9 Colo. 204 | Colo. | 1886
Section 7, General Laws, 630, provides that “any open cut, cross-cut or tunnel, which shall cut-a lode at the depth of ten feet below the surface, shall hold such lode, the same as if a discovery shaft were
In the case of Gray v. Truby, 6 Colo. 278, it was held that while the open cut, cross-cut or tunnel must cut the lode at the depth of ten feet below the surface, there was no such requirement in the case of an adit; that while there was no express requirement of depth, the development must always -be such in its dimensions and character as to make it fairly the equivalent of a discovery shaft. In that case the evidence showed that “the appellant, in lieu of a discovery shaft, opened an adit on his lode, beginning at the surface where the lode was discovered, and running in and along the lode a distance of twenty or twenty-five feet, where it obtained a depth of eight or nine feet below the surface.” In this case the evidence shows that the defendant company, in lieu of a discovery shaft, opened an adit on its lode, beginning at the surface where the lode was discovered, and running in and along the lode (well defined and with mineral) a distance of fourteen or fifteen feet, where it obtained a depth of about nine feet; that the adit, at a distance of about six feet from the point of beginning, entered cover; and that the remaining nine feet were under cover and timbered. The court below rejected the excavation made by the defendant company as not a sufficient “open cut,” because it did not cut the lode at a depth of ten feet below the surface. There was no error in this. There was error, however, in rejecting the excavation as an adit because it' was not under cover.
Every adit upon a hill-side, if continued, must enter cover at some distance from the point where the excavation begins,— at what distance will depend upon the inclination of the surface. Supposing the lode to outcrop, the point where the excavation enters cover, and the point where the lode was discovered, would never concur, except when the ground presented a perpendicular
Although the discovery and location of the Willamette lode were prior in point of time to the location of the lode of the defendant company, there was much conflict in the testimony as to the depth of the discovery shaft. As the instructions of the court practically precluded a finding for the defendant company, it remains doubtful whether the verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff was not based upon that fact, rather than upon evidence showing a legal discovery shaft in the case of the Willamette. However this may be, the defendant was entitled to have the whole case submitted, under proper instructions.
The judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded. Reversed