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Mitchell v. Hutchinson

Supreme Court of California,Department One
Mar 8, 1904
142 Cal. 404 (Cal. 1904)

Opinion

Sac. No. 1014.

March 8, 1904.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Calaveras County. C.V. Gottschalk, Judge.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.

Ira Hill Reed, for Appellants.

The location was invalid, there being no finding of conformity to the public surveys. (U.S. Rev. Stats., secs. 2329, 2330, 2331; 22 L.D. 409; 30 L.D. 225.) The burden is upon the locator to show that his placer claim cannot be conformed to legal subdivisions. (U.S. Rev. Stats., sec. 2331.) The record of the notice was invalid. (U.S. Rev. Stats., sec. 2324; Stats. (Cal.) 1875-1876, p. 853; Gleeson v. Martin, 13 Nev. 462; 1 Lindley on Mines, sec. 379.) "The court cannot do for the mining locator what he alone should do for himself." (King v. Amy, 152 U.S. 222.)

Bishop, Wheeler Hoefler, F.J. Solinsky, and William Rix, for Respondents.

The findings of ultimate facts sustain all the allegations of the complaint, and findings of mere probative facts cannot control them. (Perry v. Quackenbush, 105 Cal. 299; Smith v. Acker, 52 Cal. 219.) Conformity to the public surveys is not necessary to the validity of the location of a placer claim. (U.S. Rev. Stats., sec. 2333; 1 Lindley on Mines, sec. 448; Rablin's Placer, 2 L.D. 764; Esperanze etc. Co., 10 Copp's L.D. 338; In re Pearsall, 6 L.D. 227.) Natural objects and permanent monuments referred to in the record of a notice of location will control courses and distances, and it is sufficient that the recorded claim can be identified. (1 Lindley on Mines, sec. 382, and cases cited; Duryea v. Boucher, 67 Cal. 141, 142.) Notices of location by miners are to be liberally construed. (Carter v. Bacigalupi, 83 Cal. 187; Donahue v. Meister, 88 Cal. 121, 131, 132; Lindley on Mines, sec. 381; Wilson v. Trumpet Mining Co., 19 Utah, 66.)

22 Am. St. Rep. 213.

75 Am. St. Rep. 718.


This action was brought to quiet title to a tract of land in Calaveras County, containing 122.15 acres. The defendants claimed title to a portion thereof consisting of 74.50 acres.

Both plaintiffs and defendants claimed under placer-mining locations alleged to have been made by them, the plaintiffs' location, called the Kentucky Placer Mine, being alleged to have been made on February 8, 1889, and the defendants', called the Paragon Placer Mine, on August 31, 1897.

The plaintiffs obtained judgment, and the defendants appeal therefrom on the judgment-roll. The only questions presented are as to whether the findings support the judgment.

1. It is contended by defendants that no valid location was effected by the Kentucky claimants, for the reason that their claim was upon surveyed government lands and did not conform to legal subdivisions.

The findings show that the location was made upon surveyed government land, and that the description thereof by metes and bounds consisted of nine courses, of which only five conformed to the lines of the United States system of public land surveys.

This fact would not of itself, however, render the location invalid, for it is well settled that, under sections 2329, 2330, and 2331 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, placer claims are required to conform to the lines of the public survey only where such conformity is reasonably practicable, and that where such conformity is not reasonably practicable, it is sufficient if they conform to such lines as near as is reasonably practicable. It was held by Secretary of the Interior Teller, in Rablin's Placer, 2 L.D. 764, that it was the intention of Congress to provide for cases where the situation of the deposits is such that conformity of the location with subdivision-lines is unreasonable, and to permit persons to take a certain quantity of land fit for mining, and not to compel them to take such a quantity irrespective of its fitness for mining, and that it was not practicable to conform to the lines of the survey in a case where the entire placer deposit in a caqon within certain limits is claimed, and where the land on either side is entirely unfit for mining or agriculture. (See, also, Esperanze M. Co., 10 Copp's L.D. 338; In re Pearsall, 6 L.D. 227; Lindley on Mines, sec. 448.) We have not been referred to any decision or ruling disapproving the views expressed in the above authorities. The case of Miller Placer Claim, 30 L.D. 225, 351, was not, as we read it, intended to make any change in the rule laid down in the prior decisions.

In view of this well-established rule, the findings of the trial court entirely dispose of defendants' contention in this behalf.

The complaint alleged that the land located by plaintiff's predecessors was vacant public land, open to exploration and location, and that the Kentucky claimants entered thereon and discovered therein and thereon gold and mineral bearing earth, and "did duly locate the same as a placer mining claim under and in pursuance of the provisions of . . . the Revised Statutes of the United States," and then alleged the various acts performed by them in making the location. It further alleged that plaintiffs were the owners of the premises, and that defendants claimed and asserted an interest therein adverse to plaintiffs, which claim of defendants was without right.

The answer denied "that said locators . . . did make a valid location upon" the land in dispute, denied plaintiffs' allegation of ownership, and set up their own alleged later location.

There was no issue made by the pleadings as to whether the Kentucky claimants' claim conformed as near as was practicable to the survey-lines, except in so far as it was included in the general issues of location and title already referred to, and, so far as the record on appeal shows, there was no contention in the trial court that the claim did not conform to the survey-lines as near as was practicable, unless that fact is to be inferred from the presence of a finding which will be hereinafter quoted.

We are of the opinion that it was not incumbent upon the plaintiffs to allege that the claim, declared in their complaint to have been located by their predecessors, conformed as near as was practicable with the United States survey-lines, and that the allegations already referred to sufficiently tendered issues as to the making of a location in accordance with the requirements of the statutes. (See Quigley v. Gillett, 101 Cal. 462.)

