This is a controversy concerning mining ground; the plaintiffs basing their rights upon the White Horse and Black Horse lode claims, which were located January 5, 1898; the defendant asserting prior and Superior rights by virtue of the Snowy Day and Black Lode claims, alleged to have been located May 6, 1896.
The court, before whom the cause was tried without a jury, found: (1) That on May 6, 1896, the Snowy Day and the Black lodes were duly located by the grantor of the defendant herein, David R. Short; setting forth in detail the acts of location
It is contended that the defendants’ claims were not legally located, for two reasons: “(1) The location notices posted thereon did not contain the statutory requirements, in that they did not give (a) the date of discovery, (b) the number of
The contention that the relocations relied upon by the defendant were invalid because the notices were posted upon old location stakes need not be considered, for the reason that the location certificates of the plaintiffs’ claims recited that they were relocations of the defendant’s claims, respectively. Relocation is the appropriation of mining ground by location where a former claim has become lost by abandonment or forfeiture, and the land is consequently restored to the public domain. There can be no relocation unless there has been a prior valid location, or something equivalent, of the same property. Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279, 26 L. Ed. 735. A relocation is an implied admission of the validity of the former location, and the assertion that the relocator claims a forfeiture by reason of a failure on the part of the former locator to com
The plaintiffs offered certain location certificates for the purpose of showing that the ground in controversy had been several times located or relocated for the benefit of the defendant company. Reversible error cannot be predicated upon the rejection of such offers because the facts sought to be proven thereby were established by other uncontradicted evidence. David Short, the principal witness on behalf of the defendant, testified as follows: “I had these claims relocated again in January, 1888, by Henry Suhr. Then on November 27, 1889, I had all these four claims relocated again under the same names as before by John H. Manning. He conveyed to the Prior Hill Company right thereafter. These claims have been relocated three times for the company, and any further I do not
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.