22 Colo. App. 149 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the court.
Upon this complaint and these separate answers the case was tried to a jury which returned, a verdict in favor of the defendants in the following words: “We, the jury, find the issues herein joined for the defendants, and that the defendants, W. B. Brown and Edward Brown, are the owners, and the defendant, The French Mountain Mining Company, is the lessee, and entitled to the possession of the vein or lode opened and developed in the Hecla and Shamrock lode claims by what is known as the lower tunnel. ’ ’
Pending a hearing on a motion for a new trial the court permitted the defendants, over the objection of plaintiff, to file a joint amended answer in which it was alleged, among other things, that the defendants further answering said complaint, and by way of counterclaim, allege that at all times mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint the defendants, W. B. Brown and Edward Brown, were, and still are, the owners in fee simple of the Grand Trunk lode mining claim, situate in the Holy Cross mining district, state of Colorado; that on or about the...... day of August, 1904, they gave or extended a lease of, or bond upon said claim to the defendant, John W. Bailey, who thereafter and in May, 1906, assigned said lease and bond to the defendant, The French Mountain Mining Company, which, ever since said time, has been in the actual possession and occupancy of said lode and vein; and that said Grand Trunk lode lies parallel and adjacent to the Australian lode claim, and that the said- Australian,
After this answer was permitted to be filed, the court over-ruled plaintiff’s motion for a new trial and rendered judgment in substance, that the defendants are entitled to the possession of the vein or dode in dispute in this action, opened up and disclosed within the side lines of the Hecla and Shamrock claims as a vein or lode apexing within the lines of the Grand Trunk lode and a part thereof, the defendants, W. B. Brown and Edward Brown, being so entitled as the owners thereof, and that plaintiff has no right, title or interest therein whatever. It was further adjudged, that said vein is in fact the Grand Trunk vein, belonging to and having its apex upon the Grand Trunk lode, and that. the title, rights and interests of the defendants are hereby quieted and confirmed as against the said .plaintiff, and all persons claiming under- him, and that said plaintiff, his agents, servants and attor
The case was thereupon appealed to the supreme court and is now before this court for review. Before the case was submitted to the jury plaintiff moved for a directed verdict, upon the ground that defendants had not proved any continuous vein or body of ore from the ground of defendants into the patented ground of plaintiff, within the meaning of the acts of congress, and that -the continuity and dip were not established by competent or any testimony.
The following instruction is likewise complained of: “The jury are instructed that in determining whether a vein is continuous in its downward course, it is not necessary that the vein should be opened up or disclosed for the entire distance, but you must take into consideration all the facts shown as to the dip or incline of the vein, its geological and mineral character, and of the walls, and from the whole evidence deeide whether it is the same vein in fact. ”
It was agreed that plaintiff was the owner of
It will be seen that the answer of the defendants upon which the case was tried was simply the denial of ownership and the right to possession by plaintiff of the lode claims set out in the complaint. While the amended answer permitted to be filed after ver-' diet was returned, set up an affirmative claim to the vein, admitted to be within the plaintiff’s ground, by reason of defendant’s claim of apex right. This was a new and different cause of action from that set up in the original answer, and upon which the case was tried.
The appellate courts of this state have been liberal in the matter of the allowance of amendments to' pleadings, and particularly so as applied to answers. In the case of. Cartwright v. Ruffin, 43 Colo., 377, it was held that amendments to pleadings are largely in the discretion of the trial judge, and unless clearly abused, such discretion ordinarily will
While the question of the amendment presented for consideration in that case was not determined, yet it was characterized as radical. Neither do we find it necessary to determine whether or not the amended pleading in this case, as such, was allowable. Yet in view of the finding hereinafter stated, as to the failure of proof upon the part of the defendants, we hold that for such reason the amendment was not proper.
But if the amended pleading be considered as permissible and within the discretion of the court, then under the practice, it was the duty of the court in this case to have granted a new trial, and to have thus permitted the parties to try the case upon the new pleadings.
