen, and not oil,
see n 3,
supra, its status remained problematic.
See Reidy, Do Unpatented Oil Shale Claims Exist?, 43
Denver L.J. 9, 12 (1966).
That this was the nature of the uncertainty surrounding the
patentability of oil shale claims is evident from remarks made
throughout the hearings and debates on the 1920 Act. In the 1918
hearings, Congressman Barnett, for example, explained:
"Mr. BARNETT. . . . If the department should contend that shale
lands come within the meaning of the term 'oil lands,' they must
perforce, by the same argument, admit that they are placer lands
within the meaning of the act of 1897."
"The Chairman. And patentable?"
"Mr. BARNETT. And patentable under that act."
Hearings at 918. The enactment of the 1920 Mineral Leasing Act
put an end to these doubts. By withdrawing "oil shale . . . in
lands valuable for such minerals" from disposition under the
general mining law, the Congress recognized -- at least implicitly
-- that oil shale had been a locatable mineral. In effect, the 1920
Act did for oil shale what the 1897 Oil Placer Act had done for
oil. And, as Congressman Barnett's ready answer demonstrates, once
it was settled that oil shale was a mineral
Page 446 U. S. 666
subject to location, and once a savings clause was in place
preserving preexisting claims, it was fully expected that such
claims would be patentable. The fact that oil shale then had no
commercial value simply was not perceived as an obstacle to that
end.
III
Our conclusion that Congress in enacting the 1920 Mineral
Leasing Act contemplated that preexisting oil shale claims could
satisfy the discovery requirement of the mining law is confirmed by
actions taken in subsequent years by the Interior Department and
the Congress. [
Footnote 8]
A
On May 10, 1920, less than three months after the Mineral
Leasing Act became law, the Interior Department issued
"Instructions" to its General Land Office authorizing that Office
to begin adjudicating applications for patents for pre-1920 oil
shale claims. The Instructions advised as follows:
"Oil shale having been thus recognized by the Department and
by Congress as a
mineral deposit and a source of
petroleum . . . lands valuable on account thereof
must be held
to have been subject to valid location and
Page 446 U. S. 667
appropriation under the placer mining laws, to the same
extent and subject to the same provisions and conditions as if
valuable on account of oil or gas."
47 L.D. 548, 551 (1920) (emphasis added) . The first such patent
was issued immediately thereafter. Five years later, the Department
ruled that patentability was dependent upon the "character, extent,
and mode of occurrence of the oil-shale deposits."
Dennis v.
Utah, 51 L.D. 229, 232 (1925). Present profitability was not
mentioned as a relevant, let alone a critical, consideration.
In 1927, the Department decided
Freeman v. Summers, 52
L.D. 201. The case arose out of a dispute between an oil shale
claimant and an applicant for a homestead patent, and involved two
distinct issues: (1) whether a finding of lean surface deposits
warranted the geological inference that the claim contained rich
"valuable" deposits below; and (2) whether present profitability
was a prerequisite to patentability. Both issues were decided in
favor of the oil shale claimant: the geological inference was
deemed sound, and the fact that there was "no possible doubt . . .
that [oil shale] constitutes an enormously valuable resource for
future use by the American people" was ruled sufficient proof of
"value."
Id. at 206.
For the next 33 years,
Freeman was applied without
deviation. [
Footnote 9] It was
said that its application ensured that "valid rights [would] be
protected and permitted to be perfected." Secretary of Interior Ann
Rep. 30 (1927). In all, 523 patents for 2,326 claims covering
349,088 acres were issued under the
Freeman rule. This
administrative practice, begun immediately upon the passage of the
1920 Act,
"has peculiar weight [because] it involves a contemporaneous
construction
Page 446 U. S. 668
of [the] statute by the men charged with the responsibility of
setting its machinery in motion,"
Norwegian Nitrogen Products Co. v. United States,
288 U. S. 294,
288 U. S. 315
(1933).
Accord, e.g., United States v. National Assn. of
Securities Dealers, 422 U. S. 694,
422 U. S. 719
(1975);
Udall v. Tallman, 380 U. S.
