193 F. 572 | 9th Cir. | 1911
(after stating the facts as above).
The defendants in error interpose a motion to dismiss the writ of error on the ground that the record was not filed in this court by or before the return day, and the time for filing the record was not extended by the judge who signed the citation, or by a judge of this court, as required by rule 16 of this court (150 Fed. xxix, 79 C.C.A. xxix). The motion is purely technical and without merit.
It appears that Judge Lyons of the District Court of Alaska, Fourth Division, tried the case at Fairbanks, and signed the citation, and, from time to time, made orders
The motion to dismiss is therefore denied.
The unit of an individual placer mining claim is 20 acres. Section 2331, R.S. (30 U.S.C.A. § 35 and note). But an association of persons may make a location of a tract which shall embrace as many individual claims of 20 acres each as there are individuals in the association, not to exceed eight locators making a location aggregating 160 acres. Section 2330, R.S. (30 U.S.C.A. § 36); Lindley on Mines, § 448; Morrison’s Mining Rights (13th Ed.) p. 215; Costigan on Mining Law, p. 173; Cook v. Klonos, 164 F. 529, 90 C.C.A. 403; Nome & Sinook Co. v. Snyder (C.C.A.) 187 F. 385.
The Oregon Association claim is a placer mining claim, and as staked in June, 1905, was by eight locators claiming 160 acres. The claim was afterwards surveyed, and, after deducting an overlap with a prior location, was found to contain something less than 160 ácres. Gold was discovered on this claim in August, 1905, in a shaft sunk to a depth of about 88 feet on or near the western boundary line as claimed by the defendants. This discovery was sufficient to support the location of an entire tract of 160 acres. Union Oil Co., 25 Land Dec.Dept.Int. 351; McDonald v. Montana Co., 14 Mont. 88, 35 P. 668, 43 Am.St.Rep. 616; Kirk v. Meldrum, 28 Colo. 453, 65 P. 633. The tract as surveyed in August, 1906, included the ground in con
The court instructed the jury that a mining claim might be marked upon the ground by stakes or other permanent monuments; but that the law required a claim to be marked so distinctly upon the ground that its boundaries could be readily traced; that the requirements of the statute in this respect were not necessarily fulfilled by merely setting stakes at each of the corners of the claim and at the center of the end lines, unless the topography of the ground and the surrounding conditions were such that a person accustomed to tracing lines of mining claims could, after reading a description of the claim in the posted- or recorded notice of location or upon the stakes, by a reasonable and bona fide effort to do so, find all of the stakes or monuments, and thereby readily trace the boundaries; that where
To these instructions no objection was made, but it was objected that the court proceeded to give a misleading and contradictory instruction and one that did not state the law correctly in the following instruction: “But if you find from .the evidence that the Oregon Association placer claim as originally located included the tract of mining ground in controversy, and if you further find that the boundaries thereof were not so marked as to make them readily traceable at or about the time of the making of such location, but you do further find that such boundaries were so marked as to be readily traceáble upon the ground during the months of August or September, 1906, at the time of the alleged ‘Allen survey/ and that such marking was made peaceably, and not clandestinely, surreptitiously, or fraudulently, and was made before the plaintiffs made any discovery of gold within the exterior boundaries of the Liberty Association claim, and you further find that the defendants made a discovery of gold within the limits of said Oregon Association placer claim prior to the date when plaintiffs made a discovery of gold within the exterior boundaries of the Liberty Association claim, then you are instructed that it is immaterial whether the original marking of the Oregon boundaries were sufficient to make them readily traceable or not.”
Instructions to juries must always be considered with reference to the evidence to which they relate. The first important question in this case was priority of discovery.
In Steele v. Tanana, 148 F. 678, 78 C.C.A. 412, this court held that discovery was as necessary to a location of a placer claim as to a location of a lode claim; and in Lange v. Robinson, 148 F. 799, 79 C.C.A. 1, this court held that the object of the law in requiring discovery to precede location was to insure good faith upon the part of the mineral locator and to prevent fraud upon the government by persons attempting to acquire patents to land not mineral in character.
