Pete Lien & Sons, Inc. v. Zellmer , 2015 S.D. LEXIS 65 ( 2015 )


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  • #26982-aff in pt, rev in pt & rem-SLZ & GAS
    
    2015 S.D. 30
    IN THE SUPREME COURT
    OF THE
    STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    PETE LIEN & SONS, INC,
    a South Dakota Corporation,                   Plaintiff and Appellee,
    v.
    STEVE ZELLMER; CESAR CONDE;
    SUNSET PROPERTIES, LLC, a
    Colorado Corporation; GCC OF
    AMERICA, INC., a Delaware
    Corporation; and GCC DACOTAH,
    INC., a South Dakota Corporation,             Defendants and Appellants.
    ****
    APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF
    THE FOURTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT
    LAWRENCE COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA
    ****
    THE HONORABLE RANDALL L. MACY
    Judge
    ****
    LARRY M. VON WALD of
    Beardsley, Jensen & Von Wald,
    Prof., LLC
    Rapid City, South Dakota                      Attorneys for plaintiff
    and appellee.
    KYLE L. WEISE
    JAMES S. NELSON of
    Gunderson, Palmer, Nelson
    & Ashmore, LLP
    Rapid City, South Dakota                      Attorneys for defendants
    and appellants.
    ****
    ARGUED ON
    OCTOBER 8, 2014
    OPINION FILED 05/13/15
    #26982
    ZINTER and SEVERSON, Justices
    [¶1.]        Justice Severson delivers the opinion of the Court, holding
    that title to mining claims CHUCK NO. 2012-02, CHUCK NO. 2012-03,
    CHUCK NO. 2012-04, CHUCK NO. 2012-05, CHUCK NO. 2012-06, CHUCK
    NO. 2012-07, CHUCK NO. 2012-08, CHUCK NO.2, CHUCK NO.3, CHUCK
    NO.4, CHUCK NO.5, CHUCK NO.6, and CHUCK NO.7 is quieted in Pete
    Lien & Sons, Inc. Chief Justice Gilbertson concurs. Justices Zinter and
    Wilbur and Retired Justice Konenkamp concur in result.
    [¶2.]        Justice Zinter delivers the opinion of the Court, holding that
    title to mining claim CHUCK NO. 2012-01, a.k.a. CM-5, is quieted in GCC
    Dakota Inc. Justice Wilbur and Retired Justice Konenkamp concur. Chief
    Justice Gilbertson and Justice Severson dissent.
    [¶3.]        SEVERSON, Justice, writing the opinion regarding mining
    claims CHUCK NO. 2012-02, CHUCK NO. 2012-03, CHUCK NO. 2012-04,
    CHUCK NO. 2012-05, CHUCK NO. 2012-06, CHUCK NO. 2012-07, CHUCK
    NO. 2012-08, CHUCK NO.2, CHUCK NO.3, CHUCK NO.4, CHUCK NO.5,
    CHUCK NO.6, and CHUCK NO.7.
    [¶4.]        GCC Dacotah, Inc. and Pete Lien & Sons, Inc., claim mineral rights to
    the same 280 acres of U.S. Forest Service land in Lawrence County, South Dakota.
    Pete Lien & Sons, Inc. (PLS) filed a complaint to quiet title on September 14, 2012.
    Both parties subsequently moved for summary judgment on October 16, 2013,
    which the circuit court granted to PLS on January 2, 2014. The circuit court held
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    that GCC Dacotah, Inc. (GCC) had failed to follow federal and state law regarding
    the proper location of placer mining claims. GCC appeals.
    Background
    [¶5.]         On April 6, 2007, Steve Zellmer, then president of GCC, signed and
    filed with the Lawrence County Register of Deeds fourteen placer mining claims.
    Throughout this opinion Appellants will be interchangeably referred to as GCC or
    Zellmer. Each claim covers twenty acres of U.S. Forest Service land in Lawrence
    County for a total of 280 acres. That same day, Gene Nelson, an employee of GCC,
    placed one discovery monument containing notices of the fourteen claims on the
    northeast corner of the 280 acres. Zellmer transferred the claims by quitclaim deed
    on June 6, 2007, to Sunset Properties, LLC, a company owned by GCC of America,
    Inc. Sunset Properties, LLC recorded the deed on September 11, 2007.
    [¶6.]         On April 20, 2007, Sam Brannan, on behalf of PLS, posted notices of
    location certificates on six placer mining claims covering some of the same 280 acres
    claimed by Zellmer. PLS marked each twenty-acre section with corner and side-
    center posts. 1 Notices of location were attached to discovery monuments at each
    claim. On February 13, 2012, Sam Brannan made discovery of eight more placer
    mining claims and marked the boundaries in the same manner as in 2007. These
    eight claims were also previously claimed by Zellmer. As a result, both GCC and
    PLS now claim that they each have rights to the same 280 acres.
    1.      Side posts are placed half way down each side of each twenty-acre section for
    a total of eight posts to mark a twenty-acre section.
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    [¶7.]        PLS filed a complaint to quiet title on September 14, 2012, alleging
    that Zellmer did not follow federal or state law to properly locate his placer mineral
    claims and the property remained open for claims. GCC replied, alleging that only
    one monument is needed and that the notice of the fourteen claims in the
    monument gave actual notice of his rights. Furthermore, GCC argued that anyone
    trying to claim the same mineral rights had constructive notice of GCC’s claim
    because the claims were filed with the county register of deeds. As a result, GCC
    argued, no future claimants could obtain an interest in the same minerals.
    [¶8.]        PLS and GCC each moved for summary judgment. The circuit court
    granted summary judgment to PLS on January 2, 2014. The court found that
    federal regulations require the location of the placer mining claims to be staked and
    monumented at the corners of each twenty-acre claim. The court also found that
    federal regulations provide that the procedure to stake and monument surface
    mining claims must also meet any state requirements not inconsistent with federal
    law. Further, it found SDCL 45-4-3 requires additional posts to mark the centers of
    each claim’s sides, for a total of eight posts on each claim. The court found that
    Zellmer did not follow federal or state law to claim the minerals; however, it found
    that PLS followed all applicable laws and was therefore entitled to the mining claim
    subject to the paramount title of the United States.