1,
380 U. S. 16
(1965). It provides strong support for the conclusion that Congress
did not intend to impose a present marketability requirement on oil
shale claims.
B
In 1930 and 1931, congressional committees revisited the 1920
Mineral Leasing Act and reexamined the patentability of oil shale
claims. Congressional interest in the subject was sparked in large
measure by a series of newspaper articles charging that oil shale
lands had been "improvidently, erroneously, and unlawfully, if not
corruptly, transferred to individuals and private corporations." 74
Cong.Rec. 1079 (1930) (S.Res. 379). The articles were based upon
accusations leveled at the Interior Department by Ralph S. Kelly,
then the General Land Office Division Inspector in Denver. Kelly's
criticism centered on the
Freeman v. Summers decision.
Fearing another "Teapot Dome" scandal, the Senate authorized the
Committee on Public Lands to "inquire into . . . the alienation of
oil shale lands."
The Senate Committee held seven days of hearings focusing almost
exclusively on "the so-called
Freeman-Summers case."
Hearings on S.Res. 379 before the Senate Committee on Public Lands
and Surveys, 71st Cong., 3d Sess., 2 (1931). At the outset of the
hearings, the Committee was advised by E. C. Finney, Solicitor,
Department of the Interior, that 124 oil shale patents had been
issued covering 175,000 acres of land, and that 63 more patent
applications were pending. Finney's statement prompted this
interchange:
"Senator PITTMAN: Well, were the shales on those patented lands
of commercial value? "
Page 446 U. S. 669
"Mr. FINNEY: If you mean by that whether they could have been
mined and disposed of at a profit at the time of the patent, or
now, the answer is no."
"Senator PITTMAN: So the Government has disposed of 175,000
acres in patents on lands which in your opinion there was no valid
claim to in the locator?"
"Mr. FINNEY: No; that was not my opinion. I have never held in
the world, that I know of, that you had to have an actual
commercial discovery of any commodity that you could take out
and market at a profit. On the contrary, the department
has held that that is not the case. . . ."
Id. at 25 (emphasis added). Later in the hearings,
Senator Walsh expressed his understanding of the impact of the
Freeman decision:
"Senator WALSH: [It means] . . . that the prospector having
found at the surface the layer containing any quantity of mineral,
that is of oil-bearing shale or kerogen, that that would be a
discovery in view of the beds down below of richer character."
"Mr. FINNEY: In this formation, yes sir; that is correct."
Id. at 138.
See also id. at 22-23, 26, 163.
The Senate Committee did not produce a report. But one month after
the hearings were completed, Senator Nye, the Chairman of the
Committee, wrote the Secretary of the Interior that he had
"'conferred with Senator Walsh and beg[ged] to advise that there
is no reason why your Department should not proceed to final
disposition of the pending application for patents to oil shale
lands in conformity with the law.'"
App. 103. The patenting of oil shale lands under the standards
enunciated in
Freeman was at once resumed.
At virtually the same time, the House of Representatives
commenced its own investigation into problems relating to
Page 446 U. S. 670
oil shale patents. The House Committee, however, focused
primarily on the question of assessment work -- whether an oil
shale claimant was required to perform $100 work per year or
forfeit his claim -- and not on discovery. But the impact of the
Freeman rule was not lost on the Committee:
"Mr. SWING: In furtherance of the policy of conservation, Mr.
Secretary, in view of the fact that there has not been discovered,
as I understand it, any practical economical method of extracting
oil from the shale in competition with oil wells . . . , would it
not be proper public policy to withdraw all shale lands from
private acquisition, since we are compelled to recognize, perforce,
economic and fiscal conditions, that no one is going to make any
beneficial use of the oil shale in the immediate future, but is
simply putting it in cold storage as a speculative
proposition?"
