Source: http://www.chanrobles.com/usa/us_supremecourt/223/646/case.php
Timestamp: 2017-10-22 19:24:06
Document Index: 331815766

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 3241', '§ 2324', '§ 1857', '§ 2324', '§ 1851', '§ 1857']

CLASON V. MATKO, 223 U. S. 646 (1912) - US SUPREME COURT DECISIONS ON-LINE
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CLASON V. MATKO, 223 U. S. 646 (1912)
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Clason v. Matko
Submitted February 26, 1912
Where the statute provides for an agreed statement on which the case can be submitted, a stipulation between the parties as to certain facts will not be considered as an agreed statement superseding the pleadings, but only as an agreement relating to the facts enumerated in the stipulation.
This Court is not disposed to reverse a lower court on its construction of a stipulation in the conduct of a case, even if the stipulation be ambiguous.
While there may be a distinction between abandonment and forfeiture of mining claims, there is no distinction as those terms are used in § 3241, Rev.Stat., of the Territory of Arizona.
That which is taken subject to a right cannot be a burden upon that right.
Section 3241, Rev.Stat. Arizona, was enacted pursuant to the power given by § 2324, Rev.Stat. of the United States, and is not in conflict either with that section or with § 1857, Rev.Stat. of the United States.
10 Ariz. 175 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the construction and constitutionality of the mining laws of Arizona and the validity of a mining location thereunder, are stated in the opinion. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 647
Action to quiet title to a mining claim called the "Bangor." The action was brought in the District Court of the First Judicial District, County of Pima, Arizona, by appellees as plaintiffs against August Daley, Clason, appellant here, subsequently being made a party. It will be convenient to refer to appellees as plaintiffs, and, except where necessary to expressly distinguish appellant, to include him with Daley under the designation of defendants.
The amended complaint alleged the location of the claim by one Scott Turner and the recording of the notice thereof, a copy of which was annexed to the complaint. There was an allegation of claim of interest in the defendants, and a prayer for judgment "establishing a plaintiffs' estate in and exclusive possession" of the claim, and "debarring and forever estopping defendants, and each of them, from claiming any right or title" thereto.
As a further defense, it was alleged that the action had been originally commenced against Daley as the sole defendant, and that, in the first trial of the action, a stipulation was entered into as follows:
"That all parties plaintiff and defendant are now and at all the times mentioned in the pleadings have been each citizens of the United States of America."
"That the respective locations upon which, as shown by the pleadings herein, the parties plaintiff and defendant base their rights to the 'Bangor' mining claim were
Page 223 U. S. 648
each duly made, and that all acts required by the laws of the United States and the laws of the Territory of Arizona necessary to vest in the parties so locating good and valid titles so far as valid location could vest the same, such as mineral discovery, monumenting of claim, and recording of location notices, etc., were each duly done and performed at the time of said locations, except that plaintiffs do not admit that, at the time of said location of defendant Daley, the ground was open to such location by reason of failure to do assessment work for the years 1901 and 1902 or to resume work prior to the date of said location."
The case went to trial, it is alleged, on the single issue whether the claim was open to location, and resulted in a judgment against Daley. A new trial was granted, which took place, and the agreement was recognized by counsel and the parties to be still in force and effect, and the same issue was submitted to a jury as in the first trial to the court, and a verdict and judgment went for defendant Daley. The judgment was reversed by the supreme court, and the cause remanded for a new trial (10 Ariz. 175), the court saying:
"Under the allegations in the defendant's cross-complaint with respect to the relocation by the defendant of the claim as a forfeited claim, the location notice of the defendant would seem to be void in failing to state that the claim was located as forfeited or abandoned property, as required by the statute, and would seem to afford the defendant no ground for the relief claimed. Cunningham v. Pirrung, 9 Ariz. 288."