    [¶9.]        GCC appeals, raising the following issues:
    (1)    Whether the court erred in deciding that GCC’s fourteen
    placer mineral claims on 280 acres of U.S. Forest Service
    property in Lawrence County, South Dakota, were
    invalid.
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    (2)    Whether GCC’s placer mineral claims precluded PLS’s
    subsequent claims.
    Standard of Review
    [¶10.]       The circuit court in this case interpreted federal and state statutes
    when it granted summary judgment.
    Our standard of review on a grant or denial of summary
    judgment is well settled. Summary judgment is proper where[]
    the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and
    admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that
    there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. SDCL
    15-6-56(c).
    Luther v. City of Winner, 
    2004 S.D. 1
    , ¶ 6, 
    674 N.W.2d 339
    , 343. “We view all
    reasonable inferences drawn from the facts in the light most favorable to the
    [nonmoving] party.” Roden v. Gen. Gas Co. of Wis., 
    2003 S.D. 130
    , ¶ 5, 
    671 N.W.2d 622
    , 624. Statutory interpretation is a question of law reviewed de novo.
    Martinmaas v. Engelmann, 
    2000 S.D. 85
    , ¶ 49, 
    612 N.W.2d 600
    , 611.
    Analysis
    [¶11.]       I.     Whether the court erred in deciding that GCC’s fourteen
    placer mineral claims on 280 acres of U.S. Forest Service
    property in Lawrence County, South Dakota, were invalid.
    [¶12.]       Federal law allows citizens to explore and purchase mineral rights on
    certain United States property. 
    30 U.S.C. § 22
     (2012). In order to claim an interest
    in minerals on federal lands open to such exploration, citizens must follow both
    federal law and state law “so far as the [state laws] are applicable and not
    inconsistent with the laws of the United States.” 
    Id.
     A citizen who has discovered
    minerals on U.S. land must properly locate the claim. Locate is a term of art within
    mining laws. Locating a claim means “(1) establishing the exterior lines of a mining
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    claim or site on lands open to mineral entry to identify the exact land claimed; and
    (2) [r]ecording a notice or certificate of location as required by state and Federal
    law[.]” 
    43 C.F.R. §§ 3832.1
    (a)(1)-(2) (2014). Additional state and federal
    requirements provide the manner in which the exterior lines are to be established
    and claims are to be recorded. See 
    id.
     § 3832.1(b)(1) (providing that further
    requirements regarding location and recording are found within the regulations); 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
     (2012) (allowing states to “make regulations not in conflict with the laws
    of the United States, . . . subject to the following requirement[]: [t]he location must
    be distinctly marked on the ground so that its boundaries can be readily traced”); 
    id.
    § 35 (2012) (placer claims “shall be subject to entry and patent, under like
    circumstances and conditions, and upon similar proceedings, as are provided for
    vein or lode claims; . . . no such location shall include more than twenty acres for
    each individual claimant”); 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
     (2014) (a proper location includes:
    discovery, staking and monumenting “the corners of a mining claim or site which
    meets applicable state monumenting requirements[,]” 2 posting “the notice of
    location in a conspicuous place on the claim or site” with proper information,
    recording in the local recording office and Bureau of Land Management State Office
    (BLM), following state law, and complying with other specific requirements
    applicable to the type of claim).
    2.    
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2): “To locate a claim or site, you must—(2) Stake and
    monument the corners of a mining claim or site which meets applicable state
    monumenting requirements and the size limitations described in § 3832.22
    for lode and placer claims, § 3832.32 for mill sites, and § 3832.42 for tunnel
    sites[.]”
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    [¶13.]         Federal law provides for different types of mining claims; the two types
    at issue in this case are “placer” and “lode or vein” claims. A placer claim covers
    “ground within defined boundaries which contains mineral in its earth . . . ; ground
    that includes valuable deposits not in place, that is, not fixed in rock, but which are
    in a loose state, and may in most cases be collected by washing or amalgamation
    without milling.” United States v. Iron Silver Mining Co., 
    128 U.S. 673
    , 679, 
    9 S. Ct. 195
    , 197-98, 
    32 L. Ed. 571
     (1888). In contrast, vein or lode claims cover “lines or
    aggregations of metal embedded in quartz or other rock in place.” 
    Id.
     The fourteen
    claims over limestone in this case are placer claims.
    South Dakota Mining Laws
    [¶14.]         The Dakota Territory first enacted laws regarding mines and mining
    claims in 1875, before South Dakota became a state. 1875 Dakota Sess. Laws ch.
    LXVII, § 6. 3 Many of those laws remain largely the same today and are codified at
    SDCL chapter 45-4. Our statutes only refer to placer claims within SDCL 45-4-20,
    which makes it a misdemeanor to associate with another to obtain possession of
    mining claims by force, violence, threat of violence, or stealth. The other provisions
    within the mining chapter mention lode claims or just generally refer to mining
    claims. Because of the lack of a specific reference to placer claims within chapter
    45-4, the parties dispute whether SDCL 45-4-3 governs the marking of a placer
    claim. SDCL 45-4-3 provides:
    3.       We cite to the enactments of the Dakota Territory legislative assembly as the
    equivalent of session laws today. However, we note that they were not
    referred to as session laws in 1875 but as “General Laws and Memorials and
    Resolutions of the Territory of Dakota.”
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    Surface boundaries shall be marked by eight substantial posts,
    hewed or blazed on the side or sides facing the claim and plainly
    marked with the name of the lode and the corner, end, or side of
    the claim that they respectively represent and sunk in the
    ground; one at each corner and one at the center of each side line
    and one at each end of the lode. If it is impracticable because of
    rock or precipitous ground to sink such posts, they may be
    placed in a monument of stone.
    The circuit court held that this provision is consistent with federal law and
    applicable to placer claims as well as lode claims. The court concluded that GCC
    did not have a mining claim because Zellmer did not comply with this state
    requirement when locating his placer claims.
    [¶15.]       We have not previously ruled on the scope of chapter 45-4. GCC
    asserts that none of the statutes found in chapter 45-4 apply to placer mineral
    claims. GCC notes the reference to a placer claim in SDCL 45-4-20 and argues that
    its inclusion demonstrates the Legislature’s acknowledgement of a distinction
    between placer and lode claims. GCC further argues that SDCL 45-4-20 indicates
    that the Legislature intended to exclude placer claims entirely from chapter 45-4,
    and that if the rest of the statutes were meant to apply to placer claims those
    statutes would explicitly reference placer claims. To the contrary, there is nothing
    within chapter 45-4 to suggest that placer claims are not covered within the
    provisions. The statutes now and at enactment address all mining claims, not just
    lode or vein claims. To hold otherwise, that the entire section only applies to lode
    claims, would severely limit the scope of other provisions within chapter 45-4 that
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    do not specifically refer to lode claims. 4 That interpretation would be contrary to
    the plain meaning of the statutes, which by their terms, apply to all mining claims.
    Reading chapter 45-4 in a contrary way would eliminate all state requirements for
    federal mining claims that are not vein or lode claims. It is clear that the chapter
    was to have broad applicability to all mining claims.
    [¶16.]        Finding that chapter 45-4 applies to placer claims, the next question is
    whether the provisions within chapter 45-4 that specifically reference lode claims
    equally apply to placer claims. Federal law states in relevant part that placer
    claims
    shall be subject to entry and patent, under like circumstances
    and conditions, and upon similar proceedings, as are provided
    for vein or lode claims; but where the lands have been previously
    surveyed by the United States, the entry in its exterior limits
    shall conform to the legal subdivisions of the public lands. And
    where placer claims are upon surveyed lands, and conform to
    legal subdivisions, no further survey or plat shall be required,
    and all placer-mining claims located after the 10th day of May
    1872, shall conform as near as practicable with the United
    States system of public-land surveys, and the rectangular
    subdivisions of such surveys . . . .
    
    30 U.S.C. § 35
     (emphasis added). This indicates that the federal scheme does not
    envision a mining system where separate provisions will always apply to either
    placer claims or vein and lode claims but not both. To the contrary, it indicates that
    absent provisions for placer claims, rules governing vein or lode claims will equally
    apply to placer claims. This reading is consistent with the structure of the federal
    4.       SDCL 45-4-7; SDCL 45-4-8; SDCL 45-4-13 to -17; SDCL 45-4-19; and SDCL
    45-4-21 to -23 contain no reference to a lode or vein claim.
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    statutes and regulations which often apply uniformly regardless of the type of
    mineral claim.
    [¶17.]         The Supreme Court of the Territory of Dakota, when determining the
    ownership of placer claims in Lawrence County, found the same. Suessenbach v.
    First Nat’l Bank of Deadwood, 
    41 N.W. 662
    , 667 (1889). 5 The territorial court
    sustained the lower court’s factual finding that a placer claim had been properly
    located. Id. at 666. The court explained the locating parties had
    duly located, claimed, and appropriated . . . “Placer Claim No.
    15[]” . . . in accordance with the laws of the United States, the
    local laws, and the customs, rules, and regulations of miners in
    said mining district, by distinctly marking the surface
    boundaries of said claim so that they could be readily traced on
    the ground; by setting substantial stakes at each corner of said
    claim, and on the sides thereof, with the name of the claim
    marked thereon and the name of the locators; and by putting a
    plain sign or notice at the points of discovery thereon, containing
    the name of the claim as “Placer Claim No. 15,” above discovery,
    and the names of the locators . . . and the date of location . . .
    and by filing and recording a certificate of location in the records
    of the recorder of said Whitewood mining district.
    Id. at 662-63 (emphasis added). The court went on to explain the locators
    marked [the claim’s] boundaries by stakes, so that they could be
    readily traced. They posted the required notice, which was duly
    recorded in compliance with the regulations of the district. They
    had thus done all that was necessary under the law for the
    acquisition of an exclusive right to the possession and enjoyment
    of the ground.
    5.       In his writing Justice Zinter states that any reliance on this case is misplaced
    as the court did not decide whether the procedure applied to placer claims.
    However, the approach the court used to determine placer claim ownership
    indicates that the procedure was not in dispute. The parties and court
    recognized that a placer claim was located by the procedure as outlined in the
    opinion, which includes staking the corners and sides of the claim.
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    Id. at 667. See also Strickland v. Commercial Mining Co., 
    104 P. 965
    , 966 (Or.
    1909) (holding that even though state law “required the posting of a notice on the
    lode or vein of a quartz claim, but no provision was made for the locating of placer
    claims, or for the recording of notices thereof[,]” federal statutes made placer claims
    “subject to entry and patent under like circumstances and conditions, and upon
    similar proceedings as are provided for vein or lode claims” (citation omitted)). The
    territorial law the court applied in Suessenbach is substantially the same as our
    statute exists today. 6 Therefore, it is evident that the procedure to be followed in
    locating a placer claim is the same for that of a lode claim, absent a statute to the
    contrary. Placer claims are subject to the provisions of chapter 45-4 so long as those
    requirements are not inconsistent with federal law. SDCL 45-4-3 sets forth the
    procedure claimants must follow when marking the surface boundaries of placer
    claims.
    [¶18.]         GCC asserts that our reading of SDCL 45-4-3 is preempted because it
    imposes requirements inconsistent with federal law. GCC reads 
    30 U.S.C. § 35
     as
    6.       Compare 1875 Dakota Sess. Laws ch. LXVII, § 6 (“Such surface boundaries
    shall be marked by eight (8) substantial posts, hewed or blazed on the side or
    sides, facing the claim, and sunk in the ground, to-wit: One at each corner,
    and one at the center of each side line, and one at each end of the lode. When
    it is impracticable on account of rock or precipitous ground to sink such posts,
    they may be placed in a monument of stone.”), with SDCL 45-4-3 (“Surface
    boundaries shall be marked by eight substantial posts, hewed or blazed on
    the side or sides facing the claim and plainly marked with the name of the
    lode and the corner, end, or side of the claim that they respectively represent
    and sunk in the ground; one at each corner and one at the center of each side
    line and one at each end of the lode. If it is impracticable because of rock or
    precipitous ground to sink such posts, they may be placed in a monument of
    stone.”).