"Secretary WILBUR: As a matter of conservation, what you say is
true, but what we have to meet here is the fact that, in the
leasing act, there was a clause to the effect that valid existing
claims were not included, and so we are dealing with claims that
are thought to be valid, and the question -- "
"Mr. SWING (interposing). I realize that, and I understand the
feeling of Congress, and I think generally the country, that in
drawing the law we do not want to cut the ground from under the
person who has initiated a right."
Consolidated Hearings on Applications for Patent on Oil Shale
Lands before the House Committee on the Public Lands, 71st Cong.,
3d Sess., 100 (1931). [
Footnote
10]
Page 446 U. S. 671
Congressman Swing's statement of the "feeling of Congress"
comports with our reading of the 1920 statute, and of congressional
intent. To hold now that
Freeman was wrongly decided would
be wholly inconsistent with that intent. Moreover, it would require
us to conclude that the Congress, in 1930-1931, closed its eyes to
a major perversion of the mining laws. We reject any such
conclusion.
C
In 1956, Congress again turned its attention to the
patentability of oil shale. That year, it amended the mining laws
by eliminating the requirement that locators must obtain and convey
to the United States existing homestead surfaceland patents in
order to qualify for a mining patent on minerals withdrawn under
the 1920 Mineral Leasing Act.
See Pub.L. 743, 70 Stat.
592. Where a surface owner refused to cooperate with the mining
claimant and sell his estate, this requirement prevented the mining
claimant from patenting his claim.
See James W. Bell, 52
L.D.197 (1927). In hearings on the amendment, it was emphasized
that oil shale claimants would be principal beneficiaries of the
amendment:
"Mr. ASPINALL. This [bill] does not have to do with any other
minerals except the leaseable minerals to which no one can get a
patent since 1920. . . . As far as I know, there are only just a
few cases that are involved, and most of those cases are in the oil
shale lands of eastern Utah and western Colorado. That is all this
bill refers to."
Hearings on H.R. 6501 before the House Committee on Interior and
Insular Affairs 4 (1956).
See also Hearings on H.R. 6501
before the Subcommittee on Mines and Mining of the House Committee
on Interior and
Page 446 U. S. 672
Insular Affairs 4, 13-14, 16 (1956). The Reports of both Houses
also evince a clear understanding that oil shale claimants stood to
gain by the amendment:
"Under the Department of the Interior decision in the case of
James W. Bell . . . , the owner of a valid mining claim located
before February 25, 1920, on lands covered by the 1914 act, in
order to obtain a patent to the minerals, is required to acquire
the outstanding interest of the surface owner and thereafter to
execute a deed of reconveyance to the United States. . . . From
1946 to 1955, inclusive, 71 mining claims,
including 67 oil
shale claims, were issued under this procedure. The committee
is informed that, in a few cases, mining claimants have been unable
to obtain the cooperation of the owners of the surface estate, and
have been prevented thereby from obtaining patent to the mineral
estate."
S.Rep. No. 2524, 84th Cong,2d Sess., 2 (1956); H.R.Rep. No.
2198, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., 2 (1956) (emphasis added). The bill was
enacted into law without floor debate. Were we to hold today that
oil shale is a nonvaluable mineral, we would virtually nullify this
1956 action of Congress.
IV
The position of the Government in this case is not without a
certain irony. Its challenge to respondents' pre-1920 oil shale
claims as a "nonvaluable" comes at a time when the value of such
claims has increased sharply as the Nation searches for alternative
energy sources to meet its pressing needs. If the Government were
to succeed in invalidating old claims and in leasing the lands at
public auction, the Treasury, no doubt, would be substantially
enriched. However, the history of the 1920 Mineral Leasing Act and
developments subsequent to that Act persuade us that the Government
cannot achieve that end by imposing a present marketability
Page 446 U. S. 673
requirement on oil shale claims. [
Footnote 11] We conclude that the original position of
the Department of the Interior, enunciated in the 1920 Instructions
and in
Freeman v. Summers, is the correct view of the
Mineral Leasing Act as it applies to the patentability of those
claims. [
Footnote 12]
The judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Discovery of a "valuable mineral" is not the only prerequisite
of patentability. The mining law also provides that, until a patent
is issued, a claimant must perform $100 worth of labor or make $100
of improvements on his claim during each year, and that a patent
may issue only on a showing that the claimant has expended a total
of $500 on the claim. 30 U.S.C. §§ 28, 29.