In Creede v. Uinta, 196 U.S. 337, 353, 25 S.Ct. 266, 273 (49 L.Ed. 501), the Supreme Court, referring to section 2320 of the Revised Statutes and the fact of discovery as relating to the right of exclusive possession attending a valid location, said: “It is undoubtedly true that discovery is the initial fact. The language of the statute makes that plain, and parties may not go upon the public domain and acquire the right of possession by the mere performance of the acts prescribed for a location.”
The fact of discovery being in favor of the Oregon claim, the next question was: What were the boundaries of that claim to which this discovery related?
Upon that question the plaintiffs contend, first, that it was proven conclusively that the Oregon boundaries had never been marked on the ground plainly or otherwise prior to the Allen survey in August, 1906, when the claim was made to cover the ground in dispute; that prior to that time the rights of plaintiffs to that ground had intervened by the location of the Liberty claim in May, 1906; but no discovery was made on that claim until October 9 or 10, 1906, and the law fixes the latter date as the day of location of the claim with respect to all parties who have made the discoveries provided by law within the boundaries of legal bona fide overlapping claims. A possessory title
The plaintiffs contend that the evidence shows further that the boundaries of the Oregon claim were changed by the survey made of that claim in August, 1906, from what they were in June, 1905, for the purpose of taking in that part of the Liberty claim embraced in the land in dispute, and that, as in the former case, the rights of the plaintiffs had intervened by the location of the Liberty claim in May, 1906. But here again the plaintiffs are met by the law that discovery fixes the date of location with respect to all parties who have made the discoveries provided by law within the boundaries of overlapping claims. This was sufficient to dispose of the question of mere priority as between these two claims; but the question of the good faith of the defendants in staking the Oregon claim remained to be determined, and they introduced testimony tending to show that they staked that claim as early as June, 1905. That is to say, they undertook to show the origin of their right of possession, and the plaintiffs took issue upon the question as to whether the staking of the Oregon claim in June, 1905, marked the boundaries of that claim so that they could be traced upon the ground; and upon that question the court instructed the jury that it was immaterial whether the original marking of the Oregon claim was sufficient to make the boundaries readily traceable or not, providing that the perfected marking of the Oregon claim in August, 1906, was made peaceably, and not clandestinely, surreptitiously, or fraudulently. Whether the' staking of the Oregon claim, so that its boundaries could be readily traced upon the ground, had been made openly and peaceably, and not clandestinely, surreptitiously, or fraudulently, being an issue in the case, the claim of the defendants that they had staked this identical claim as early as June, 1905, and had staked it so that the boundaries marked upon the ground could be readily traced,
It appears that one J. H. Sanford was the person who staked the Oregon claim in June, 1905. He was called by the defendants as a witness, and testified substantially as follows:
In marking the boundaries of the claim on the 16th of June, 1905, he set an upper center stake, as “the initial stake.” It was a stake at least six feet high, and four inches square. He wrote on it, “We, the undersigned, claim 160 acres for placer mining purposes, 1,320 feet on each side of this stake,” and the names of the locators: A. N. Gould, A. P. MacArthur, H. W. Sanford, N. P. Hill, M. J. Foley, B. W. Piper, John Macdonald, and A. McKinnon. That stake, he testified, is still standing. He then blazed a line and stepped it as near as he could 1,320 feet in a southeasterly direction, and set the southeast corner stake. He chopped a tree down about five feet high, blazed it down on four sides, and wrote the names of the locators and location on it. Besides the names of the locators, he wrote: “We, the undersigned, claim 160 acres for placer mining purposes, 2,640 feet downstream and 1,320 feet to the initial stake.”
He put an arrow on the stake pointing towards the initial stake and one pointing down the creek. From the center stake for about 400 feet there was no timber, only scattered scrub trees. The rest of the way on the timber was quite heavy. After he reached the timber, he blazed the trees along the course with an axe, taking the bark off on the sides. He went down the creek about the center of the ground, and there he put in a lower center stake. He cut a green tree off and blazed it down on three sides. He wrote a location notice, and on the stake he wrote: “We, the undersigned, claim 160 acres for placer mining purposes, described as follows: 1,320 feet on each side of this stake, and 2,640 feet upstream.”