“At common law the court has power to allow an amendment of the pleadings in a case until final judgment; and authority is given by statute in most of the states to allow amendments after as well as before judgment by the insertion of new allegations material to the case. Although this is an extraordinary power and should be sparingly exercised, amendments have been allowed under special circumstances. even after satisfaction of the judgment. If the amendment is allowed, the judgment should be vacated in order to give the opposite party an opportunity to controvert the new allegations;
Therefore the refusal of the court to grant a new trial after allowing the amended answer to be filed, and thus to permit the case to be tried upon the pleadings as amended, was error. The verdict and the judgment were wholly at variance with the defendant’s pleadings upon which the case was tried, and it has been held that the judgment obtained through a clear departure from the issues joined, cannot be sustained. Jackson v. Ackroyd, 15 Colo., 583.
The court’s action in allowing the amendment was also in violation of the code provision requiring a showing to be made. — Mills’ Ann. Code, sec. 75. The motion for a new trial should have been granted.
From what has been said the judgment should be reversed; but, inasmuch as the case may be again tried, it seems proper to consider the remaining questions. From a careful study of the record it seems quite clear that there was a failure of proof as to the defendant’s claim of apex-right. In order to understand the issue it will be necessary to consider the following sketches, to which we will refer as figures 1 and 2, respectively. Figure 1 shows the surface lines and location of the lode claims •involved. It also shows the line of the tunnel and the location of the shaft, also the workings on the Grand Trunk lode, referred to in the record as the “upper tunnel.” Figure 2 is intended as a sectional view showing the shaft on the Grand Trunk sunk a short distance below the level of the upper tunnel, which last appears to be about 30 feet below
The shaft on the Grand Trunk is testified to by the defendant Bailey as extending about 50 feet below the level of the upper tunnel, but by reason of water therein, not examined by other witnesses. The up-raise in the Hecla is estimated to be about 45 feet vertically upward from the level of the lower tunnel, but constructed through the ore in a sort of circular stairway form, reaching and exposing a.small portion of. both walls, but always at different places. .Bailey testifies that the shaft from the tunnel level in the Grand Trunk, follows the dip of a vein to the bottom of the shaft. These maps, and the record, except as to figure 1 where the surface lines are from actual survey, are made from alleged surveys of others, not in evidence, and. the seeming guess and speculation of the makers of the maps. The dip of the vein in the Hecla, as far as exposed, seems to compare with the dip of the vein, so far as disclosed, in the Grand Trunk, but there seems to be so little of either vein exposed that estimates in that regard are, of necessity, largely conjectural. The character of the ore in the Grand Trunk tunnel is said to be the same as that in the lower tunnel, except that the ore in the Grand Trunk is oxidized. The witness, Boehmer, for the defendants, says that he also bases his opinion that the vein disclosed on the Hecla and that appearing on the Grand Trunk, are one and the
Q. Why did you mark this lower tunnel, when, as a matter of fact, the lower tunnel is two or three hundred feet away? A. It is projected on. That dotting is on there to show that.
Q. Why did you change the course and dimensions of that streak? A. I platted that from the dips that I took in the lower level, the average was 67 degrees. I drew that line 67 degrees, and thé upper one I found 65 degrees,. and I started that from the upper workings and then connected with an irregular line.
Q. TIad you projected with the 67 degrees, it would come out in the Australian? A. Yes, if that line was projected it would come out in the Australian.
Q. So if you take the dip of the vein, as shown in the lower workings, and project that to the surface, with that same angle, it would come out in the Australian? A. Yes, it would.
Q. And not on the Grand Trunk, at all? A. Yes, sir.
Q. When you got about here to this line, between the Shamrock and the Australian, then you commenced to give off towards the Grand Trunk? A. Yes, sir.
Q. Why? A. Because the vein up there is within the Grand Trunk, and not 'the Australian, and you have to connect vein with vein, and could not connect any dip you happen to find.
Q. In other words, you must connect whether it is solid rock or not? A. Yes, sir, you must connect vein with vein.
*161 Q. Did you go up liere to examine and find if there was a vein on the surface? A_. No, I couldn’t see anything’ there.
Q. Then the upper exhibit is conjecture beyond the end of the drift so far as the lower tunnel is concerned, and conjecture so far as the upper tunnel is concerned down this way to the east? A. No, not the upper one. That is put on by the evidence of Mr. Bailey. I didn’t see that myself.
Q. So far as you are concerned. A. So far as I am concerned, yes.
Q. Why didn’t you take Mr. Bailey’s word for this up-raise in the lower tunnel workings? A. I could get at that.” — Transcript of Record, folios 182, 183, 184.