See Hickel
v. Oil Shale Corp., 400 U. S. 48
(1970). In addition, a claim "must be distinctly marked on the
ground so that its boundaries can be readily traced." 30 U.S.C.
§ 28;
Kendall v. San Juan Silver Mining Co.,
144 U. S. 658
(1892). If the requirements of the mining law are satisfied, the
land may be patented for $2.50 per acre. 30 U.S.C. § 37. There
is no deadline within which a locator must file for patent, though
to satisfy the discovery requirement the claimant must show the
existence of "valuable mineral deposits" both at the time of
location and at the time of determination.
Barrows v.
Hickel, 447 F.2d 80, 82 (CA9 1971).
[
Footnote 2]
The savings clause is contained in § 37 of the Act, 41
Stat. 451, as amended, which, as set forth in 30 U.S.C. § 193,
provides in full:
"The deposits of coal, phosphate, sodium, potassium, oil, oil
shale, and gas, herein referred to, in lands valuable for such
minerals, including lands and deposits in Lander, Wyoming, coal
entries numbered 18 to 49, inclusive, shall be subject to
disposition only in the form and manner provided in this chapter,
except as to valid claims existent on February 25, 1920, and
thereafter maintained in compliance with the laws under which
initiated, which claims may be perfected under such laws, including
discovery."
[
Footnote 3]
Oil shale is a sedimentary rock containing an organic material
called kerogen which, upon destructive distillation, produces a
substantial amount of oil.
[
Footnote 4]
In
Chrisman v. Miller, 197 U.
S. 313 (1905), this Court approved the Department of the
Interior's "prudent man test," under which discovery of a "valuable
mineral deposit" requires proof of a deposit of such character that
"a person of ordinary prudence would be justified in the further
expenditure of his labor and means, with a reasonable prospect of
success, in developing a valuable mine."
Castle v. Womble,
19 L.D. at 457.
Accord, Best v. Humboldt Placer Mining
Co., 371 U. S. 334,
371 U. S.
335-336 (1963);
Cameron v. United States,
252 U. S. 450,
252 U. S. 459
(1920). In
United States v. Coleman, the Court approved
the Department's marketability test -- whether a mineral can be
"extracted, removed and marketed at a profit" -- deeming it a
logical complement of the prudent man standard.
[
Footnote 5]
The Board observed that,
"[a]lthough Shell . . . expended some $18,780 in perfecting
title to and preparing patent application for the Mountain Boy
claims before 1964, it did not purchase [the claims] from Frank
Winegar for $30,000 [until] after initiation of the contest
proceedings."
And it found no evidence that D. A. Shale, Inc., or its
predecessors had invested "more than a minimal amount" in the
purchase of the Shoup claims in reliance on the
Freeman
decision.
[
Footnote 6]
Congress was aware that there was then no commercially feasible
method for extracting oil from oil shale. The 1918 Report of the
House Committee on the Public Lands, for example, had emphasized
that
"no commercial quantity or any appreciable amount of shale oil
has ever been produced in this country, nor any standardized
process of production has yet been evolved or recommended or agreed
upon in this country by the Bureau of Mines or anyone else, and it
has not yet been demonstrated that the oil shale industry can be
made commercially profitable. . . ."
H.R.Rep. No. 563, 65th Cong., 2d Sess., 18 (1918).
See
also 58 Cong.Rec. 4271, 4279 (1919) (remarks of Sen. Smoot);
Hearings on H.R. 3232 and S. 2812 before the House Committee on the
Public Lands, 65th Cong., 2d Sess., 811, 890, 1257 (1918)
(hereafter Hearings).