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    requiring placer claims to be only mapped in conformity with the United States
    survey, not physically marked. The requirement of physically marking a claim that
    is controlled by legal subdivisions, GCC asserts, is not necessary when the lines of
    the claim are already controlled by the survey. However, federal law requires
    placer claims to conform “as near as practicable” to existing surveys and provides
    for situations where a claim cannot conform to legal subdivisions; therefore, the
    surface boundaries may be important in certain cases. 7 
    30 U.S.C. § 35
    . Further,
    federal law does not say that boundaries need not be marked if there is a survey
    that governs the claim. 8 The law only says that “no further survey or plat shall be
    7.    30 U.S.C § 35 provides in relevant part:
    [W]here the lands have been previously surveyed by the
    United States, the entry in its exterior limits shall conform to
    the legal subdivisions of the public lands. And where placer
    claims are upon surveyed lands, and conform to legal
    subdivisions, no further survey or plat shall be required, and all
    placer-mining claims located after the 10th day of May 1872,
    shall conform as near as practicable with the United States
    system of public-land surveys, and the rectangular subdivisions
    of such surveys, and no such location shall include more than
    twenty acres for each individual claimant; but where placer
    claims cannot be conformed to legal subdivisions, survey and
    plat shall be made as on unsurveyed lands . . . .
    (Emphasis added.)
    8.    GCC asserts that recording a notice of location for the claim meets locating
    requirements because the notice contains the legal subdivision description
    per the federal survey. Such an approach conflates step two and step three of
    perfecting a mining claim. A proper claim includes (1) Discovery,
    (2) “Establishing the exterior lines of a mining claim[,]” (see supra ¶¶ 6, 12),
    (3) “Recording a notice or certificate of location as required by state and
    Federal law and by this part.” 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.1
     (2014). The subdivision
    description is used to describe the claim when registering and recording and
    cannot eliminate the requirement of physically marking a claim. 
    Id.
    (continued . . .)
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    required[.]” 
    Id.
     State statutes that require posting when a claim conforms to a
    survey are not inconsistent with the federal requirements. In fact, 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) provides that a locator must “[s]take and monument the corners of a
    mining claim or site which meets applicable state monumenting requirements[.]”
    SDCL 45-4-2 and SDCL 45-4-3 define the monument and post requirements in
    South Dakota. We do not require a new survey or plat; we simply require
    additional ground work to mark the claim’s boundariesregardless of whether it
    conforms to legal subdivisions or not. 9
    [¶19.]         Not only is our reading of SDCL 45-4-3 consistent with federal law, it
    is mandated by such. Federal law “makes the manner of locating mining claims
    ____________________
    (. . . continued)
    § 3832.12(a)(1) explains the answer to the following question: “When I record
    a mining claim or site, how do I describe the lands I have claimed?” It states:
    All claims and sites. You must describe the land by state,
    meridian, township, range, section and by aliquot part to the
    quarter section. To obtain the land description, you must use an
    official survey plat or other U.S. Government map that is based
    on the surveyed or protracted U.S. Public Land Survey System.
    If you cannot describe the land by aliquot part (e.g., the land is
    unsurveyed), you must provide a metes and bounds description
    that fixes the position of the claim corners with respect to a
    specified claim corner, discovery monument, or official survey
    monument. In all cases, your description of the land must be as
    compact and regular in form as reasonably possible and should
    conform to the U.S. Public Land Survey System and its
    rectangular subdivisions as much as possible . . . .
    Id.
    9.       This position is further reinforced by the 2003 amendment to 
    43 C.F.R. § 3831.1
     (1973) that removed the option of the states to eliminate the
    requirement of marking the surface boundaries if a claim conformed to legal
    subdivisions. See infra ¶ 20 n.11.
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    and recording them subject to the laws of the state or territory, and the regulations
    of each mining district, when they are not in conflict with the laws of the United
    States.” Kendall v. San Juan Silver Mining Co., 
    144 U.S. 658
    , 664, 
    12 S. Ct. 779
    ,
    781, 
    36 L. Ed. 583
     (1892). Although this provision gives states broad authority to
    enact laws regarding mining, that power is conditioned on the requirement that the
    location be marked on the ground. 10 The inclusion of this requirement indicates the
    importance of marking a claim in some manner on the ground and that physical
    marking cannot be made optional by the states. The federal regulations go on to
    specifically state that corners are to be marked in accordance with state law. 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    . No persuasive argument has been presented for holding that
    states cannot set standards on posts and monuments. Reading the statute as
    disallowing requirements for posting would be contrary to the plain language of the
    federal statute requiring the ground to be distinctly marked.
    [¶20.]         GCC cites case law from other states that have decided that physical
    boundary marking of placer claims is unnecessary because those claims are already
    adequately described by legal subdivisions that will not change. However, those
    10.      30 U.S.C § 28 provides in relevant part:
    The miners of each mining district may make regulations not in
    conflict with the laws of the United States, or with the laws of
    the State or Territory in which the district is situated, governing
    the location, manner of recording, amount of work necessary to
    hold possession of a mining claim, subject to the following
    requirements: The location must be distinctly marked on the
    ground so that its boundaries can be readily traced.
    (Emphasis added.)
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    cases were not decided under the current regulation, enacted in 2003. Previously,
    federal regulations allowed states to exempt placer claims from the normal
    requirements. 11 No such regulation or statute exists today. Further, even under
    the old regulations, South Dakota never had a statute allowing placer claims to be
    left unmarked, nor has any case law so held.
    [¶21.]         Current law still reflects the historical approach to mining, which
    required physically staking your claim on land so that all those exploring would
    know someone had claimed an interest in that area. The law requires that a
    location “be distinctly marked on the ground so that its boundaries can be readily
    traced.” 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
    . Furthermore, SDCL 45-4-3 requires that this be done with
    eight posts.
    [¶22.]         Even without application of state law, under 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    ,
    applying federal requirements alone, I would reach the same result. 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) requires that “[t]o locate a claim or site, [the locator] must . . . [s]take
    and monument the corners of a mining claim or site[.]” The remaining language,
    “which meets applicable state monumenting requirements[,]” further describes the
    requirements the claim or site must meet, but the absence of state law does not
    11.      
    43 C.F.R. § 3831.1
     (1973) read in relevant part: “A location is made by . . .
    staking the corner of the claim, except placer claims described by legal
    subdivision where State law permits locations without marking the
    boundaries of the claims on the ground . . . .” The regulation changed in
    2003, and its current version does not have a similar provision.
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    obviate the requirement under federal law to stake and monument the corners of
    the site or claim. 12 
    Id.
    Additional Federal Mining Claims Requirements
    [¶23.]         To properly locate a placer claim, 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3) provides
    that one must “[p]ost the notice of location in a conspicuous place on the claim or
    site.” (Emphasis added.) 
    30 U.S.C. § 35
     states that “no such location shall include
    more than twenty acres for each individual claimant[.]” Similarly, SDCL 45-4-5
    states that “[n]o location certificate may claim more than one location whether the
    location is made by one or several locators.” No one disputes that the location
    certificates are valid in this case as there are fourteen separate certificates, each
    covering one, twenty-acre claim. However, Zellmer attempted to comply with 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3) by posting all fourteen notices in one place on just one of the
    locations. GCC asserts that this is sufficient to comply with the regulations. We
    disagree. A location and location certificate cover only one claim of twenty acres,
    and each notice of location must be posted on the single twenty-acre claim it covers.
    
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3). Therefore, unless all 280 acres are collectively considered
    to be one claim and one locationcontrary to the plain language of the
    12.      The use of “which” rather than “that” indicates that the clause “meets
    applicable state requirements” is a nonrestrictive clause, also known as a
    nondefining clause. Bryan A. Garner, The Redbook: A Manual on Legal Style
    188-89, 312-13 (3d ed. 2013). The majority’s opinion on this issue, which is
    written by Justice Zinter, reads “that” where a “which” has been used. “That”
    is used to introduce a restrictive (or defining) clause, a clause essential to the
    meaning of the sentence.
    -15-
    #26982
    statutesZellmer and GCC did not comply with the requirement that each notice
    be conspicuously placed on the claim that it covers.
    [¶24.]         GCC is correct to assert that defects in regulatory compliance are
    curable. 13 However, even if GCC were to receive notice from the Bureau of Land
    Management (BLM) and correct its failure to place a notice of location on each
    claim, those placer claims would still not be valid claims. The requirement that
    “the location must be distinctly marked on the ground so that its boundaries can be
    readily traced” is a statutory requirement. 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
    . Such defects are
    incurable. 
    43 C.F.R. § 3830.93
    (a) (2014).
    [¶25.]         II.    Whether GCC’s placer mineral claims precluded PLS’s
    subsequent claims.
    [¶26.]         GCC asserts that PLS was on notice of its claims and cannot now
    attack defects in GCC’s claims. GCC further asserts that PLS could no longer
    discover the same minerals once GCC’s claims had been recorded and fees paid to
    BLM.
    13.      
    43 C.F.R. § 3830.93
     (2014):
    When are defects curable?
    (a) If there is a defect in your compliance with a statutory
    requirement, the defect is incurable if the statute does not
    give the Secretary authority to permit exceptions (see §§
    3830.91 and 3833.91 of this chapter). If your payment,
    recording, or filing has incurable defects, the affected
    mining claims or sites are statutorily forfeited.
    (b) If there is a defect in your compliance with a
    regulatory, but not statutory, requirement, the defect is
    curable. You may correct curable defects when BLM gives
    you notice. If you fail to cure the defect within the time
    BLM allows, you will forfeit your mining claims or sites.
    -16-
    #26982
    [¶27.]         The federal regulation on the effect of paying fees and recording a
    claim is clear. 
    43 C.F.R. § 3833.1
    (b) states that “[r]ecording a mining claim or site,
    filing any other documents with BLM, or paying fees or service charges, as this part
    requires, does not make a claim or site valid if it not otherwise valid under
    applicable law.” Failure to properly locate a placer claim under state and federal
    law is not saved by paying fees or recording the site.
    [¶28.]         Zellmer cites case law from other states to assert that because PLS
    was on notice of existing claims, it could neither complain of nor take advantage of
    any defects. However, the cases GCC refers us to are ones in which a valid claim
    was first properly located, but suffered minor compliance defects or evidence of the
    location disappeared over time. 14 Zellmer and GCC did not properly locate the
    claims in this case, and to hold that PLS cannot bring an action now would preclude
    14.      Pease v. Johnson, 
    235 P.2d 229
    , 452 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951); Independence Placer
    Mining Co. v. Hellman, 
    109 P.2d 1038
    , 1042 (Idaho 1941) (“One who has
    actual notice, that a prior locator is claiming a tract of mining ground and
    has done location work thereon and continued to do prospecting and
    assessment work on the property, is not in a position to make a valid location
    on such property . . . and he may not question the sufficiency of the original
    location or the character of the original occupant’s title.”); Fuller v. Mountain
    Sculpture, Inc., 
    314 P.2d 842
    , 846 (Utah 1957); Scoggin v. Miller, 
    189 P.2d 677
    , 685 (Wyo. 1948) (“It is a well known fact that the boundaries as marked
    upon the ground, and the notices thereon posted, often disappear within a
    very short time, but there is no requirement in the law that they shall be
    maintained . . . . When the location of the mining claim is once sufficiently
    marked upon the surface so that its boundaries can be readily traced, and all
    the other acts of location are performed as required by law, the right of
    possession becomes fully vested in the locator, and cannot be divested . . .
    without the act or fault of the locator, during the time he continues to
    perform the necessary work upon the claim, and comply with the law in all
    other essential respects.”) (citation omitted) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    -17-
    #26982
    an adverse party from asserting challenges against those claiming interests that do
    not exist, effectively protecting a property interest where there is none.
    Conclusion
    [¶29.]       SDCL chapter 45-4 applies to placer claims, and SDCL 45-4-3 is
    consistent with federal law. Zellmer failed to follow state and federal law requiring
    a claim to be physically marked on the ground. This left the minerals open for
    subsequent discovery and location. The circuit court correctly held that PLS
    properly located its claims in the same area and therefore has title subject to the
    paramount title of the United States.
    [¶30.]       GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, concurs.
    [¶31.]       ZINTER and WILBUR, Justices, and KONENKAMP, Retired Justice,
    concur in result on all claims except CHUCK NO. 2012-01, a.k.a. CM-5.