This testimony shows clearly that if the vein continued on the angle of the dip estimated by the witness as being the angle in the lower tunnel, the vein would come to the surface on the Australian, and not on the Grand Trunk, as contended by the defendants. It likewise discloses the uncertainty of his information upon which, he relied to make the map, figure 2. This witness also testifies, and there seems to be no other contention, that the top of the up-raise in the Hecla is 550 feet lower, vertically, than the bottom of the Grand Trunk shaft, and also 300 feet distant, at right angles, from the bottom of the Grand Trunk shaft, as well as 200 feet’ nearer the southerly end lines of the claims. It will be seen that if this is a fair statement of the substance of the testimony the conclusion that the workings in the Hecla are in the vein said to apex in the Grand Trunk, is the result simply of conjecture and speculation; and, considered in its most fa
Section 2322 Rev. Stat. U. S. conferring what is commonly known as the apex right, is in derogation of the common law which granted to the owner of lands all veins within the vertical lines of his land to the center of the earth, and it has been generally held in the determination of cases under this statute, that the presumption is with the owner of the lands as to his right to veins and ore bodies within his vertical side lines.
It was said in Stevens v. Gill, 23 Fed. Cas., No. 13398, that “the burden of proof is upon the plaintiffs claiming the apex, both because they are the plaintiffs, and because they are seeking' to go out of their own territory into that of others.” This seems to be the universally accepted rule of appellate courts including our own. Again, to establish such a claim, and from the very nature of the ease, there should be at least a reasonable degree of certainty in the proof.
The following statement of the rule is perhaps as fair as can be selected from the reported cases in this regard:
“The act of congress, sec. 2322 Rev. St., gives to the owner of a mineral vein or lode, not only all that is covered by the surface Tines of his established claim as those lines are extended vertically, but it gives him the right to possess and enjoy that lode or vein by following it when it passes outside of those vertical lines laterally. But this right is dependent, outside of the lateral limits of the claim, upon its being the same vein as that within those*163 limits. For the exercise of this right it must appear that the vein outside is identical with and a continuation of the one inside those lines. But if the mineral disappears or the fissure with its walls of the same rock disappears, so that its identity can no longer be traced, the right to pursue it outside of the perpendicular lines of claimants’ survey is gone.” Iron Silver Min. Co. v. Cheesman, 116 U. S., 529.
To say then in this case, that the alleged apex, on the Grand Trunk is that of the vein appearing on the Iiecla at a wholly unexplored distance of 550 feet, with a right angle distance of 300 feet, and an additional extended distance lengthwise of the claims 200 feet, is to base such conclusion upon mere speculation.
Particularly is this true in the light of the scant development at either point, and the slight and uncertain evidence as to the formation. Thus by these figures of the engineer from a point at the bottom of the shaft- on the Grand Trunk to a point at the top of the up-raise from the tunnel in the Hecla would be in a straight line through the earth a distance of approximately 657 feet, all of which is unopened, unexplored and the character of which is wholly unknown. To conclude under this state of facts that this distance is traversed by a single continuous vein of which these two points are the only opened and exposed parts, is little short of absurd.
We.can find no case wherein such a wild guess has been accepted as proof. In fact the most that can be said in favor of such a conclusion is that it is the opinion of an engineer. But in view of the many worked and ore bearing veins in the same lo
It was said in Heinze et al. v. B. & M. Co., 30 Mont., 485:
“The plaintiffs have not by their operations so developed their own workings from the apex of their vein down to the disputed territory as to furnish substantial evidence that their claim is probably well founded. Indeed, while they concede that there is a vein in the defendant’s ground dipping to the south, their own contention is based exclusively upon the opinion of their engineers that, if the vein having its apex in the Minnie Ilealy ground continues to dip at the same angle from certain points where it is exposed in the upper levels in their workings, it will reach the point where the defendant is conducting its operations. This is not sufficient to overcome the presumption that the defendant owns the ores found beneath its own surface. This presumption may not be overturned by speculative conjecture or even intelligent guess.”
As we read the facts in the case of Colo. Cent. Con. Min. Co. v. Turck, 50 Fed., 888, they were much more favorable to the apex claimant in.that case insufficient upon which to base a verdict and judgthan in the case at bar. And the testimony was there held to be mere speculation. The proof was insufficient upon which to base a verdict and judgment.
The instruction complained of was misleading, if not erroneous in this case. It might have been allowable in a case where a vein had been opened
Judgment reversed.
All the judges concurring.