[
Footnote 7]
Mr. John Fry, one of the Committee witnesses who represented the
oil shale interests before Congress, was candid on that point:
"Mr. TAYLOR. There is a large amount of this shale land that has
been located and is now held under the placer law. But none of it
has yet gone to patent."
"The Chairman. Has one acre of this land withdrawn in Colorado
been patented?"
"Mr. FRY. No."
"The Chairman. So you do not know what the holding of the
department will be?"
"Mr. FRY. We do not."
Hearings at 912.
See also id. at 626, 873, 913, 918,
1240, 1256-1257.
[
Footnote 8]
This Court has observed that "the views of a subsequent Congress
form a hazardous basis for inferring the intent of an earlier one."
United States v. Price, 361 U. S. 304,
361 U. S. 313
(1960). This sound admonition has guided several of our recent
decisions.
See, e.g., TVA v. Hill, 437 U.
S. 153,
437 U. S.
189-193 (1978);
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U.
S. 103,
436 U. S.
119-122 (1978). Yet we cannot fail to note Mr. Chief
Justice Marshall's dictum that "[w]here the mind labours to
discover the design of the legislature, it seizes everything from
which aid can be derived."
United States v.
Fisher, 2 Cranch 358, 386 (1805). In consequence,
while arguments predicated upon subsequent congressional actions
must be weighed with extreme care, they should not be rejected out
of hand as a source that a court may consider in the search for
legislative intent.
See, e.g., Seatrain Shipbuilding Corp. v.
Shell Oil Co., 444 U. S. 572,
444 U. S. 596
(1980);
Red Lion Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U.
S. 367,
395 U. S.
380-381 (1969);
NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co.,
416 U. S. 267,
416 U. S.
274-275 (1974).
[
Footnote 9]
See, e.g., John M. Debevoise, 67 I.D. 177, 180 (1960);
United States v. Strauss, 59 I.D. 129, 140-142 (1945);
Location of Oil Shale Placer Claims, 52 L.D. 631 (1929);
Assessment Work on Oil-Shale Claims, 52 L.D. 334 (1928);
Standard Shales Products Co., 52 L.D. 522 (1928);
James W. Bell, 52 L.D.197 (1927).
[
Footnote 10]
At the conclusion of its hearings, the Committee recommended
legislation placing a deadline on the filing of patent applications
for oil shale claims and permitting an oil shale claimant to pay
$100 a year to the Land Office in lieu of $100 in annual assessment
work. Other aspects of the oil shale patentability -- including the
question of discovery -- were not addressed in the proposed
legislation. H.R.Rep. No. 2537, 71st Cong., 3d Sess. (1931). The
proposal was not enacted by the Congress.
[
Footnote 11]
This history indicates only that a present marketability
standard does not apply to oil shale. It does not affect our
conclusion in
United States v. Coleman that, for other
minerals, the Interior Department's profitability test is a
permissible interpretation of the "valuable mineral" requirement.
See n 4,
supra.
[
Footnote 12]
The dissent overlooks the abundant evidence that Congress, since
1920, has consistently viewed oil shale as a "valuable mineral"
under the general mining law. The dissent dismisses the 1931
hearings and the 1956 Act as irrelevancies: as for the 1931
hearings, the dissent states that "not a single remark by a Senator
or Representative" approved the
Freeman standard; as for
the 1956 Act, we are informed that Congress "dealt with [a] totally
unrelated problem."
Post at
446 U. S. 676.
Neither of these observations is correct. The 1931 Senate hearings
were called specifically to review the
Freeman case for
fear that another "Teapot Dome" scandal was brewing. Rarely has an
administrative law decision received such exhaustive congressional
scrutiny. And following that scrutiny, no action was taken to
disturb the settled administrative practice; rather Senator Nye
advised the Interior Department to continue patenting oil shale
claims. Similarly, to characterize the 1956 Act as "totally
unrelated" is to blink reality. The patentability of oil shale land
was an essential predicate to that legislation; if oil shale land
was nonpatentable, then Congress performed a useless act.