As a further defense, it was urged that the decision of the Supreme Court of the territory in Cunningham v. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 649
Pirrung, insofar as it holds or construes paragraph 3241 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona (Revision of 1901) as it existed prior to the amendment of 1907 to provide that the relocation of a forfeited mining claim shall be void or voidable when the relocation notice does not state that the "whole or any part of the ground covered by such relocation is relocated or located as forfeited ground," and that said statute, insofar as it justifies such interpretation, is contrary to the provisions of § 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States in its general terms, and specifically to that portion thereof which provides that, upon failure to do assessment work therein required, such claim "shall be open to relocation in the same manner as if no location of the same had ever been made," and also contravenes the provisions of § 1851 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and the defendants specially rely upon said provisions of the laws of the United States.
The defendants also filed a cross-complaint, which asserted title in them derived from a location of the claim, a notice of which was attached.
The cross-complaint further alleged that the title of the plaintiffs was derived from Scott Turner, but that plaintiffs had no title, by reason of the fact that the annual assessment work had not been performed, that the ground was open to relocation, that, before work was resumed, Daley entered upon the land and duly located it as a mining claim and performed all acts required to perfect the location prior to any attempt of the plaintiffs to resume work thereon. All of the separate defenses pleaded were made part of the cross-complaint.
The location notice attached to the cross-complaint did not state that the claim was located as forfeited or abandoned property.
There was attached to the cross-complaint an amended location notice signed by August Daley and Charles Clason. It refers to the location by Daley, and states chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 650
that such location was made as a relocation of forfeited ground for the failure to do assessment work. It further states that the amended notice of location was made, without waiving any previous rights, to secure all of the benefits of paragraph 3238 of the Revised Statutes of Arizona (1901), and without waiving, but especially relying upon, the rights conferred upon Daley by his original location by the laws of the United States. It also states that Charles Clason was the owner of an undivided one-half interest under Daley.
A demurrer was sustained to the cross-complaint, and, defendants declining to amend, judgment was entered for plaintiffs in accordance with the prayer of their complaint upon the stipulation of facts which has been set out above. The case was taken by Clason to the supreme court of the territory, where the judgment was affirmed.
The first question in the case is the effect of the stipulation. Appellant contends that all questions were "formally and expressly" admitted by it
"pertaining to the validity of the respective locations except the single question, which was: was the ground open to relocation on May 1, 1903, for plaintiffs' [appellees'] default in performing the work required by law?"
It covered, therefore, it is further contended, all acts necessary to be done under the laws of Arizona -- that is, to come to the specific controversy in the case, the stipulation contained an admission that the location notice complied with the laws of Arizona, which necessarily includes compliance, it is contended, "with paragraph 3241 in any construction thereof."
The enumeration, it is urged, in the stipulation of certain acts cannot be considered "to have been intended to be exhaustive, but merely illustrative of what the parties considered necessary to make a valid location or relocation," and there was left open only the failure of plaintiffs to do the assessment work. And this, it is insisted further, was the construction of the parties through two trials, chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 651
The trial court and the supreme court took a different view of the stipulation, and considered it as but a substitute for evidence, not waiving or supplying the defects of the pleadings, and that therefore, as the cross-complaint contained no allegation of compliance with law, it was insufficient. And both courts held further that the stipulation, as evidence, did not establish such compliance.
The supreme court explicitly, and the trial court impliedly, from its action in sustaining the demurrer to the cross-complaint, took a different view of the stipulation as indicated by the conduct of the parties. The "obvious purpose of the parties in filing the stipulation," the supreme court said, "was manifestly to have it take the place of testimony or other evidence upon the trial, and not to supplant the pleadings in the case." The court recognized that the parties could, under the laws of the territory, have agreed upon a statement of the case which would have been a substitute for formal pleadings, but, said the court,
"such was not the attempt in this case, as appears from the stipulation itself and the conduct of the parties in the proceedings subsequent to the entry of the stipulation,"
both parties amending their pleadings after the filing of the stipulation. The court concluded therefore that it was not an agreed case under paragraph 1390 of the Revised Statutes of the territory, "but a stipulation appertaining merely to the matter of evidence upon the trial."
