89 Cal. 310 | Cal. | 1891
Henry Neuebaumer and F. W. Street sued in ejectment for a certain piece of mining ground.
The court below rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, from which, and an order denying a new trial, the defendant appeals.
From the facts found it appears that the mining claim was attempted to be located on the 24th of October, 1873, by one William Jones, by posting certain notices on it, but that in making this attempt he did not mark the location of the claim so that the boundaries could bo. readily traced.
On the 2d of July, 1877, Jones being indebted to one F. L. Tucker, he and the defendant here, S. P. Woodman, made a grant, bargain, and sale deed of this claim, called the Tiger Mine, to Tucker, describing it. Thereafter Jones and others, for Tucker, performed labor on the mine, running tunnels into it, and crushing the quartz rock taken from it in a mill situate near by, known as the Tiger Mill. Afterwards, on the 13th of February, 1880, Tucker deeded the property to one William T. Jones. The latter entered into possession of the claim under that deed, and during the years from 1880 to 1886 ran four tunnels in and upon the quartz vein in the claim, and expended several thousand dollars in labor and improvements upon it.
As part of the purchase price, this William T. Jones
The mining claim here involved was sold on execution issued on that judgment, and no redemption having been had, it was deeded by the sheriff who made the sale to the purchasers at the sale, the original plaintiffs here, Henry Neuebaumer and F. W. Street.
On the day after Tucker commenced that action, William T. Jones made a conveyance of the property in dispute to his mother, E. A. Jones. This convej'ance was afterwards, at the suit of the plaintiffs here, declared fraudulent and void, canceled and annulled.
Henry Neuebaumer died after this action was commenced, and prior to the trial, Teresa Neuebaumer, his administratrix, was substituted.
In addition to these facts, it was further found, in the eighth finding of fact, “that the mining claim in the complaint described was never abandoned by the plaintiffs herein, or by their grantors, and that plaintiffs and their grantors were in continuous actual possession of the same until the third day of December, 1888, at which time the defendant herein, said S. P. Woodman, entered in and upon said mining claim and ejected the plaintiffs therefrom; that upon the said third day of December, 1888, said defendant, S. P. Woodman, made an attempted location of the mining claim in the complaint described, by posting a notice of location on the vein, at each end
The only ground of error relied on for the reversal of the judgment and order is, that this finding is not supported by the evidence.
The evidence shows that the defendant did not take the necessary steps to locate the mine, nor did the plaintiffs or their grantors, under section 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States.
The point to be considered, then, is, whether the plaintiffs or their grantors were in the actual possession of the claim, and had not abandoned it at the time of the ouster.
By the undisputed finding it appears that William ' Jones, who made the attempted location, conveyed the whole of this claim to Tucker on the 2d of July, 1877. Thereafter this Jones worked the mine for Tucker, and his possession was that of Tucker. Then it appears that on the 13th of February, 1880, Tucker conveyed the property to William T. Jones, who was the son of William Jones. William T. Jones entered into possession at once under this deed, and during tfie years from 1880 to 1886 remained in possession and did work on the mine, even - after the action was commenced by Tucker against him, in 1885. It also appears in evidence that Mrs. E. A.
Jones, at the time she claimed it under her fraudulent deed from her son, William T. Jones, stated that the claim was being kept up; this continued the possession of those interested against the claim of the defendant.
William T. Jones, whose interest was sold and conveyed by the sheriff, under a conveyance from whom respondents claim, had been for years in possession of a large part of the claim, having entered under the deed of Tucker, who claimed the whole mine, and for whom William Jones had possession of a part thereof up to the time when the deed was made by Tucker to William T. Jones.
Tucker certainly had possession, after his purchase through William Jones, of a part of the claim, and made a deed of the whole of it to William T. Jones, through whom the plaintiffs claim as their immediate grantor. Tucker had possession of a part, claiming the whole described by metes and bounds, through his deed from William Jones. Thus claiming the whole, he made a conveyance of it by metes and bounds to William T. Jones, and the last immediately entered into possession, claiming the whole. This possession was continued in the respondents. This would give them the constructive possession of the whole tract, as against a mere intruder, as the court finds the defendant to be. (Dodge v. Yates, 76 Cal. 254; Attwood v. Fricot, 17 Cal. 37; English v. Johnson, 17 Cal. 107; 76 Am. Dec. 574.)
We think the evidence on the part of the plaintiffs tends to show that the defendant, Woodman, did not, in his attempted location, mark the same on the ground so that its boundaries could in any manner be traced.
The finding assailed is supported by sufficient evidence, and w'e advise that the judgment and order be affirmed.
Vancliee, C., and Fitzgerald, C., concurred.
The Court. — For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.