74 P. 853 | Cal. | 1903
This is an action by the plaintiff for a decree determining the title to a certain mining claim situated in the town of Groveland, and known as the Rhode Island Mining Claim. Judgment in the court below was given for the plaintiff; the defendants' motion for a new trial was denied, and from the judgment and order the defendants appeal.
The plaintiff claims title to the mining claim under a mining location originally made in the year 1854, by one Reid, and relocated by Reid and one Austin January 1, 1876. The plaintiff obtained a conveyance of the mine from Reid and the successor of Austin in 1896. The defendant James deraigns his title from the patent issued for the townsite of Groveland *293 under the federal laws (U.S. Rev. Stats., secs. 2387, et seq.), and a deed from the patentee of the townsite to Laurence Murray, dated September 5, 1879, purporting to convey to Murray lot 8 of block 6, as designated on the official map of the townsite, of which lot the mining claim is a part. The date of the original entry of the townsite was October 3, 1877, and the patent was issued February 10, 1886. It appears from the findings that the mining location was duly made on January 1, 1876, by Reid and Austin, and that their title became vested in the plaintiff March 26, 1896.
1. The appellants claim that the decision is against law, because there is no finding that at the time of the entry of the townsite in 1877, or at any time thereafter, the land embraced in the mining claim was known to contain minerals of such extent and value as to justify expenditure for the purpose of extracting them, citing in support of the proposition that this is necessaryRichards v. Dower,
There is no finding that since the relocation in 1876 the claim has been kept alive by doing the assessment-work required. This omission, however, cannot affect the case. The statement on motion for new trial shows that there was no evidence given which would justify a finding that there had been a failure to do the assessment-work. Where there has been a valid location of a mining claim, and possession has been maintained thereunder, the fact of a failure to do the assessment-work necessary to hold the same is a matter of defense. It constitutes in law a forfeiture of the title, or right of possession, and, as is the rule generally in respect to forfeitures, the burden of proving the facts which constitute it rests upon the party asserting it.(Emerson v. McWhirter,
2. It is claimed by the appellant that the finding that *295 valuable gold-bearing rock had been discovered upon the mine prior to the application for the townsite patent is not sustained by the evidence. We have examined the record and find that there is sufficient evidence on the subject to sustain the finding to that effect.
3. The court did not err in overruling the objection to the question put to one of the plaintiff's witnesses whether or not the same vein that ran through the Rhode Island Mine also ran through the Mount Jefferson Mine. It was in evidence that the two mines joined, and the fact that the same vein ran through both mines was of some assistance in identifying the mining claim and its location on the ground.
We do not consider it necessary to mention other and minor points contained in the brief. They would not be of sufficient importance to justify a reversal of the case, even if it was conceded that the court erred therein.
The judgment is affirmed.
Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J., McFarland, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.