The record seems to support this view. It is true that it appears from the answer of the defendants that the stipulation was filed before the trial of the action, and that the case was submitted and decided against defendants on the single issue as to whether the claim was open to relocation by Daley. chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 652
A new trial was granted, upon what ground does not appear. It does appear, however, that the case was again submitted on the same issue, a judgment resulting for Daley. It was reversed by the supreme court, the court intimating that the defect in the cross-complaint in not stating that the relocation by Daley was upon forfeited or abandoned property, as required by the statute, would seem to make the relocation void, and the intimation was made to control or have effect in the new trial which was ordered. It was after this decision that the fourth amended answer and cross-complaint were filed and the demurrer which attacked the cross-complaint
The construction of the supreme court of paragraph 3241 of the Revised Statutes of the territory is attacked. That section required, before its amendment in 1907, that in case of a relocation of a claim, the location notice should state if the whole or any part of the new location was located as abandoned property, else it should be void. The section is inserted in the margin. * chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 653
The contention is that this section, properly considered, applied only to "abandoned property," and did not apply to forfeited property, and it is insisted that the distinction between forfeited and abandoned property is well recognized, and is "obliterated" by the court's construction.
Of course, there may be a distinction between the abandonment of a claim and its forfeiture, but the question does not turn upon that distinction only, but upon what the statute means, considering all of its words, and, considering them all, we think they show quite clearly that no distinction was intended. Paragraph 3241 provides for "the relocation of forfeited or abandoned lode claims" -- in other words, claims which have once been located -- and "the new locator's right is based upon the loss of the possessory right acquired by the former locator," to quote from Cunningham v. Pirrung, 9 Ariz. 288, where the rule is announced. The same rule is repeated in subsequent cases, including that at bar. Score v. Griffin, 9 Ariz. 295; Kinney v. Lundy, 11 Ariz. 75.
Even if we should concede that the statute is ambiguous, we should certainly lean to agreement with the supreme court of the territory. Fox v. Haarstick, 156 U. S. 674; Armijo v. Armijo, 181 U. S. 558; English v. Arizona, 214 U. S. 359; Santa Fe County v. New Mexico, 215 U. S. 296, 215 U. S. 305; Albright v. Sandoval, 216 U. S. 331.
The next contention of appellant is that, if the statute admits of the construction put upon it by the supreme chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 654
court of the territory, it is unconstitutional and in conflict with §§ 1857 and 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.
The section permits the miners to make regulations in regard to mining locations not in conflict with the laws of the United States or of the state or territory in which the mining district is situated,
"governing the location, . . . subject to the following requirements: . . . On each claim located after the tenth day of May, eighteen hundred and seventy-two, and until a patent has been issued therefor, not less than one hundred dollars' worth of labor shall be performed or improvements made during each year, . . . and upon a failure to comply with these conditions, the claim or mine upon which such failure occurred shall be open to relocation in the same manner as if no location of the same had ever been made."
Appellant contends "that the spirit and intention of this enactment" is that, upon the failure of the original locator to comply with the provisions of the law, "the ground is open to relocation in the same manner as if no location had ever been made," and that therefore neither a state nor a territory can impose conditions or burdens upon the exercise of the right.
That cannot be said to be a burden upon a right to which the right when taken is subject. The section gives to the miners of a mining district and the state or territory in which the district is situated the power to make regulation "governing the location" of a mining claim, chanroblesvirtualawlibrary
Page 223 U. S. 655
subject to certain requirements. Those requirements may not be dispensed with, but they may be supplemented, certainly to the extent (and we need go no farther in this case) prescribed by the Arizona statute. It is a provision strictly "governing the location," and is not repugnant either to the spirit or the letter of the mining laws of the United States. Butte City Water Co. v. Baker, 196 U. S. 119.
"3241. (SEC. 11.) Such affidavit, when so recorded, shall be prima facie evidence of the performance of such labor or the making of such improvements, and said original affidavit, after it has been recorded, or a certified copy of record of same, or the record of same, shall be received as evidence accordingly by the courts of this territory. The relocation of forfeited or abandoned lode claims shall only be made by sinking a new discovery shaft and fixing the boundary in the same manner and to the same extent as is required in making an original location, or the relocator may sink the original discovery shaft ten feet deeper than it was at the date of the commencement of such location, and shall erect new or make the old monuments the same as originally required. In either case, a new location monument shall be erected, and the location notice shall state if the whole or any part of the new location is located as abandoned property, else it shall be void."