He testified that at the time of giving his testimony this stake was still standing; that it had not been changed or altered in any way since it was placed there in 1905; and that it was there at the time of the Allen survey. After establishing the lower center stake, he blazed from this stake
He then turned to the lower center stake and stepped the line down the hill until he struck the lake. He blazed some trees close up to the lake and walked around the lake and started a straight line across from the lake, and blazed it close up to the creek (Vault creek), and set his northwest corner stake. He wrote upon that stake: “We, the undersigned, claim 160 acres for placer mining purposes,” the names of the locators, and “1,320 feet to the center stake and 2,640 feet up stream.”
After setting the northwest corner stake, he started to blaze up the creek. He blazed up part way that evening. It was raining very hard that day. It had been raining all day, and he was soaking wet, and it was along in the afternoon, and he quit and went home. He came up to a stake (which the context of his testimony indicates was the initial upper middle stake). He stepped it off as near as he could 1,320 feet and set the southwest corner stake. On this stake he wrote: “We, the undersigned claim 160 acres for placer mining purposes,” the names of the locators and the date, and “2,640 feet .downstream by 1,320 across the creek to the initial stake.”
He numbered all the stakes. No. 1 was the initial stake ; No. 2 was the southwest corner stake; No. 3 the northwest corner stake; - No. 4 was the center stake; No. S the northeast corner stake; No. 6 was the southeast corner stake. The witness was asked if those numbers were still upon the stakes at that time. He answered: “No, they are burnt off of those two stakes — the northeast corner stake and the southeast corner stake.”
He testified that at the time of the Allen survey there 'had been a fire through there. All the timber lying around
Upon this phase of the testimony the plaintiffs asked the court to instruct the jury, among other things, in sub
To this instruction the plaintiffs, of course, make no objection, as it was in their favor. But they contend that, while it was “the only tangible intelligible statement of the law of the case as applied to the evidence to be found in the instructions,” it was of no avail to them for the reason that there was no evidence that the boundaries of the Oregon claim had been extended so as to make defendants intruders upon the disputed ground under the law as declared by this court in Biglow v. Conrandt, 159 F. 868, 87 C.C.A. 48. There was evidence tending to show a change of boundaries, and we fail to discover the difference between evidence tending to show a “change” of boundaries referred to in the instruction, and evidence tending to show the “extension” of boundaries referred to by this court in Biglow v. Conrandt.
What has been said with respect to these instructions applies to the objections made to the other instructions given and the refusal to give instructions requested. In our opinion the instructions of the court stated the law correctly when read in the light of the testimony and in consideration of its various phases.
It is further objected that the court refused to give instructions to the jury that the location of the Oregon claim was what is called in the law a “dummy location,” as defined by this court in Cook v. Klonos, 164 F. 529, 90 C.C.A. 403; Id., 168 F. 700, 94 C.C.A. 144. The question of fraud based upon such a location was not made an issue in the pleadings in this case, as in Cook v. Klonos. It was therefore not a question upon which instructions should have been given.
As stated in Moss v. Riddle, 5 Cranch, 351, 357, 3 L.Ed. 123: “Fraud consists in intention, and that intention is a fact which ought to have been averred, for it is the gist of the plea, and would have been traversable.”
In Wetherly v. Straus, 93 Cal. 283, 286, 28 P. 1045, 1046, the court said: “Fraud is never to be presumed, and whenever it constitutes an element of a cause of action or of a defense which is of an affirmative nature, and invoked as conferring a right against the opposite party, it must be alleged.”
In Coos Bay R. & E. & Nav. Co. v. Siglin, 26 Or. 387, 38 P. 192, referring to former decisions of the court, Judge
And in Muldoon v. Brown, 21 Utah, 121, 59 P. 720, the court said: “Fraud, when relied upon as a defense, must be specifically pleaded in an answer as well as in a complaint; and the facts and circumstances relied upon should be set out, in order that the court may know whether there was such fraud as will be of avail to the pleader, and also that the party charged with fraud may know the nature of the charge, and be prepared to meet it.”
The questions at issue as presented by the pleadings having been submitted to the jury with proper instructions, we find no error in the record, and the judgment must therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered.