Davis v. Wiebbold/Opinion of the Court

The record in stating the judgment below does not show any findings of fact by the court, which tried the case without the intervention of a jury. The order for the judgment necessarily implies that the facts were found by the court upon which the order was made, but, like a verdict of a jury, the findings should properly appear in the record. The omission, it is true, was not noticed by counsel in the supreme court of the territory, nor has it been called to our attention. It was probably a mistake of the copyist in making the transcript, for the argument has proceeded upon the theory that such findings were made. The plaintiff assigns as one of the errors committed that the court erred 'in finding for plaintiff on all of the issues presented in the pleadings.' We have therefore passed by this omission, and permit the party who defends the ruling below to supply the defect.

In Deffeback v. Hawke, which was before us at October term, 1885, (115 U.S. 392, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 95,) we examined at some length the legislation of congress excepting lands containing minerals from sale or other disposition under laws providing for the alienation of portions of the public domain either for settlement or in aid of public institutions or works of internal improvement. It appeared upon such examination that until the act of July 26, 1866, such exception was general, but by that act the policy of reserving mineral lands from sale or grant was changed. Such lands of the public domain, both surveyed and unsurveyed, were thereby declared to be free and open to exploration and occupation by all citizens of the United States, and those who had declared their intention to become citizens, subject to such regulations as might be prescribed by law, and to the local customs and rules of miners in mining districts, so far as they were not in conflict with the laws of the United States. 14 St. c. 262, § 1, p. 251. By the act of May 10, 1872, to promote the development of the mining resources of the United States, (17 St. p. 94, c. 152, § 9,) the first section of the act of 1866, declaring the mineral lands of the United States free and open to exploration and occupation, was repealed, and in place of it a provision was adopted declaring that 'all valuable mineral deposits,' in lands belonging to the United States, both surveyed and unsurveyed, were free and open to exploration and purchase, subject to conditions similar to those in the original act. The Revised Statutes, which embody the law of the United States in force on the 1st of December, 1873, in its treatment of mineral lands, provided that 'in all cases lands valuable for minerals' should be reserved from sale, except as otherwise expressly directed by law, (section 2318;) but at the same time repeated the declaration, that all valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United States should be free and open to exploration and purchase. Section 2319. After that date title to mineral lands, known at the time to be valuable, could only be acquired under provisions specially authorizing their sale, except in certain states, which exception does not affect the question now before us. Chapter 8, tit. 32, Rev. St., contains the law for the reservation and sale of town-sites on the public lands. Among other things it provides for the entry, at the local land-office, of any portion of the public lands occupied as a town-site by its corporate authorities, or, if the town be unincorporated, by the judge of the county court of the county in which the town is situated; the entry to be 'in trust for the several use and benefit of the occupants thereof, according to their respective interests,' and the execution of the trust and the disposal of the lots in the town to be conducted under such regulations as may be prescribed by the legislative authority of the state or territory in which the town is situated. It also provides that the entry shall include only such land as is actually occupied by the town, and the title to whih i § in the United States; and declares that 'where mineral veins are possessed, which possession is recognized by local authority, and to the extent so possessed and recognized, the title to town lots to be acquired shall be subject to such recognized possession, and the necessary use thereof;' with the reservation, however, that nothing in this section shall be so construed as to recognize any color of title in possessors for mining purposes as against the United States. By another section of the chapter, and near its close, it is enacted that 'no title shall be acquired' under its provisions 'to any mine of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper, or to any valid mining claim or possession held under existing laws.' Section 2392. In Deffeback v. Hawke, we said of this statement of the legislation of congress that it was plain that no title from the United States to land known at the time of sale to be valuable for its minerals of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper could be obtained under the pre-emption or homestead laws, or the town-site laws, or in any other was than as prescribed by the laws specially authorizing the sale of such lands, except in certain states, not affecting the question before us; commenting particularly upon the terms 'known' and 'valuable' used in connection with the minerals in public lands, implying that they must be of that character to bring the lands within the exception of mineral lands from sale or grant by the United States. In that case there was no dispute as to the mineral character of the land-claimed by the plaintiff under his mining patent, when the town-site was entered by the probate judge at the local land-office. Proceedings for the acquisition of the mining claim had been previously initiated, the entry of the same had been had, and payment of the price made to the government; and when the patent subsequently issued it took effect by relation at the date of the entry, that being the earliest evidence of any movement for the acquisition of the title of the government. Here the case is different; here the Butte town-site had been entered at the local land-office by the probate judge of the county, and the patent of the United States in due form issued to him in trust for the occupants of the town, before the date of the mining patent, or the entry of the mining claim at the local land-office. And before that time a deed had been made by the probate judge to the defendant of the premises occupied by him, to recover which the present action is brought.

When the entry of the town-site was had, and the patent issued, and the sale was made to the defendant of the lots held by him, it was not known-at least it does not appear that it was known-that there were any valuable mineral lands within the town-site; and the important question is whether, in the absence of this knowledge, the defendant can be deprived, under the laws of the United States, of the premises purchased and occupied by him because of a subsequent discovery of minerals in them, and the issue of a patent to the discoverer. After much consideration, we have come to the conclusion that this question must be answered in the negative. It is true the language of the Revised Statutes touching the acquisition of title to mineral lands within the limits of town-sites is very broad. The declaration that 'no title shall be acquired' under the provisions relating to such town-sites, and the sale of lands therein 'to any mine of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper, or to any valid mining claim or possession held under existing laws,' would seem on first impression to constitute a reservation of such mines in the land sold, and of mining claims on them, to the United States; but such is not the necessary meaning of the terms used. In strictness, they import only that the provisions by which the title to the land in such town-sites is transferred shall not be the means of passing a title also to mines of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper in the land, or to valid mining claims or possessionsthe reon. They are to be read in connection with the clause protecting existing rights to mineral veins, and with the qualification uniformly accompanying exceptions in acts of congress of mineral lands from grant or sale. Thus read, they must be held, we think, merely to prohibit the passage of title under the provisions of the town-site laws to mines of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper, which are known to exist, on the issue of the town-site patent, and to mining claims and mining possessions, in respect to which such proceedings have been taken under the law or the custom of miners, as to render them valid, creating a property right in the holder, and not to prohibit the acquisition for all time of mines which then lay buried unknown in the depths of the earth. The exceptions of mineral lands from preemption and settlement, and from grants to states for universities and schools, for the construction of public buildings, and in aid of railroads and other works of internal improvement, are not held to exclude all lands in which minerals may be found, but only those where the mineral is in sufficient quantity to add to their richness, and to justify expenditure for its extraction, and known to be so at the date of the grant. There are vast tracts of country in the mining states which contain precious metal in small quantities, but not to a sufficient extent to justify the expense of their exploitation. It is not to such lands that the term 'mineral' in the sense of this statute is applicable.

On this subject there has been great uniformity of decision by those courts of the states and of the United States which have had the most frequent occasion to consider the subject, and by the land department. In Alford v. Barnum, 45 Cal. 482, before the supreme court of California in January, 1873, the question arose as to the meaning of the term 'mineral lands' in the acts of congress of July 1, 1862, and July 2, 1864, excepting such lands from the grants made by congress to aid in the construction of a railroad and telegraph line across the continent. In the act of 1862 the language is that all mineral land shall be excepted from the operation of the act. 12 St. c. 120, § 3. In the act of 1864, amending the act of 1862, it is declared that the term 'mineral land,' whenever it occurs in the act, and the act to which that was an amendment, shall not be construed to include coal and iron lands. 13 St. c. 216, § 4. The action in that case was to abate a ditch as a nuisance. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of a section of land in California, and that the defendants were digging a ditch across the same, which was to be used for mining purposes. The defendants answered that the * land was public mineral land of the United States, and that they were mining thereon for gold. The plaintiff at the time was in possession of the land under a contract of purchase from the railroad company, which had a patent from the United States under the acts of 1862 and 1864, and it was contended that the land was mineral land, excepted both by the acts of congress and by the patent, which contained similar provisions. The plaintiff having recovered in the court below, the case was taken to the supreme court, where the court, in considering the question, said: 'The mere fact that portions of the land contained particles of gold, or veins of gold-bearing quartz rock, would not necessarily impress it with the character of mineral land, within the meaning of the acts referred to. It must at least be shown that the land contains metals in quantities sufficient to render it available and valuable for mining purposes. Any narrower construction would operate to reserve from the uses of agriculture large tracts of land which are practically useless for any other purpose, and we cannot think this was the intention of congress.' In Merrill v. Dixon, 15 Nev. 401, the supreme court of Nevada held that, in excluding mineral lands from the grant to the Pacific Railroad Compan, c ongress only intended to reserve lands valuable for mining purposes; citing the California case. In Cowell v. Lammers, 10 Sawy 246, 257, 21 Fed. Rep. 200, the question came before the circuit court of the United States for the district of California, as to the meaning of 'mineral lands ' in the grant to the Pacific Railroad Company. That company having completed its road in accordance with the provisions of those acts, a patent was issued to it, the granting clause of which excepted and excluded all mineral lands, should any be found to exist in the tracts described. Judge SAWYER, in deciding the case, said: 'The land department in this very case, as in cases of patents to pre-emptioners, homestead claimants, and other purchasers of the public lands, have acted, and, I think, correctly, upon the idea that patents to lands, not known to be mineral lands at the time the patent issued, carry the title to all mines subsequently discovered in the lands, notwithstanding the reservation from sale of mineral lands in the acts of congress. By the words 'mineral lands' must be understood lands known to be such, or which there is satisfactory reason to believe are such, at the time of the grant or patent. And the United States courts, which have had occasion to act upon this subject, so far as I am aware, have adopted that idea. Milling Co. v. Spargo, 8 Sawy. 645, 16 Fed. Rep. 348. 'There must be some point of time when the character of the land must be finally determined, and, for the interest of all concerned, there can be no better point to determine this question than at the time of issuing the patent. The supreme court has not yet had occasion to decide the point as to the effect on a patent of a discovery of a valuable mine in lands subsequently to the issue of a patent. Any other construction would be disastrous in the extreme to the holders of lands in California under United States patents. If land, which a party has actually occupied, possessed, and peaceably enjoyed for a long series of years, claiming title under a patent of the United States 15 years old, can be entered upon and prospected for a mine by any trespasser who chooses to do so, and, a mine being found, the mine can be located, and taken out of the patent on the vague and uncertain exception in the patent in question, it can be done fifty or a hundred years hence, and the patent, instead of being a muniment of title upon which the patentee or his grantees can rest in security, would be but a delusion and a snare.' In U.S. v. Reed, 12 Sawy. 99, 104, 28 Fed. Rep. 482, before the circuit court for the district of Oregon, a bill was filed by the United States to set aside a patent issued upon a homestead entry on the ground that the land was mineral, and not agricultural, and was at the date of entry more valuable for mining than for agricultural purposes, and was so to the knowledge of the patentee. Judge DEADY, in disposing of the question, said: 'The nature and extent of the deposit of precious metals which will make a tract of land 'mineral,' or constitute a 'mine' thereon, within the meaning of the statute, has not been judicially determined. Attention is called to the question in McLaughlin v. U.S., 107 U.S. 526, 2 Sup. Ct. Rep. 802, but no opinion is expressed. The land department appears to have adopted a rule that if the land is worth more for agriculture than mining it is not mineral land, although it may contain some measure of gold or silver; and the bill in this case is drawn on that theory of the law. In my judgment, this is the only practicable rule of decision that can be applied to the subject. Nor can account be taken, in the application of this rule, of profits that would or might result from mining under other and more favorable conditions and circumstances than those which actually exist, or may be produced or expected in the ordinary course of such a pursuit or adventure, on the land in question.' In Dughi v. Harkins, 2 Dec. Dep. Int. 721, which was before the interior department in Noveber, 1883, there was a contest between mineral and agricultural claimants, the land having been returned as agricultural by the surveyor general. In disposing of it the secretary, Mr. Teller, in a communication to the commissioner of the general land-office, said. 'The burden of proof is therefore upon the mineral claimant, and he must show, not that neighboring or adjoining lands are mineral in character, or that that in dispute may hereafter by possibility develop minerals in such quantity as will establish its mineral rather than its agricultural character, but that, as a present fact, it is mineral in character; and this must appear from actual production of mineral, and not from any theory that it may produce it; in other words, it is fact and not theory which must control your office in deciding upon the character of this class of lands. Nor is it sufficient that the mineral claimant shows that the land is of little agricultural value. He must show affirmatively, in order to establish his claim, that the mineral value of the land is greater than its agricultural value.' In the Case of Spong, 5 Dec. Dep. Int. 193, which was before the department of the interior in October, 1886, similar views were expressed. An application had been made by Spong to the local land-officers for the Marble Valley quartz mine, in the Sacramento district, in California, which was refused by them, for the reason that the section of land containing the mine had been previously patented to the Central Pacific Railroad Company. On appeal, the commissioner of the general land-office affirmed the ruling, upon the ground that 'the exception in the grant to the company and in the patent is construed to mean lands known to contain valuable minerals prior to the issuing of the patent, and that subsequent discoveries would not affect the title of the company to the lands and mines subsequently discovered.' The case being taken to the interior department this decision was affirmed. In his opinion Mr. LAMAR, who had succeeded Mr. TELLER as secretary of the interior, said. 'It is strenuously insisted by counsel for the appellant that congress did not grant mineral lands to said company; that said patent, although including said section in terms, did not operate as a conveyance of the title to any land that may at any time be found to be mineral. It is not denied that said section was returned as agricultural by the United States surveyor; that it was regularly patented to said company, without fraud or mistake on the part of the land-officers or said company so far as is shown by the record. The issue of said patent was a determination by the proper tribunal that the lands covered by the patent were granted to said company, and hence, under the proviso of said act, were not mineral at the date of the issuance of said patent.' In Cleghorn v. Bird, 4 Dec. Dep. Int. 478, and in Commissioners v. Alexander, 5 Dec. Dep. Int. 126, Mr. Secretary LAMAR followed the decision of Secretary TELLER in Dughi v. Harkins, and in repeated cases afterwards it was not only referred to by him with approval, but also by his successor in the department, Mr. Secretary VILAS. Rulings to the same effect upon applications for mineral patents are found in decisions of the department for many years. They are that such applications should not be granted unless the existence of mineral in such quantities as would justify expenditure in the effort to obtain it is established as a present fact. If mineral patents will not be issued unless the mineral exist in sufficient quantity to render the land more valuable for mining than for other purposes, which can only be known by development or exploration, it should follow that the land may be patented for other purposes if that fact does not appear. See to this purport the following decisions of the interior department: Mining Co. v. Ferguson, 6 Dec. Dep. Int. 218; Nicholas Abercrombie, 6 Dec. Dep. Int. 393; John Downs, 7 Dec. Dep. Int. 71; Cutting v. Reininghaus, Id. 65; Mining Co. v. Johnson, 8 Dec. Dep. Int. 440; Thomas J. Laney, 9 Dec. Dep. Int.

It would seem from this uniform construction of that department of the government specially intrusted with supervision of proceedings required for the alienation of the public lands, including those that embrace minerals, and also of the courts of the mining states, federal and state, whose attention has been called to the subject, that the exception of mineral lands from grants in the acts of congress should be considered to apply only to such lands as were at the time of the grant known to be so valuable for their minerals as to justify expenditure for their extraction. The grant or patent, when issued, would thus be held to carry with it the determination of the proper authorities that the land patented was not subject to the exception stated. There has been no direct adjudication upon this point by this court, but this conclusion is a legitimate inference from several of its decisions. It was implied in the opinion in Deffeback v. Hawke, already referred to, and in the cases of Iron Co. v. U.S., 123 U.S. 307, 328, 8 Sup. Ct. Rep. 131, and U.S. v. Mining Co., 128 U.S. 673, 683, 9 Sup. Ct. Rep. 195. In Iron Co. v. U.S., a bill was filed to set aside patents issued for agricultural lands, on the ground that it was known at the time of their issue that the lands contained mines of coal. But the court said. 'To constitute the exemption contemplated by the pre-emption act, under the head of 'Known Mines,' there should be upon the land ascertained coal deposits of such an extent and value as to make the land more valuable to be worked as a coal mine, under the conditions existing at the time, than for merely agricultural purposes. The circumstance that there are surface indications of the existence of veins of coal does not constitute a mine. It does not even prove that the land will ever be under any conditions sufficiently valuable on account of its coal deposits to be worked as a mine. A change in the conditions occurring subsequently to the sale, whereby new discoveries are made, or by means whereof it may become profitable to work the veins as mines, cannot affect the title as it passed at the time of the sale. The question must be determined according to the facts in existence at the time of the sale. If upon the premises at that time there were not actual 'known mines,' capable of being profitably worked for their product, so as to make the land more valuable for mining than for agriculture, a title to them acquired under the pre-emption act cannot be successfully assailed.' In U.S. v. Mining Co., a bill was filed to set aside certain patents on the ground that they were issued upon false representations that the land patented embraced only placer mining claims, and not any mineral veins or lodes; and the court said with reference to the uncertain proof on the subject: 'It is not enough that there may have been some indications by outcroppings on the surface of the existence of lodes or veins of rock in place, bearing gold or silver, or other metal, to justify their designation as 'known' veins or lodes. To meet that designation the lodes or veins must be clearly ascertained, and be of such extent as to render the land more valuable on that account, and justify their exploitation.'