The dissent also overlooks that, beginning in 1920 and
continuing for four decades, the Interior Department treated oil
shale as a "valuable mineral." In paying deference to the doctrine
that a "contemporaneous [administrative] construction . . . is
entitled to substantial weight,"
post at
446 U. S. 676,
the dissent ignores this contemporaneous administrative practice.
The best evidence of the 1920 standard of patentability is the 1920
Interior Department practice on the matter. The suggestion of the
dissent that "future events [such] as market changes" were not
meaningful data under the
Castle v. Womble test,
post at
446 U. S. 678,
is inaccurate. As a leading treatise has observed,
"[t]he future value concept of
Freeman v. Summers is
nothing more than the 'reasonable prospect of success' of
Castle v. Womble, and the reference to 'present facts' in
Castle v. Womble . . . relates to the existence of a vein
or lode, and not to its value."
1 Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation, The American Law of
Mining § 4.76, P. 697, n. 2 (1979).
MR. JUSTICE STEWART, with whom MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN and MR.
JUSTICE MARSHALL join, dissenting.
Oil shale was patentable under the general mining law from
Page 446 U. S. 674
1872 until 1920. [
Footnote 2/1]
In 1920, Congress enacted the Mineral Leasing Act, 30 U.S.C. §
181
et seq. That legislation withdrew oil shale and
certain other minerals from the general mining law, but
preserved
"valid claims existent at date of the passage of this Act and
thereafter maintained in compliance with the laws under which
initiated, which claims may be perfected under such laws, including
discovery."
Act of Feb. 25, 1920, ch. 85, § 37, 41 Stat. 451, as
amended, 30 U.S.C. § 193.
The question presented in this case is whether oil shale claims
brought under this saving clause of the Mineral Leasing Act must
satisfy the usual standards of patentability, or instead may be
patented through the use of a "discovery" standard different from
that which generally applies. The Court's answer is that a
different and more relaxed standard is applicable. I disagree.
Since I believe that pre-1920 oil shale claims must fulfill the
then firmly established requirements of patentability for all
valuable minerals under the general mining law, I respectfully
dissent from the opinion and judgment of the Court.
A
There is not one shred of evidence that Congress enacted the
saving clause of the Mineral Leasing Act with the purpose of
exempting oil shale claims from the usual requirements of
patentability. On its face, the 1920 version of the
Page 446 U. S. 675
provision applied with identical effect to "coal, phosphate,
sodium, oil, oil shale, and gas," and required that all outstanding
valid claims to such minerals meet the existing standards of the
mining law in order to be perfected.
Nothing in the Act's legislative history suggests anything to
the contrary. Descriptions by legislators of the saving clause drew
no distinction between oil shale and other covered claims.
See,
e.g., 59 Cong.Rec. 2711-2712 (1920) (Rep. Taylor); 58
Cong.Rec. 7780-7781 (1919). [
Footnote
2/2] In the face of conflicting evidence on the subject,
Congress may well have thought that many oil shale claims would
meet the traditional criteria of patentability. But it did not
accord such claims any special legislative treatment.
Equally unambiguous are the Instructions which the Secretary of
the Interior published three months after passage of the Act. These
expressly stated:
"[L]ands valuable on account [of oil shale] must be held to have
been subject to valid location and appropriation under the placer
mining laws,
to the same extent and subject to the same
provisions and conditions as if valuable on account of oil or
gas. Entries and applications for patent for oil shale placer
claims will, therefore, be adjudicated . . . in accordance
with
the same legal provisions and with reference to the same
requirements and limitations as are applicable to oil and gas
placers."
47 L.D. 548, 551 (1920) (emphasis added).
Page 446 U. S. 676
Such a contemporaneous construction of the statute by the agency
charged with its application is entitled to substantial weight.
See United States v. National Assn. of Securities Dealers,
422 U. S. 694,
422 U. S. 719;
Udall v. Tallman, 380 U. S. 1,
380 U. S. 16.
B
The saving clause of the Mineral Leasing Act thus directs that
the validity of all claims brought thereunder -- including those
relating to oil shale -- must be judged according to the general
criteria of patentability that were established in the mining law
as of 1920. And I am convinced that nothing that Congress has done
since 1920 can be read to have modified this mandate.
