Mining Company v. Boggs, 70 U.S. 304 (1865)
U.S. Supreme Court
Mining Company v. Boggs, 70 U.S. 3 Wall. 304 304 (1865)Mining Company v. Boggs
70 U.S. (3 Wall.) 304
Syllabus
1. In a suit to recover mineral lands on the Pacific coast, with the mines therein, an allegation of record of prior possession of the land for the purpose of taking out the minerals, without an allegation that such possession is had under authority, or by some treaty or statute of the United States, does not give this Court jurisdiction to reexamine the case under the 25th section of the Judiciary Act of 1789.
2. Nor has the Court jurisdiction where the decision below is that, as a matter of fact, no such license exists, the courts of the state,
"to whose highest court of law and equity the writ of error is sent, having the power, under the Constitution of its state to decide both law and fact upon submission of the case by the parties."
Boggs, lessee of Fremont, brought a suit in one of the inferior state courts of California against the Merced Mining
Company for the possession of certain mineral lands, with the mines therein, situated in Mariposa County.
The case, according to a frequent practice in the courts just named, was submitted to the court, both as to matters of fact and matters of law, without a jury. The recovery was resisted on several grounds. Among them was possession of the land -- prior to any claim of the lessor of Boggs --
"according to the usages and regulations established and in force in the mining district within which it was, for the purpose of extracting the gold from the rock,"
by which prior possession of the said mineral lands and appropriation of the quartz veins therein, the mining company asserted itself to have acquired a perfect right thereto.
The pleadings nowhere developed more fully than as above the nature of the title thus set up by way of defense; nor indeed did anything else in the record brought here; though as matter of fact it was no doubt, the reporter supposes, meant to be rested on what was a subject of general knowledge, to-wit that the United States had impliedly, and to a greater or less extent, allowed persons to take possession of and to work the mining lands of the Pacific coast, though such persons had no patent for them from it. * Under an agreement, too, between the attorneys in the case, the defendant had the right to set up in defense any matter which could be the subject of a bill in equity.
The court in which the suit was brought found, as matter of fact, that the premises sued for had been granted by the United States to Boggs' lessor, and that, in virtue of his lease, Boggs became and still was owner of them; that the Mining Company, defendant in the case, was in possession of them, without the consent and against the will of the plaintiff, and was guilty of the trespass alleged.
It found also that in May, 1851, prior to the date of the lease to Boggs, the premises were vacant; that the Mining Company entered upon them under one Moffat; but it was not shown that the said Moffat himself had any title; but,
on the contrary, the premises were then the public domain of the United States, except insofar &c.; that the Mining Company commenced improving the premises for mining purposes in 1851, and had ever since used and occupied them for such purposes, "pursuant to the mining regulations prevailing in the district," and had made improvements and expenditures to the extent of more than eight hundred thousand dollars. But the court found also that the plaintiff was not estopped from asserting his title, and, on the whole case, found in his favor. Judgment went accordingly for him.
The case then went up to the supreme court of the state. That court, in its opinion (which was not, however, any part of the record), recapitulating the case, and noting that one ground relied on to defeat the recovery was "a license from the government to enter on the premises and extract the gold" -- thus proceeded:
"If the company has a right to the possession and use of the land as against its true owner, for the purpose of extracting the precious metals, it must be upon the ground that the mineral does not pass with the soil as an incident to it, but belongs either to the United States or to the state of California, and that the defendant has an effectual license to enter on the premises and extract them. . . ."
"Assuming, for the purpose of this case, that the mineral belongs to the United States, has the defendant any such license?"
"It is sometimes said, in speaking of the public lands, that there is a general license from the United States to work the mines which these lands contain. But this language, though it has found its way into some judicial decisions, is inaccurate as applied to the action, or rather want of action, of the government. There is no license, in the legal meaning of that term. A license to work the mines implies a permission to extract and remove the mineral. Such license from an individual owner can be created only by writing, and from the general government only by act of Congress. It carries an interest in the land, and arises only from grant. The mineral, whether a distinct possession or otherwise, constitutes part of the realty, as much so as growing timber, and no interest in it can pass except in the
ordinary modes for the disposition of land. It is under the exclusive control of Congress, equally with any other interest which the government possesses in land. But Congress has adopted no specific action on the subject, and has left that matter to be controlled by its previous general legislation respecting the public domain. And it is from its want of specific action, from its passiveness, that the inference is drawn of a general license. The most which can be said is that the government has forborne to exercise its rights; but this forbearance confers no positive right upon the miner which would avail as a protection against the assertion of its claims to the mineral. The supposed license from the general government, then, to work the mines in the public lands, consists in its simple forbearance. Any other license rests in mere assertion, and is untrue in fact, and unwarranted in law."
That court accordingly affirmed the judgment; and the Mining Company brought the case here, considering that it fell within the 25th section of the Judiciary Act of 1789, which gives a right of reexamination in this Court in cases where there has been drawn in question, in the highest court of law or equity in a state, "the validity of a treaty or statute of or an authority exercised under the United States, and the decision is against their validity;" which statute, however, also enacts that
"no other error shall be assigned or regarded as ground of reversal in any such case as aforesaid than such as appears on the face of the record, and immediately respecting the before-mentioned questions of validity or construction &c. "