66 P. 762 | Utah | 1901
The appellants, having. applied in the United States land office at Salt Lake City for a patent of the Havenor mining claim, and the respondent having filed in said office a protest and adverse claim, this suit was instituted by the respondent, in pursuance of section 2326 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, to determine the question of
In tbe stipulation of tbe attorneys for tbe respective parties, wbicb is set forth in tbe record, tbe appellants admit certain paragraphs of tbe complaint, among which are tbe second, fourth, and all of the fifth except tbe first five lines, and wbicb are as follows: “(2) That George Naylor, John W. Meyers, and George H. Murray, and each of them, were at all tbe times herein mentioned, and now are, citizens of tbe Hnited States of America, and duly qualified to enter upon and explore tbe unoccupied mineral lands of tbe Hnited States, and did enter upon and explore tbe premises, and discovered and located tbe Murray Hill, Sego Lily, and Silver Dick lode mining claims, on tbe seventeenth, eighteenth, and nineteenth days of August, 1896, respectively, and that each of said lode mining claims bad thereon at the time of such location, and has now, a vein or lode of rock in place, bearing gold, silver, and other precious metals. (4) That at tbe time of tbe location of each of tbe said claims, respectively, tbe said several claims were mineral lands of tbe public domain, and entirely vacant and unoccupied, and were not owned, held, or claimed by any person or persons as mining ground or otherwise; and that while the same were so vacant, unoccupied, and unclaimed as aforesaid they were located as aforesaid, in accordance with the requirements of the laws of the Hnited States, and the local customs, regulations, and rules of the said Tintic mining district, and the laws of the State of Htah; and that notices of such locations were duly posted, as required by law, upon each of
The specific grounds of the objection urged by appellants’ counsel in their brief to the admission of the articles are that that instrument was not a conveyance, and under it no title was acquired by respondent to the premises therein mentioned. The same point is raised by the assignment that the court erred in finding and decreeing that the respondent is the-owner and entitled to the possession of the premises in dispute. As the foregoing assignments are intimately connected, they will be considered together. The appellants contend that in this action “the respondent must recover, if at all, on the strength of its own title, and not on the weakness of that of the appellants;” that “a mining claim is real estate, . . . . and can not be transferred by parol, or otherwise than in ac
Under the facts thus disclosed, it would be a fraud upon the company and the other stockholders for said locators to deny that said claims were conveyed to the respondent company, and they are therefore estopped from setting up the-statute of frauds, for it is “well settled that equity will not allow the statute to be used as a means of effecting the fraud which it was designed to prevent.” Kirk v. Hamilton, 102 U. S. 69-17, 26 L. Ed. 82. This is so at law as well as in equity, and an estoppel in pais may be pleaded as a defense in an action of ejectment. Dickerson v. Colgrove, 100 U. S. 578, 25 L. Ed. 618. As the locators are estopped from asserting any claim adverse to the respondent company, the right to the possession of said claims by estoppel in pais was passed to the company. Independent of that fact, as there is no privity between the appellants and said locators, the former are not in a position to claim the benefits of the statute,
The judgment is affirmed, with costs.