104 P. 898 | Idaho | 1909
— This action was instituted by the plaintiff for the recovery of the sum of $300, together with interest, for the value of assessment work on three mining claims which the defendant had promised and agreed to do and
This action arose out of a contract entered into between the plaintiff and defendant on February 23, 1907, which contract is referred to by the parties as an option to sell three certain mining claims situated in Sanders county, Montana, and called the Bonnie Blue, May Day and Eldorado Fraction. The agreement is as follows:
“Received of C. A. Pooley of Mullan, Idaho, the sum of one hundred dollars ($100.00) as part payment for the following described Quartz Lode Claims, viz.: The ‘Bonnie Blue,’ the ‘May Day5 and the ‘Eldorado Fraction,’ all being in Spring Gulch (unorganized) Mining District, in the County of Sanders, State of Montana.
• “The entire balance of price to be paid for the said described property is the sum of seven thousand dollars ($7000.00) to be paid on or before the first day of May, A. D., 1907, by the aforesaid C. A. Pooley. On the payment of the said sum of seven thousand dollars ($7000.00) within the time above specified, to the undersigned D. L. Moore, of Carter, Missoula County, Montana, the said D. L. Moore hereby agrees to execute and deliver to the aforesaid C. A. Pooley, a good and sufficient grant deed to the above described mining property.
“The aforesaid C. A. Pooley hereby also agrees to perform, or have performed, the annual representation work on the above described mining property for the year 1907, whether this option shall take effect or not.
“It is also further herein specified by both parties to this agreement that the said payment of seven thousand dollars ($7000.00) to be paid by the said C. A. Pooley to the said D. L. Moore, shall be deposited to the credit of the said D. L. Moore in the Western Montana National Bank of Missoula, Montana.
“Dated at Carter, Montana, the 23rd day of February, 1907.
.(Signed) “D. L. MOORE,
“C. A. POOLET.”
On the trial of the case there was considerable evidence offered and some introduced tending to show that two of the claims had been previously located, and that the plaintiff had worked the claims for some length of time under a lease from the former owner and that he had thereafter .(in mining parlance) “jumped” the property. Plaintiff, on the contrary, showed that he had fully and regularly located- the property and had performed the location and annual assess
The court found that he was the owner of the property at the time that the option to purchase was given the defendant, and we are satisfied that there is sufficient evidence to support and justify that finding. It is also worthy of note that although the defendant pleads fraud and deception on the part of the plaintiff, and alleges that the plaintiff represented that he had a clear and fee simple title to the property, save and except the paramount title of the United States, that notwithstanding all this, the contract which was subsequently reduced to writing and hereinbefore set out provided that the plaintiff should, upon the full payment of the purchase price, “execute and deliver to the aforesaid C. A. Pooley a good and sufficient grant deed to the above described mining property.” Sec. 3120 of the Rev. Codes of this state, which, in the absence of proof to the contrary, is presumed to be the law of Montana, defines a “grant” conveyance and enumerates the warranties that accompany such a conveyance, and it will be noted from an examination of that provision of the statute that such a deed does not amount to an unqualified warranty of title. That section was considered by this court in Warren v. Stoddart, 6 Ida. 692, 59 Pac. 540. Now, it is not contended in this action that (1) previous to the time of the execution of the conveyance the grantor (Moore) had conveyed the estate or any right, title or interest therein to any other person, nor is it contended (2) that at the time of the execution of this contract there was any outstanding encumbrance against the property which had been created by the grantor or any person claiming the property through or under him. These considerations alone, it seems to us, would have been sufficient to destroy the force of the defense pleaded. The liability, it will be observed, was made absolute by the contract whether defendant elected to buy the property or refused to purchase. (Davis v. Eames (Cal.), 35 Pac. 566.) The defendant failed to make out a case on bis charge of fraud, deception and misrepresentation with reference to the condition of the title to this property. He
Counsel for appellant has taken exception to the action of the court in admitting evidence of the several sections of the Political Code of the state of Montana which plaintiff offered to prove in order to show the laws of that state with reference to the location of mining claims. It seems that the plaintiff offered in evidence a book which purported to be “The Political Code of the State of Montana.” Just what it contained or in what manner it “purported” or “appeared” to be the Political Code of Montana does not appear. However, counsel for defendant did not object to its introduction on the ground that it did not purport to be the Political Code of the state of Montana, but claims now that the proof did not comply with the provisions of our statute. He has not pointed out to this court the particular wherein the offer fell short of the requirements of the statute. Sec. 5969 of our Kev. Codes provides that “Books printed or published under the authority of a state, territory, or foreign country and purporting to contain the statutes, code, or other written law of such state, territory, or country, or proved to be commonly admitted in the tribunals of such state, territory, or country as evidence of the written law thereof, are admissible in this state as evidence of such law.” So far as appears from the record, the plaintiff’s proof complied with the requirements of our statute and was admissible.
Numerous other assignments of error are made on the admission and rejection of evidence, and we have given them
Judgment affirmed, with costs in favor of respondent.