The Court points to congressional committee hearings that were
held in 1931 on the Secretary's 1927
Freeman v. Summers
decision, and notes that there resulted from this inquiry no
legislative rejection of the Department's then prevailing generous
treatment of oil shale claims. But of far greater significance, in
my opinion, is the fact that not a single remark by a Senator or
Representative, let alone by a congressional committee, can be
found approving the liberal standard enunciated in
Freeman v.
Summers, 52 L.D. 201, even though such a statement could not,
in any event, have overridden the plain meaning of the saving
clause of the Mineral Leasing Act.
See TVA v. Hill,
437 U. S. 153,
437 U. S.
191-193;
SEC v. Sloan, 436 U.
S. 103,
436 U. S.
121.
The Court purports to find support for its position in
legislation enacted by Congress in 1956. But that legislation dealt
with the totally unrelated problem of competing surface and mineral
estates, and has nothing to do with the question at issue here.
See Pub.L. 743, 70 Stat. 592; S.Rep. No. 2524, 84th Cong.,
2d Sess. (1956); H.R.Rep. No. 2198, 84th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1956).
The only reasonable inference that can be drawn from the events
of 1931 and 1956 is that on those two occasions, as in 1920,
Congress declined to assume that every pre-1920 oil
Page 446 U. S. 677
shale claim would turn out to be unpatentable. It seems to me
wholly fallacious to interpret these indications of caution as a
congressional intent to exempt oil shale claims from longstanding
principles of patentability.
C
The respondents' patent applications were, I think, quite
properly rejected at the administrative level for the simple reason
that they failed to satisfy the requirements of the general mining
law as of 1920. By 1920, the law was clear that a mineral land
patent could issue only when the applicant had made a "discovery"
of a "valuable mineral deposit."
Union Oil Co. v. Smith,
249 U. S. 337,
249 U. S. 346
(1919). Through departmental and judicial decisions, it had been
further established that a "discovery" occurs only when minerals
are found in such quantity and quality as to justify a prudent man
to expend his labor and means with a reasonable prospect of success
in developing a valuable mine.
Chrisman v. Miller,
197 U. S. 313,
197 U. S.
321-323 (1905);
H. H. Yard, 38 L.D. 59, 70
(1909);
Castle v. Womble, 19 L.D. 455, 457 (1894).
See
Cameron v. United States, 252 U. S. 450,
252 U. S. 459
(1920);
Casey v. Northern Pacific R. Co., 15 L.D. 439, 440
(1892).
Of controlling significance here is the fact that, by 1920, two
refinements of this "prudent man test" had occurred. First, it was
clear that, although the patent applicant did not have to
demonstrate that his mining efforts would definitely yield some
profit, [
Footnote 2/3] he at least
had to show that they probably would.
Cataract Gold Mining
Co., 43 L.D. 248, 254 (1914).
See Cole v. Ralph,
252 U. S. 286,
252 U. S. 299
(1920);
Cameron v. United States, supra at
252 U. S. 459;
United States v. Iron Silver Mining Co., 128 U.
S. 673,
128 U. S. 684
(1884). [
Footnote 2/4] Second,
Page 446 U. S. 678
this required showing of probable profitability had to rest
primarily on presently demonstrable, not speculative, fact.
See
Davis's Administrator v. Weibbold, 139 U.
S. 507,
139 U. S.
521-524 (1891);
Castle v. Womble, supra at 457
("the requirement relating to discovery refers to present facts,
and not to the probabilities of the future");
Casey v. Northern
Pacific R. Co., supra at 440;
Winters v. Bliss, 14
L.D. 59, 62 (1892). Thus, the applicant could not satisfy the
applicable standard by pointing to such highly uncertain future
events as market changes or technological advances in an attempt to
demonstrate a reasonable prospect of success.
