14 Mont. 88 | Mont. | 1894
On the twenty-third day of September, 1890, plaintiffs (being seven in number) and Thomas Joyes located the Landlock placer mining claim, a tract of ground in Jefferson county, which they estimated at the time contained 160 acres, but which afterwards, by a survey, was found to contain about 76 acres. Plaintiffs made but one discovery on the entire tract. They marked the boundaries by blazing a tree at each corner of the entire tract of ground, and designated each of said corners of (he claim by writing with a pencil, on the respective blazed trees, the name of the claim, and the
The appellant contends that the location of the mining claim in the manner as above described is a nullity, and conferred upon plaintiffs no right or title to the Laudlock placer mining claim, or to the right of possession thereof. The appellant claims that, under the law, the plaintiffs should have made a discovery on each 20 acre tract contained in the land sought to be located; that each 20 acre tract therein contained should have been marked upon the surface thereof, so that the boundaries thereof could have been readily traced; that a separate location of each 20 acre tract was necessary under the law; and that work or improvements of the value of $100 should have been done on each 20 acre tract contained therein, for the year 1891. Section 2330 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, among other things, provides: “But no location of a placer claim made after the ninth day of July, 1870,
The appellant further contends that the evidence shows that the plaintiffs had forfeited any right or title they may have had to the ground in controversy, by failing to do the required
The appellant contends that in this case, if it were liable for actual damages, the court below erred in rendering judgment for treble damages. This suit was instituted for damages for willful and malicious trespass; but respondents contend that, notwithstanding the complaint charges willful and malicious trespass, they are nevertheless entitled to treble damages, under section 363, Code of Civil Procedure. The respondents contend that it was not necessary, under said section, to allege or prove malice, wantonness, or evil design, etc.
In Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, section 129, the author, commenting on similar statutes, says; “Similarly, statutes giving punitive, double, or treble damages against one cutting and converting to his own use timber growing on the land of another, without the latter’s consent, are held confined to cases where some element of willfulness, wantonness, carelessness, or evil design enters into the act.”
In Cohn v. Neeves, 40 Wis. 393, the court, in a case involv
In Kramer v. Goodlander, 98 Pa. St. 353, construing a statute almost identical with ours, the court say: “Its [the
In the case at bar the evidence shows that the land in controversy was located out in the wilderness, far away from human habitation. The plaintiffs had to cut a trail through the timber to get to it. The defendant, coming to the land from another direction, had to cut a trail also. The defendant found but little evidence that any of the land in the vicinity had ever been claimed by any person for any purpose, except the blazing of four or five trees, and a small discovery shaft on the ground in controversy, as the work of plaintiffs. There was nothing to indicate that anybody actually asserted ownership or dominion over any part of the country thereabout. The circumstances attending the trespass complained of here are vastly different from a case where a person cuts down a shade tree in front of another’s house or lot, or enters another’s close and damages trees or timber therein, when all the evidences of ownership in another are present. These are the acts and trespasses we think are intended to be denounced and punished by our statute. The evidence in the case does not.support the contention that there was any willfulness, wantonness, or maliciousness in the acts or conduct of the defendant. We therefore think that the evidence did not justify the rendering of judgment for treble damages against defendant in this case.
It is ordered that the judgment of the court below be modified, by rendering judgment in favor of plaintiffs against the defendant, for the amount of actual damages found by the jury, and in other respects the judgment is affirmed as modified.
Modified and affirmed.