The trial court found that, at the date of the location, the land located was vacant public land of the United States, open to exploration and location, and that the Kentucky claimants did locate the premises as a placer mining claim in pursuance of the provisions of the Revised Statutes of the United States, and performed the various acts necessary to effect an effectual location, such as posting the notice of location, etc.; that plaintiffs are the owners of the land in controversy; and that the claim of defendants thereto is without any right whatever.

These findings of fact upon issues made by the pleadings establish a valid location, unless the effect thereof is overcome by another finding made by the court upon matters not specifically presented by the pleadings, which was as follows, viz.: "That the said tract of land and premises hereinabove described were located by the locators upon surveyed land as a placer mining claim; that in making said location it was the intention of said locators to include within the exterior boundaries of their location the bed of what they believed to be an old river channel or gravel deposit lying beneath the surface of the earth, and that in order to take in said channel and not include within their boundaries any ground which would be of no value for mining purposes, their location could not conform to the United States system of public land surveys, and the rectangular subdivisions thereof, but did conform thereto as near as was practicable to accomplish the object they had in view, to wit: The location of said channel, and not to include land not useful for mining purposes."

It is well settled that the findings of the trial court should receive such construction as will uphold rather than defeat the judgment, and that they are to be read and considered together and liberally construed in support of the judgment, and, if possible, are to be reconciled so as to prevent any conflict upon material points. (People's Home Sav. Bank v. Rickard, 139 Cal. 285, 291, and cases there cited.) So regarded, the finding is susceptible of a construction affirmatively showing such conformity to the survey-lines as was reasonably practicable, under the decisions of the land department already referred to, for the court expressly found therein that, in order to include the land which was considered valuable for mining purposes, and to exclude land which was of no value for such purposes, the location could not conform to the United States system of public land surveys, and it further found that the location did conform to such surveys as near as was practicable to accomplish an object authorized by the statute — viz., the inclusion of lands useful for mining purposes and the exclusion of lands not useful for such purposes.

But construing this finding, in accordance with the contention of defendants, to be based entirely upon the opinion and belief of the Kentucky claimants as to the situation of the river channel or gravel deposit and the value of the adjoining land for mining purposes, without regard to the actual condition, there is nothing therein inconsistent with the findings upon the specific matters alleged in the complaint and denied by the answer. As is contended by plaintiffs, such intention and belief could reasonably coexist with the fact that the location as made actually did take in the lands valuable for mining purposes and excluded the lands that were not valuable for such purposes, and that it conformed to the survey-lines as near as was practicable to accomplish such objects.

We are therefore of the opinion that the other findings are not affected by the finding last quoted, and that those findings sufficiently establish a valid location as far as the question of conformity to the survey-lines is concerned. Such findings are conclusive in the absence of attack by a bill of exceptions or statement on motion for a new trial.

2. It is further contended that the attempted location was invalid for the reason that the description of the property located was not correctly set forth in the copy of the notice of location recorded in the office of the county recorder of Calaveras County.

The trial court found that the notice of location posted in a conspicuous place on the claim contained "such a description of the said . . . claim so located by reference to natural objects and permanent monuments such as did and will identify the claim," and that the locators, at the time of making their location, "distinctly marked their said location on the ground so that its boundaries could and can now be readily traced." It further found that owing to a mistake in writing out the copy to be recorded the description in the recorded notice was erroneous in three or four particulars, the principal error being the omission of the last course and distance, so that the description instead of being "8th south 41 deg. 12 mins. west 26.58 chs. to post marked K.P.M. set in stone mound being 1/4 1/4-section corner; thence 9th west 20 chs. to place of beginning, containing 122.15 acres," was as follows, viz.: "8th, S. 41 1/2 degs. W. 26.58 chs. to place of beginning, containing 125 acres more or less." An act regulating the recording of mining locations in Calaveras County, approved April 3, 1876, and in force at the time of the Kentucky location, provided that a copy of the notice of location of any mining claim thereafter located should be filed and recorded in the office of the county recorder within six days from the date of posting, and further provided that a notice posted without being so recorded should "not be considered notice to subsequent locations recording under this act." (Stats. 1875-1876, p. 853.)

This act constituted the only regulation then in force relative to the recording of location notices. Whatever might be the effect of an entire failure to comply with its provisions, a substantial compliance with the requirements of the act would certainly be sufficient, and if the description contained in this notice was complete enough to enable one examining it to ascertain therefrom that the land actually claimed was included therein, there was such a substantial compliance as would satisfy the statute, for such a description would give full notice that such land had been in fact appropriated by others. That such was the effect of the description in the recorded notice in this case there can be no doubt, whatever rule of construction be applied thereto. If the eighth course and distance be rejected entirely, and a straight line be run from the eighth corner to the "place of beginning," it would include all the land now claimed, and if, on the other hand, the course and distance were followed, a post marked "K.P.M." set in a stone mound, being a quarter-quarter-section corner would be found, whence a straight line west along the section-line, twenty chains to place of beginning, would close the description and furnish an exact description of the land claimed.

The other imperfections in the recorded description noticed in defendants' closing brief were slight errors in courses and distances, which were controlled by the references in such description to natural objects and permanent monuments sufficiently to fully identify the exact boundaries of the claim.

The judgment is affirmed.

Shaw, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.


Summaries of

Mitchell v. Hutchinson

Supreme Court of California,Department One
Mar 8, 1904
142 Cal. 404 (Cal. 1904)
Case details for

Mitchell v. Hutchinson

Case Details

Full title:T.D. MITCHELL et al., Respondents, v. LEWIS J. HUTCHINSON et al.…

Court:Supreme Court of California,Department One

Date published: Mar 8, 1904

Citations

142 Cal. 404 (Cal. 1904)
76 P. 55

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