Each of these principles had developed rather naturally out of
the "prudent man" rule of
Castle v. Womble, supra. For
land to be deemed "valuable" for mining purposes, and for a prudent
man to decide to expend his time and money in developing a mine
upon that land, it was quite rational to require a showing of a
reasonable prospect that the mine would yield a profit.
See
Cataract Gold Mining Co., supra at 254. The Court is simply
mistaken in suggesting that the general mining law was in any way
otherwise in 1920.
D
With respect to the oil shale deposits at issue in this case,
the Board of Land Appeals found that they "never have been a
valuable mineral deposit within the meaning of the general
Page 446 U. S. 679
mining law." The Board based this conclusion on the following
factual findings:
"First, as a historical fact, the commercial production of oil
from oil shale has never been competitive with the liquid petroleum
industry. Second, the hypothetical studies [in the record] at best
confirm that the commercial exploitation of oil shale would not be
competitive with the liquid petroleum industry. Third, without
exception, every oil shale operation that has been attempted in
this country has failed to show profitable production. Fourth, [the
respondents] have held these claims for half a century without
attempting to exploit them."
"It is unlikely that any oil shale operation could have operated
at a profit at the time these claims were located or at any time up
to and including the time of these contest proceedings. . . ."
"
* * * *"
"In order for a commercially profitable operation to come into
being, there must be either a dramatic improvement in the
technology or an alteration of the economic forces which have
always operated in this country to prevent the commercial
production of oil shale."
The Court of Appeals seemed to acknowledge that these findings
were supported by substantial evidence, 591 F.2d 597, 598-599, but
thought that a different standard of patentability is applicable to
oil shale claims, and today this Court agrees with that view.
For the reasons stated, I do not agree. Accordingly, I would set
aside the judgment of the Court of Appeals.
[
Footnote 2/1]
Rev.Stat. § 2319
et seq., as amended, 30 U.S.C.
§ 22
et seq. See Union Oil Co. v. Smith,
249 U. S. 337,
249 U. S.
345-346.
[
Footnote 2/2]
The Court's discussion of a 1919 attempt to substitute "deposits
in paying quantities" for "valuable mineral" in a provision of the
prospective Mineral Leasing Act, and Representative Sinott's
response thereto,
see ante at
446 U. S.
663-664, has absolutely nothing to do with the issue at
hand. The attempted substitution concerned a provision of the
prospective Act that set out the circumstances under which
exploratory permits would be allowed for oil and gas deposits under
the new leasing scheme.
See 58 Cong.Rec. 7536-7537 (1919).
Thus, the legislative discussion quoted by the Court did not
involve oil shale, the requirements of the general mining law, or
the Act's saving clause.
See id. at 7780-7781.
[
Footnote 2/3]
See East Tintic Consolidated Mining Co., 43 L.D. 79,
81-82 (1914).
[
Footnote 2/4]
Sec also Royal K. Placer, 13 L.D. 86, 89-90 (1891);
Tinkham v. McCaffrey, 13 L.D. 517, 518 (1891). The
authorities cited by the Court,
ante at
446 U. S. 664,
do not support a contrary rule. They state that an applicant for a
mineral patent need not establish with certainty that a paying mine
exists or can be developed on his land, but they do not in any way
reject the rule of
Castle v. Womble, 19 L.D. 455, 457
(1894), that the applicant must show that there exists a
"reasonable prospect of success" in his developing a profitable
mine.
See Cascaden v. Bartolis, 146 F. 739, 741-742 (CA9
1906);
United States v. Ohio Oil Co., 240 F. 996, 998-1004
(Wyo.1916);
Montana Cent. R. Co. v. Migeon, 68 F. 811,
814-818 (CC Mont. 1895);
Book v. Justice Mining Co., 58 F.
106, 120, 123-125 (CC Nev. 1893);
Madison v. Octave Oil
Co., 154 Cal. 768, 771-772, 99 P. 176, 178 (1908); 2 C.
Lindley, American Law Relating to Mines and Mineral Lands §
336, pp. 768-773 (3d ed.1914).