delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal by the defendants King and Sutton from an order granting an interlocutory injunction.
The Plymouth lode mining claim is owned by the plaintiffs. Title to the Silver King lode mining claim is in the defendants Daly, Murray, and King. The Plymouth adjoins the Silver King on the south. The plaintiffs commenced an action against the defendants by which they seek to- recover a judgment for $150,000, the 'Value of ores alleged to have been mined, extracted and converted by the defendants from the Plymouth claim, and to obtain an injunction restraining them from entering upon that part of the Plymouth which lies west of a vertical plane passing through a point on the north side line of the
The specifications of error are seven in number, but the only one which is argued or elsewhere referred to in the brief relates to the question whether the evidence was sufficient to justify the making of the order; the other supposed errors, although specified, must therefore be deemed to have been waived. They will not be considered.
The contention of the plaintiffs is, in substance, that the vein on which the defendants were mining in the Plymouth has its apex in that claim, and that if the apex is in the Silver Xing the vein on its strike crosses both side lines of the last-named claim, in which event — the side lines becoming the end lines— the right to follow the vein on the dip is limited to an area
During the examination of a witness for the defendants the judge presiding remarked that an injunction pendente lite would be granted upon the evidence which was then before the court, saying, among other things, to counsel for the defendants : “But, if you want to get evidence here to appeal or to have it reviewed, you can do so, but I shall issue the injunction on the testimony that has been given here, for the reason, as I tell you, that I have been doing it in all of these cases, and it is my duty to do it. The supreme court has affirmed these decisions.” The defendants were then permitted to introduce their evidence. Judges should endeavor to avoid reaching or announcing conclusions in contested cases before hearing both parties. This is obvious. The course pursused by the judge helow was extraordinary, for without hearing what further evidence the defendants might desire and be able to present, he announced his intention to grant the order prayed for. He could not judicially know whether the injunction order ought to be granted until the evidence of the defendants as well as that of the plaintiffs had been heard by him. This is also manifest. The court, however, heard all the evidence offered by the defendants and, as must be presumed, considered it. The fact that the judge prematurely or in advance announced his intention to exercise his legal discretion in a particular way upon evidence, to him seemingly sufficient, then before the court, does not constitute reversible error when he or the court (as the case may be) hears the whole case and then decides. In the absence of a showing to the contrary, the presumption must be indulged that the evidence was not rejected but was con
Let the order be affirmed. Remittitur forthwith.
Affirmed.