In connection with these views it is to be borne in mind, also, that the object of the town-site act was to afford relief to the inhabitants of cities and towns upon the public lands, by giving title to the lands occupied by them, and thus induce them to erect suitable buildings for residence and business. Under such protection many towns have grown up on lands which, previously to the patent, were part of the public domain of the United States, with buildings of great value for residence, trade, and manufactures. It would in many instances be a great impediment to the progress of such towns if the titles to the lots occupied by their inhabitants were subject to be overthrown by a subsequent discver y of mineral deposits under their surface. If their title would not protect them against a discovery of mines in them, neither would it protect them against the invasion of their property for the purpose of exploring for mines. The temptation to such exploration would be according to the suspected extent of the minerals, and, being thus subject to indiscriminate invasion, the land would be to one having the title poor and valueless, just in proportion to the supposed richness and abundance of its products. We do not think that any such results were contemplated by the act of congress, or that any construction should be given to the provision in question which could lead to such results. Our conclusion, as already substantially stated, is that congress only intended to preserve existing rights to known mines of gold, silver, cinnabar, or copper, and to known mining claims and possessions, against any assertion of title to them by virtue of the conveyances received under the town-site act, and not to leave the titles of purchasers in the town-sites to be disturbed by future discoveries. In Deffeback v. Hawke, the mining patentee's rights antedated those of the occupants under the town-site law, and wherever such is the case his rights will be enforced against the pretensions of the town-site holder; but where the latter has acquired his rights in advance of the discovery of any mines, and the initiation of proceedings for the acquisition of their title or possession, his rights will be deemed superior to those of the mining claimant.

It is not necessary in this case to state in what manner it must be shown that the existence of mines was known at the time the patent for the town-site was issued. If the mining patent states any initiatory steps in acquiring title which antedate the title of the town-site, that may suffice in an action at law. In the absence of such statement, the development and working of a mine would be a controlling fact; so, also, perhaps, would be the location of the claim patented, and notice thereof required by law, or the custom of miners. But in this case the patent does not show any such initiatory steps; it merely refers to the entry of the mining claim, and that was after the patent was issued to the town-site. No proof was offered to show when the mining claim was originally located; and it does not appear that the want of it was made an objection to the plaintiff's recovery, except as that may be implied from the defendant's offer to prove that at the time the patent to the Butte town-site was issued to the probate judge the premises embraced by the Gold Hill lode were not known to be valuable for minerals of any kind. That proof was excluded on the ground that the mining patent to the plaintiff established that the premises contained valuable minerals. Such was the effect of the patent, if there were any jurisdiction in the land department to issue a mining patent at all under the circumstances of this case. Assuming for the present that there was jurisdiction, the question was not whether there were valuable minerals at the time that patent was issued, but whether such minerals were known to exist within the premises at the date of the town-site patent to the probate judge. The plaintiff not having offered any proof upon this point, but having relied upon the fact as a matter of presumption merely, the defendant should have been premitted to establish the negative of it. The absence of any proceedings required by law or the custom of the mining district to initiate a right to a mining claim, which he might perhaps have shown, would have been very persuasive that no mine was then known to exist. We think the court erred in excluding the proof of the defendant.

