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bly of this Territory, subsequent to the location of plaintiffs' mining claims, a charter to certain persons, to lay out and maintain a toll-road up said Cement gulch, and that, in pursuance of said charter, these persons did open and maintain such road. That a subsequent legislative assembly repealed the act granting this charter, and, by an act, declared this road a public highway.

The defendants claim, that by virtue of the provisions of an act of congress, passed July 26, 1866, entitled "An act providing for the right of way to ditch and canal owners, over public lands, and for other purposes" (see 14 U. S. Stat. at Large, 253), they were vested with the right to lay out and maintain this road. The section of said act which they claim grants them this right reads as follows:

SEC. 8. "That the right of way for the construction of highways over public lands, not reserved for public uses, is hereby granted."

The first question then presented for our consideration is, were the lands upon which these mining claims are situated fully public lands?

The same act which grants this right to construct highways over public lands, grants to citizens of the United States, and those who have declared their intentions to become such, the right to explore and occupy the mineral lands of the public domain, subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by law, and subject, also, to the local customs and rules of miners in the several mining districts, so far as the same may not be in conflict with the laws of the United States. 14 U. S. Stat. at Large, § 1, p. 253.

We hold, that this section of that act grants to the proper person an easement upon such of the mineral lands belonging to the public domain of the United States, as he may appropriate, in accordance with the local rules and customs of miners in the mining district, in which the same may be situated, there being at present no regulations prescribed by law to vary or limit these. There is no point presented in this case that would imply that plaintiffs did not hold their mining claims, in accordance with the rules and cus

toms of the miners in the district in which the same are situated. They being in possession of them, it will be presumed that they hold them in accordance with such rules and customs, upon the same principle that the possessor of any real estate is presumed to be the owner thereof, until the contrary is shown.

This easement is one of a very extensive character, for it gives the owner thereof the right to occupy and explore such land. Being a right received by legislative grant, it should receive no narrow construction.

The rule may be stated as a general one, in respect to legislative grants in this country, that they should be construed liberally in favor of the grantee, and in such a manner as to give them a full and liberal operation, so as to carry out the legislative intent, where that can be ascertained. See 2 Washb. on Real Prop. 539. Considering the history of mining for the precious metals in the mineral lands of the United States, and the history of the passage of the act under consideration, it cannot be doubted that congress intended by it to legalize the mining upon the public domain for precious metals, which up to the passage of the same had been carried on in such a manner as to make those engaged therein trespassers as against the general government. We may assert, then, that the grant to occupy and explore the public mineral lands belonging to the public domain, carried with it, by implication, the right to take what was found by such exploration, namely, the precious metals; for, without this right, the grant would be of no utility to those it was intended to benefit. The only object any miner would have in occupying and exploring any mineral land, would be the extraction therefrom of metals therein contained. Without this right, the miner who does so would still be a trespasser against the general government. I am aware that in the case of Charles River Bridge v. Warren Bridge, 11 Pet. 420, in relation to franchises, the supreme court of the United States held, that a legislative grant should be strictly construed, and that nothing could be derived by implication from such a grant. Yet, in relation to legisla

tive grants of this character, I believe that court would be more liberal. Certainly, public policy would not dictate so narrow a construction. Yale, in his treatise on mining claims and water rights, maintains that this grant gives as extensive rights to the miner, in regard to extracting the precious metals from a mining claim, as those specified above. See Yale on Mining Claims and Water Rights, 355, 356.

This right to occupy, explore and extract from mineral lands the precious metals, is of a higher character than if created by what is termed a parol license, for it is given by an act of congress; and, hence, equivalent to a patent from the United States to the same.

"For the transfer, by the United States or by a State, of the title of land, no particular form is required. It may be done by special act of legislation, by a clause inserted in a treaty by the treaty-making power, or by patent issued by one authorized to represent the sovereignty." 2 Washb. on Real Prop. 240.

Again: "A grant may be made by law as well as by patent issued pursuant to law." 2 Washb. on Real Prop. 240.

Of course, this right to occupy, explore and extract the precious metals from the mineral lands belonging to the public domain is not unlimited. It is restricted by the local rules and customs of the miners of the district in which such land is situated. These rules and customs refer to the location, user and forfeiture of mining claims. When a miner locates a particular portion of mining land, in accordance with these rules and customs, then the grant from the general government to occupy, explore and take there from the precious metals, accrues to such miner over the ground located. The effect of this statute, then, is to grant these rights over the ground located, in accordance with such rules, to as full an extent as if the land had been designated in the law.

While the general government then holds the fee in the land upon which these mining claims are situated, it has

parted with an incorporeal hereditament in the same, that is, the right to occupy, explore and extract the precious metals therefrom; and these rights have become vested in the plaintiffs, by virtue of a grant from the general government; hence, these mining claims are no longer to the full extent public lands. The title in fee is, but these rights, which were incident to the fee, have been carved out of it, and are no longer government property but that of the plaintiffs, and it is property which the law will protect. The use to which the defendants would devote this property, would destroy plaintiff's rights. The section of the act under which defendants claim their rights are granted does not devote any particular portion of the public domain to a highway. It gives a general right to the public of a right of way for that purpose over public lands, and should be construed only to offer to devote to that use any lands belonging to the general government, not reserved for public uses, that the public might, through its proper officers, select. Until the public then accepts the offer made, and seeks to devote some particular portion of the public domain for a highway, no rights accrue to the public over such. lands. See The City and County of San Francisco v. David Calderwood et al., 31 Cal. 585. No rights could have accrued to the public in the land, upon any portion of Cement gulch, until either the legislature declared the tollroad up the same a highway, or until the said county commissioners sought to locate one there. We have seen, however, that before either of these events transpired, the rights of the plaintiffs had become vested. No greater rights could accrue to the public in these lands, than the government had at the time the public accepted the offer made in one of the ways above specified. The government, as we have seen, had parted with an easement to plaintiffs. Neither the defendants as county officers, or the Territory, or even the general government, could devote this ground to the use of a highway, without giving the plaintiffs a just compensation for all the damage done their rights.

The defendants insist that any miner who locates a mining VOL. I.-53.

claim does so subject to right of the public under the section of the law referred to above to construct a highway over the same. There is no reservation of this kind in the grant to the miner. The clause, "subject to such regulations as may be prescribed by law," reserves only the right to regulate the manner and conditions under which miners must work their claims by legal enactments. The clause, "subject to the local customs or rules of miners in the several mining districts," refers evidently to the rules, customs and regulations of miners in relation to the location, user and forfeiture of mining claims. By no rule of legal construction that I am aware of can these clauses be made to refer to a reservation of a right to the public to construct a highway over located mining claims. The proper construction of the law upon these subjects is, I think, that miners have the right to occupy and explore unappropriated public mineral lands; that the public have a right to an easement for a highway over the unoccupied public domain, and that whichever is prior in time is prior in right. It is as inconsistent for the public to claim a right of way over an appropriated mining claim without giving the owner thereof a just compensation for his rights as it would be for a miner to claim the right to appropriate for mining purposes a portion of the public domain which had been devoted to the use of a public highway. The statute does not, by express terms, or by implication, make either of these rights superior to each other. There was no attempt on the part of the defendants to have the rights of plaintiff's sequestered for the benefit of the public upon giving to them a just compensation therefor. As far as we have been able to ascertain there is no provision in the statutes in this Territory which provides for the paying of a just compensation for private property which is sought to be devoted to a public use for a highway. Until there is some provision for this I do not see how private property can be devoted to the use of the public for such a purpose, notwithstanding the necessity for such an appropriation may be very great. It would seem that it was a condition precedent that a just

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