    [¶32.]       KERN, Justice, not having been a member of the Court at the time this
    action was assigned to the Court, did not participate.
    [¶33.]       ZINTER, Justice, writing the majority opinion regarding
    mining claim CHUCK NO. 2012-01, a.k.a. CM-5.
    [¶34.]       This case involves the state and federal requirements for “placer”
    mining claims. Nevertheless, Justice Severson concludes that GCC’s predecessor in
    interest failed to comply with a federal regulation (
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2))
    incorporating a state law (SDCL 45-4-3) that governs “lode or vein” claims. We
    disagree with Justice Severson’s conclusion that SDCL 45-4-3 applies to placer
    claims. Therefore, GCC’s predecessor did not violate 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) by
    failing to comply with SDCL 45-4-3. However, GCC’s predecessor failed to follow a
    -18-
    #26982
    second federal requirement (
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3)) and a federal statute (
    30 U.S.C. § 28
    ) regarding posting on thirteen of the fourteen claims. Therefore, PLS is
    entitled to title on those thirteen claims. GCC is only entitled to title on the one,
    twenty-acre claim where it followed 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3) and 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
     by
    marking its claim on the ground with a post that gave notice of the boundaries of
    that claim.
    [¶35.]         
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) required GCC to “[s]take and monument the
    corners of a mining claim or site which meets applicable state monumenting
    requirements[.]” (Emphasis added.) Justice Severson concludes that the “applicable
    state monumenting requirements” are in SDCL 45-4-3, which requires eight posts
    marking the corners and sides of each twenty-acre claim. We disagree because that
    statute governs lode claims, not placer claims. 15 SDCL 45-4-3 provides:
    15.      Justice Severson’s reliance on Suessenbach v. First Nat’l Bank of Deadwood,
    
    41 N.W. 662
     (Dakota 1889), is misplaced. Suessenbach did not involve the
    question whether the requirements in SDCL 45-4-3’s predecessor (1875
    Dakota Sess. Laws ch. LXVII, § 6) applied to placer claims. Therefore,
    Justice Severson’s cited language, supra ¶ 17, is dicta. Justice Severson,
    however, argues that Suessenbach is not distinguishable because “[t]he
    parties and court recognized that a placer claim was located by the procedure
    as outlined in the opinion, which includes staking the corners and sides of the
    claim.” See supra ¶ 17 n.5.
    However, the language of Suessenbach indicates that the case involved local
    mining district rules rather than the state/territorial statutes now found in
    SDCL 45-4-3. It is significant that both then and now, 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
    provided: “The miners of each mining district may make regulations not in
    conflict with the laws of the United States, or with the laws of the State or
    Territory in which the district is situated, governing the location, manner of
    recording, amount of work necessary to hold possession of a mining
    claim . . . .” Suessenbach’s reference to staking and monumenting the corners
    and sides of the claim appears to have been a reference to such procedural
    laws of the local Whitewood mining district. This fact is apparent upon
    (continued . . .)
    -19-
    #26982
    ____________________
    (. . . continued)
    review of the complete quotation of the Territorial Court. The Court noted
    that the claimants in that case had complied with the local rules of the local
    Whitewood mining district. They
    duly located, claimed, and appropriated the same as placer
    mining ground, the same being known and called “Placer Claim
    No. 15,” above discovery, on Whitewood Gulch, in Whitewood
    mining district, Lawrence County, Dak., in accordance with the
    laws of the United States, the local laws, and the customs, rules,
    and regulations of miners in said mining district, by distinctly
    marking the surface boundaries of said claim so that they could
    be readily traced on the ground; by setting substantial stakes at
    each corner of said claim, and on the sides thereof, with the
    name of the claim marked thereon and the name of the locators;
    and by putting a plain sign or notice at the points of discovery
    thereon, containing the name of the claim as “Placer Claim No.
    15,” above discovery, and the names of the locators, to-wit, Noah
    Siever, Edward Durham, William Moore, and Thomas Clifton,
    and the date of location, to-wit, March 16, 1877; and by filing
    and recording a certificate of location in the records of the
    recorder of said Whitewood mining district . . . [and by] working
    and developing said placer claim No. 15, said placer claim No. 15
    containing not to exceed four acres, and no more than was
    allowed by the local laws, rules, and regulations in force in said
    mining district.
    Suessenbach, 41 N.W. at 662-63 (emphasis added). It also appears that the
    local Whitewood mining district rules were at issue because the third issue in
    that appeal involved the contention that the trial court erred “in admitting in
    evidence [of] the mining rules and regulations of Whitewood mining
    district[.]” See id. at 666. It further appears that the rules at issue involved
    local Whitewood district rules because the court noted the rules at issue
    limited the placer claim to four acres, a provision not found in the territorial
    statutes. Therefore, the precedential value of Suessenbach appears to be
    limited by the local laws, rules, and regulations of the Whitewood mining
    district. Suessenbach is no authority for the additional proposition that
    placer claims are governed by the lode-claim-posting requirements set forth
    in the session law of Dakota Territory that was carried forward into SDCL
    45-4-3. The territorial law was never mentioned in the opinion.
    PLS’s reliance on Hawke v. Deffenbach, 
    22 N.W. 480
     (Dakota 1885), and City
    of Deadwood v. Whittaker, 
    12 S.D. 515
    , 
    81 N.W. 908
     (1900), is subject to the
    same infirmity. Because the statutory requirements for locating placer
    claims were not at issue in those cases, the references to staking and
    monumenting are dicta.
    -20-
    #26982
    Surface boundaries shall be marked by eight substantial posts,
    hewed or blazed on the side or sides facing the claim and plainly
    marked with the name of the lode and the corner, end, or side of
    the claim that they respectively represent and sunk in the
    ground; one at each corner and one at the center of each side line
    and one at each end of the lode. If it is impracticable because of
    rock or precipitous ground to sink such posts, they may be
    placed in a monument of stone.
