162 F. 267 | 9th Cir. | 1908
Upon the former hearing of this cause, judgment in defendant’s favor was reversed for error in the instructions. Cascaden v. Bartolis, 146 F. 739, 77 C.C.A. 496. New trial having been had, defendant again prevailed, and again plaintiffs have brought the case here.
The action was brought by John Cascaden, John Bernstein, Richard Stein, Louis K. Pratt, and Carl A. Johanson, plaintiffs in error, to recover from Joseph Bortolis, defendant in error, two certain lots in the town known as Gate City, Alaska. The complaint prayed that plaintiffs be adjudged the owners of and entitled to the possession of the lots described, and that defendant be adjudged to have no right or title thereto, and that he be removed therefrom. Plaintiffs set forth that they owned the lots as against all persons except the United States, and that in September, 1904, the defendant went upon them and withheld possession from plaintiffs, and that he has built buildings thereon and claims to own the same. The amended answer denied the allegations of ownership, and set' forth that in September, 1904, the defendant entered the land described in plaintiffs’ complaint, which was vacant, unappropriated public land. Defendant admitted that he occupied the premises, and set forth that the cabins he built were situated within what was known as the town, site of Gate City, where a large number of buildings had been erected, and that it was the intention of the occupants of the land upon which the town was situated to enter the same for town site purposes and secure patent therefor, in accordance with the act of Congress in such cases made
The principal question involved and submitted to the jury upon the last trial, as upon the first, was whether or not there had been such a finding of mineral in the placer claim, under which the plaintiffs asserted their rights, as would satisfy the laws of the United States (Rev.St.U.S. § 2320 [30 U.S.C.A. § 23]), which provide, among other things, that no location of a mining claim shall be made until discovery of mineral within the limits of the claim located. Was there such a discovery of mineral as gave reasonable evidence of the fact that the ground was valuable for placer mining? Chrisman v. Miller, 197 U.S. 313, 25 S.Ct. 468, 49 L.Ed. 770. The lower court having been of the opinion that plaintiffs made a sufficient showing to submit the question of discovery to the jury, charged, among other things, that there must be a discovery of gold or other mineral upon the ground included within the locator’s claim, and said: “What is ‘discovery’? What finding of mineral on a placer mining claim is sufficient to satisfy that clause of the statute which provides that ‘no location of a mining claim shall be made until the discovery of the mineral within the limits of the claim located?’ Where mineral has been found upon a placer mining claim, and the evidence thereof is of such a character that a person of ordinary prudence, not necessarily a skilled miner, would be justified in the further expenditure of his labor and means, with a reasonable prospect of success, in developing a mine thereon, the requirements of the statute have been met. To hold otherwise would tend to make of little avail, if not entirely nugatory, that provision of the law whereby ‘all valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United States * * * are * * * described to be free and open to exploration and purchase.’ It is not a fair criterion that the locator says he is willing to further expend his labor and means in seeking for mineral thereon. The question should not be left to his arbitrary will or statement, but the facts which are within the observation of the discoverer and which induce him to locate should be such as to justify a man of ordinary prudence,
It will be observed that the first portion of the instruction quoted, wherein the court discusses what constitutes discovery, is substantially a reiteration of the rules approved of by this court in Cascaden v. Bartolis, supra, where the principle was laid down that, to constitute a valid location, there must be such a discovery of mineral as that an ordinarily prudent man, not necessarily a miner, would be justified in expending his time and money there
Upon the trial of the case, plaintiffs sought to prove by witnesses called to the stand that a large amount of gold had been extracted in the mining of claims in the immediate vicinity of the one involved in the suit. But the court rejected the plaintiffs' offer. Plaintiffs contended that, such evidence was admissible as a circumstance to be considered with the positive testimony of the plaintiffs and their witnesses that gold was found within the claim as staked. Counsel stated that he wished to show that the “neighborhood was gold-bearing ground, immensely rich deposits.” Continuing, he said: “We have shown the character of the explorations we have made, and the kind of looking ground we got. I will show that the débris coming out of these shafts, where these valuable deposits have been found and demonstrated, is similar. I will connect it in that way. I will connect it with the configuration of that country up there, especially in connection with Wolf creek.”
Plaintiffs further sought to prove the familiarity of experienced mining men with the workings and the results of the workings on the creek below the Cascaden claim, and upon the benches thereabouts, in order to introduce opinions whether, if as a fact Cascaden knew at the time of his location of the result of work upon Discovery and Discovery Bench, and the Hilty Fraction claim near by, it would have influence in causing a prudent man to locate the ground as mining ground. The court sustained the objection to such testimony, and refused the offer of plaintiffs to prove in a general way the lay of the ground in which the Cascaden claim was situated.
A witness was also called to prove that a drift had been driven upon an adjacent claim close to the lower side line of plaintiffs’ claim, as tending to show that there had been
The court held that a discovery could not be established in any such way. Plaintiffs’ counsel said he was not trying to establish a discovery in such a way, but that he wished to sustain the evidence of the plaintiffs that they had found gold and made a discovery on their claim. The court held that such evidence was wholly immaterial and not competent.
Again, a witness, an experienced miner, was asked whether, from his knowledge of the ground, and what he had seen of the development work, and what he knew of the prospects of gold that had been found upon the ground, he would say that an ordinarily prudent mining man would be justified in sinking a shaft to bed rock, with the expéctation of finding a pay streak of gold there. Objection to the question was sustained; the court holding that the essential question was whether plaintiffs had made á discovery, and that that was not a question for an expert to testify to, but was one of fact.
Plaintiffs preserved their exceptions, and the point for decision is whether the court erred in rejecting plaintiffs’ offers of proof. Inasmuch as the court was satisfied that there was enough evidence as to mineral found to submit the issue of discovery to the jury, we are of opinion that plaintiffs had a right to introduce the evidence offered. While mere possibility that ground claimed contains gold, or that there are mere indications of the existence of mineral in the ground, is not enough to justify a prudent person in expending money and work in exploration of it, yet where the evidence shows the actual existence of gold in the claim, and such evidence is of sufficient weight to submit to the jury upon the issue of discovery, we think the locator has a right to strengthen his proof upon any of the elements which enter into what is comprehended by discovery. In doing so, he may supplement the showing
How is the prospector for placer gold to be guided? He discovers gold, a few cents only to the pan. He knows he is in a gold-bearing placer region, but is unacquainted with any distinct characteristics of the mineral-bearing
We therefore conclude that, inasmuch as there was evidence of gold having been found within the limits of the plaintiffs’ claim, the court erred in refusing to permit plaintiffs to show the situation, character, value and mineralogical conditions of adjacent claims, and in refusing plaintiffs’ offer to prove by experienced miners that plaintiffs were justified in expending time and money in prospecting and developing the ground claimed as valuable for mineral.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.