When the patent to the mining company was offered in evidence an objection was taken on the ground that the exception contained in it excluded all town lots from the grant, and it was necessary for the plaintiff to show that the property in controversy did not consist of lots thusexc epted. The exception in the patent went only to the exclusion of the lots from interfering with the surface of the land granted with the mining lode. But we do not attach any importance to the exception, for the officers of the land department, being merely agents of the government, have no authority to insert in a patent any other terms than those of conveyance, with recitals showing compliance with the conditions which the law prescribes. Could they insert clauses in patents at their own discretion, they could limit or enlarge their effect without warrant of law. The patent of a mining claim carries with it such rights to the land which includes the claim as the law confers, and no others, and these rights can neither be enlarged nor diminished by any reservations of the officers of the land department, resting for their fitness only upon the judment of those officers. Deffeback v. Hawke, 115 U.S. 392, 406, 6 Sup. Ct. Rep. 95. If, after the introduction of the town-site patent and the deed to the defendant, the objection had been raised to the jurisdiction of the land department to issue the patent in question for minerals in lands which had been previously conveyed to the defendant, a much more serious question would have been presented. The laws of congress provide that valuable mineral deposits in lands of the United States shall be open to exploration and purchase. They do not provide, and never have provided, that such mineral deposits in lands which have ceased to be public, and become the property of private individuals, can be patented under any proceedings before the land department or otherwise. Proceedings for the acquisition of title to a mining claim within a town-site, commenced before the issue of a town-site patent, could undoubtedly be prosecuted to completion afterwards. The right initiated by the location of the mining claim would not be defeated by a subsequent conveyance of the title to the land in which the mining claim was situated. But it is not perceived where the jurisdiction exists under the laws of the United States to grant a patent for a mine on lands owned by private individuals-which was the case here-if the lots for which the defendant received a deed were included within the town-site patent and the location of the mining claim was subsequently made. Nor is there in this statement anything at all inconsistent with the decision of this court in Steel v. Smelting Co., 106 U.S. 447, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 389. We stated there that land embraced within a town-site on the public domain, when unoccupied, was not exempt from location and sale for mining purposes, and referred to the fact that some of the most valuable mines in the country were within the limits of incorporated cities, which had grown up on what was on its first settlement a part of the public domain. We were speaking at that time of town-sites for which no patent had been issued, and of mines in public lands, for immediately after using these expressions we said: 'Whenever, therefore, mines are found in lands belonging to the United States, whether within or without town-sites, they may be claimed and worked, provided existing rights of others, from prior occupation, are not interfered with.' It must be borne in mind, also, that town-sites on the public domain in many instances, and probably in the greater part of them, embrace a much larger tract of country than is included in a patent for such town-sites. The United States laws limit the quantity that shall be included within the patent of such a town-site to the number of its inhabitants. Where there are over 100 and less than 200 inhabitants, the patent can only embrace lands not exceeding 320 acres; where the inhabitants number more than 200 and less than 1,000, it cannot embrace more than 640 acres; and where the inhabitants are 1,000 or more, it cannot exceed 1,280 acres. For each additional thousand inhabitants, not exceeding 5,000, a further grant of only 320 acres is allowed. Valuable mineral deposts in such lands outside of the patent are equally open to exploration and purchase as those in lands outside of the town-site. It was in reference to mines in unoccupied public lands in unpatented town-sites that the language in Steel v. Smelting Co. was used, and to them and to mines in public lands in patented town-sites outside of the limits of the patent it is only applicable. We agree to all that is urged by counsel as to the conclusiveness of the patents of the land department when assailed collaterally in actions at law. We have had occasion to assert their unassailability in such cases in the strongest terms, both in Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.S. 636, 640-646, and in Steel v. Smelting Co., 106 U.S. 447, 451, 452, 1 Sup. Ct. Rep. 389. They are conclusive in such actions of all matters of fact necessary to their issue, where the department had jurisdiction to act upon such matters, and to determine them; but if the lands patented were not at the time public property, having been previously disposed of, or no provision had been made for their sale or * other disposition, or they had been reserved from sale, the department had no jurisdiction to transfer the land, and their attempted conveyance by patent is inoperative and void, no matter with what seeming regularity the forms of law have been observed. In the several cases to which we have been referred in the fifth and sixth Montana Reports, (Milling Co. v. Clark, 5 Mont. 378, 5 Pac. Rep. 570; Talbott v. King, 6 Mont. 76, 9 Pac. Rep. 434; Butte City Smoke-House Lode Cases, 6 Mont. 397, 12 Pac. Rep. 858,) which involved contests between parties claiming under mining patents and others claiming under town-site patents, and in which very able and learned opinions were given by the supreme court of the territory of Montana, the mining claim patented had been located and the rights of the mining claimant had thus attached before the town-site patent was issued. The patent which subsequently followed was a mere perfection of the right originated by the location, and to which it took effect by relation. It was held, in accordance with this opinion, that the prior mining location was not affected by the town-site entry. It follows from the views expressed that the judgment of the supreme court of the territory of Montana must be reversed, and the cause remanded to the supreme court of the state, with directions to order a new trial in the proper trial court; and it is so ordered.