    (Emphasis added.) “Words and phrases in a statute must be given their plain
    meaning and effect. When the language in a statute is clear, certain and
    unambiguous, . . . the Court’s only function is to declare the meaning of the statute
    as clearly expressed.” Martinmaas v. Engelmann, 
    2000 S.D. 85
    , ¶ 49, 
    612 N.W.2d 600
    , 611 (quoting Moss v. Guttormson, 
    1996 S.D. 76
    , ¶ 10, 
    551 N.W.2d 14
    , 17).
    Here, there is nothing ambiguous about SDCL 45-4-3. The language plainly
    prescribes the method for marking “lode” claims and no others.
    [¶36.]       Statutory intent is also determined from “enactments relating to the
    same subject.” US W. Commc’ns, Inc. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n of S.D., 
    505 N.W.2d 115
    , 123 (S.D. 1993). Most of the statutes in SDCL chapter 45-4 refer only to lode
    and vein claims. See SDCL 45-4-1 (discovery of the vein or lode); SDCL 45-4-2
    (conditions precedent to location certificate for lode claim pursuant to SDCL 45-4-4);
    SDCL 45-4-3 (marking surface boundaries regarding lode claim); SDCL 45-4-4
    (location certificate requirements for lode claim); SDCL 45-4-6 (dimensions of lode
    claim); SDCL 45-4-10 (surface ground included in location or location certificate for
    lode claim). And the few statutes that do not reference any type of claim are not
    material to the issues in this case. The only reference to placer claims is in SDCL
    45-4-20. That statute makes it a misdemeanor to obtain possession of “lode, gulch,
    or placer” claims by force, violence, or threats. 
    Id.
     By referring to both lode and
    -21-
    #26982
    placer claims in SDCL 45-4-20, the Legislature clearly demonstrated its knowledge
    of the distinction between these types of claims. And, because the Legislature only
    referred to lode claims in SDCL 45-4-3, the Legislature demonstrated its intent that
    the requirements of SDCL 45-4-3 only apply to lode claims.
    [¶37.]         The legislative history of the statute confirms this conclusion. Since its
    enactment by the Territorial Legislature in 1875, the language in SDCL 45-4-2 and
    SDCL 45-4-3 has only referred to lode claims. See 1877 Revised Codes of the
    Territory of Dakota, Political Code, ch. 31, §§ 5-6. Indeed, the first ten sections of
    chapter 31, of which §§ 5-6 are a part, refer exclusively to lode or vein claims.
    Moreover, the material parts of chapter 31 dealing with lode claims are generally
    identical to the corresponding parts of SDCL chapter 45-4. Compare SDCL 45-4-2
    to -11, -13 to -19, -22, with 1877 Revised Codes of the Territory of Dakota, Political
    Code, ch. 31, §§ 1-6, 9-10, 12-13, 16-20. These are all lode or vein mining
    regulations. Indeed, even PLS agrees that “South Dakota has no statutes with
    specific requirements for placer mining claims. Rather, its statutes cover the
    requirements for lode claims.” Brief for Appellee at 21 (citing SDCL chapter 45-4).
    Because SDCL 45-4-3 has never applied to placer claims, GCC’s monumenting and
    staking did not fail to meet the requirements of 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) by failing
    to meet the requirements of SDCL 45-4-3. 16
    16.      Justice Severson would hold that GCC failed to meet the federal
    requirements of 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) even without considering the
    requirements of SDCL 45-4-3. See supra ¶ 22. Under Justice Severson’s
    interpretation, the federal regulation requires that the corners of the mining
    claim must be staked and monumented without regard to state law. See id.
    The plain language of 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) does not support that
    (continued . . .)
    -22-
    #26982
    ____________________
    (. . . continued)
    interpretation. The regulation provides that claimants must “[s]take and
    monument the corners of a mining claim or site which meets applicable state
    monumenting requirements[.]” 
    Id.
     (emphasis added). Here, there are no
    applicable state monumenting requirements for placer claims. Justice
    Severson’s interpretation reads the limiting language “which meets
    applicable state monumenting requirements” out of the federal regulation.
    We do not interpret laws to nullify or make meaningless any of the words
    actually used. State v. Miranda, 
    2009 S.D. 105
    , ¶ 23, 
    776 N.W.2d 77
    , 83.
    Justice Severson argues that our interpretation of 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2)
    incorrectly reads the phrase “which meets applicable state momumenting
    requirements” as a restrictive clause. See supra ¶ 22 n.12. Justice Severson
    contends that the phrase is a nonrestrictive clause. See id. However, there is
    no comma preceding the “applicable State requirements” clause in 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2). Therefore, notwithstanding the use of the word “which,” the
    absence of a comma makes the phrase a restrictive clause. “It’s not an
    outright blunder to use which to introduce a restrictive clause.” Bryan A.
    Garner, The Redbook: A Manual on Legal Style 189 (3d ed. 2013). While
    “that” may be preferred to “which” when introducing a restrictive clause, a
    comma-less “which” is to be read as a restrictive clause. See 
    id.
     Commas are
    to be used to introduce nonrestrictive clauses. See 
    id.
     (“Never use
    commas . . . to set off a restrictive clause.”); William Strunk Jr. & E.B. White,
    The Elements of Style 3-4 (3d ed. 1979) (“Nonrestrictive relative clauses are
    parenthetic . . . . Commas are therefore needed. . . . Restrictive clauses, by
    contrast, are not parenthetic and are not set off by commas.”); Andrea
    Lunsford & Robert Connors, The New St. Martin’s Handbook 354 (5th ed.
    2001) (“Nonrestrictive elements—clauses, phrases, and words that do not
    limit, or ‘restrict,’ the meaning of the words they modify—are set off from the
    rest of the sentence with commas. Restrictive elements do limit meaning and
    are not set off with commas.”). Thus, the comma-less “which” in 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) introduces a restrictive clause “that is essential to the
    meaning of the sentence.” See Garner, supra, at 188.
    Indeed, Justice Severson adopts the restrictive clause interpretation of the
    same phrase in other parts of his writing. See supra ¶ 19 (citing 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    ) (“The federal regulations go on to specifically state that corners are
    to be marked in accordance with state law.” (emphasis added)); ¶ 17 (“SDCL
    45-4-3 sets forth the procedure claimants must follow when marking the
    surface boundaries of placer claims.” (emphasis added)). It must finally be
    noted that if Justice Severson were correct that the word “which” was not
    introducing a restrictive clause, then the balance of that same clause further
    requiring claims to meet “the size limitations described in § 3832.22 for lode
    and placer claims” would also be not essential to the meaning of the sentence.
    This view is obviously incorrect because there is no dispute that the size of
    (continued . . .)
    -23-
    #26982
    [¶38.]         GCC was, however, also required to follow 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3),
    which required claimants to “[p]ost the notice of location in a conspicuous place on
    the claim or site.” (Emphasis added.) And, “[a]n individual placer claim may not
    exceed 20 acres in size.” 
    Id.
     § 3832.22. Further, “[t]he location must be distinctly
    marked on the ground so that its boundaries can be readily traced.” 
    30 U.S.C.A. § 28
    . 17 GCC failed to follow these requirements because it did not post a location
    notice on each of the fourteen, twenty-acre-claim sites. GCC posted all fourteen
    notices on the corner of one site (CM-5). Because GCC only complied with 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3) and 
    30 U.S.C.A. § 28
     on CM-5, GCC is only entitled to priority on
    CM-5.
    [¶39.]         GCC, however, contends that its failure to follow the federal
    requirements for posting on each claim is immaterial because PLS had actual notice
    of all fourteen claims. GCC points out that PLS observed GCC’s discovery marker
    on CM-5, and that marker contained GCC’s fourteen notices of location. With
    respect to its failure to post notice on the other thirteen claims, GCC argues: “It is
    ____________________
    (. . . continued)
    placer and other claims are restricted by other federal regulations. See 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(2) (“To locate a claim or site, you must— (2) Stake and
    Monument the corners of a mining claim or site which meets applicable state
    monumenting requirements and the size limitations described in § 3832.22
    for lode and placer claims, § 3832.32 for mill sites, and § 3832.42 for tunnel
    sites[.]” (emphasis added)); 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.22
    (b)(1) (“An individual placer
    claim may not exceed 20 acres in size.”).
    17.      Contrary to GCC’s argument, 
    30 U.S.C. § 35
    ’s provision (placer claims located
    on surveyed lands must conform to legal subdivision descriptions) does not
    dispense with the requirement of 
    30 U.S.C. § 28
     that the location of mining
    claims must still be distinctly marked on the ground. See Worthen v. Sidway,
    
    79 S.W. 777
    , 779 (Ark. 1904).
    -24-
    #26982
    well settled that minor defects in the notices, descriptions, or procedure will not
    defeat the location of a prior claimant at the instance of one having actual notice.”
    Brief of Appellant at 18 (citing Fuller v. Mountain Sculpture, Inc., 
    314 P.2d 842
    ,
    846) (Utah 1957)). However, as Justice Severson correctly notes, in Fuller and
    GCC’s other cited cases, there were valid claims that were first properly located,
    and there were only minor compliance defects or evidence of location disappearance
    over time. Supra ¶ 28. Moreover, physical notice was marked on the ground in
    those cases. 18 In this case, GCC did not validly locate by physically posting on
    18.   See Fuller, 314 P.2d at 846 (involving properly marked monuments and a
    posted notice of location, but mistakenly listing the axis of the claim);
    Yosemite Gold Mining & Milling Co. v. Emerson, 
    208 U.S. 25
    , 30, 
    28 S. Ct. 196
    , 198, 
    52 L. Ed. 374
     (1908) (involving a claim in which there was marking
    on the ground); Haws v. Victoria Copper Mining Co., 
    160 U.S. 303
    , 318, 
    16 S. Ct. 282
    , 288, 
    40 L. Ed. 436
     (1895) (involving a marking on the ground by
    writing notices on a tree that described the boundaries); Pease v. Johnson,
    
    235 P.2d 229
    , 231 (Cal. Ct. App. 1951) (involving a claim where old
    monuments were rebuilt and notices were placed); Kramer v. Sanguinetti, 
    91 P.2d 604
    , 607 (Cal. Ct. App. 1939) (involving a notice in a tin can deposited on
    a pyramid of rocks); Independence Placer Mineral Co. v. Hellman, 
    109 P.2d 1038
    , 1042 (Idaho 1941) (involving a case where stakes were set to mark the
    location for all claims); Steele v. Preble, 
    77 P.2d 418
    , 428-29 (Or. 1938)
    (involving actual marks and stakes on the ground with proper notices, but
    stakes were no longer present); Powell v. Atlas Corp., 
    615 P.2d 1225
    , 1227
    (Utah 1980) (involving only “minor differences in the description of a claim as
    recorded from the actual location”); Springer v. S. Pac. Co., 
    248 P. 819
    , 825
    (Utah 1926) (involving a claim where the boundaries were marked by posts
    and rock mounds); Hagerman v. Thompson, 
    235 P.2d 750
    , 755 (Wyo. 1951)
    (involving a posted discovery notice and posts at six different corners, and
    further noting that “[t]here must doubtless be a reasonable physical
    substratum which marks the claim and a reasonable attempt to comply with
    the statutory requirements”); Scoggin v. Miller, 
    189 P.2d 677
    , 688 (Wyo.
    1948) (involving location by statutory compliance including posting and
    marking on the ground, but a typographical error on the notice).
    -25-
    #26982
    thirteen of the fourteen claims. Because GCC’s claims were never properly located
    on thirteen of its fourteen sites, GCC’s cases are inapposite.
    [¶40.]       GCC claims fourteen sites. But it failed to comply with 
    43 C.F.R. § 3832.11
    (c)(3) and 
    30 U.S.C.A. § 28
     on thirteen of those sites. Those failures are
    more than minor defects. Therefore, we agree with Justice Severson that PLS’s
    notice of GCC’s claims was immaterial. Because GCC did not validly locate thirteen
    claims, the circuit court correctly entered judgment quieting title in PLS on those
    claims. But because GCC was the first to comply with the federal requirements on
    CM-5, we reverse and remand for the circuit court to enter judgment quieting title
    to CHUCK NO. 2012-01, a.k.a. CM-5, in GCC.
    [¶41.]       WILBUR, Justice, and KONENKAMP, Retired Justice, concur.
    [¶42.]       GILBERTSON, Chief Justice, and SEVERSON, Justice, dissent.
    -26-