27 Colo. 502 | Colo. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in support of an adverse claim to mining property situate in Boulder county. The appellant, who was plaintiff below, claims it as a part of, and included within the surface boundaries of, the Golden Crown, and defendant as a part of the Yellow Pine Extension, lode. Aside from the contention that the Crown was not part of the public domain, no question is raised by defendant that plaintiff fully complied with the provisions of the mining laws relative to mining locations ; so that plaintiff is entitled to recover unless defendant has shown a better title to the property under a prior valid location, and this he has attempted to establish.
The abstract of record may not fully, as it does not very clearly, set forth the points relied upon for a reversal as our rules provide. If it does, with substantial accuracy, reproduce the evidence as exhibited below, then we cannot permit the judgment to stand. Possibly the evidence, if set forth in detail, would relieve the mind of the uncertainty which its abridgment found in the abstract has produced; and,, if so, it was the duty of counsel for appellee, by a further abstract, to present all the facts necessary to a full understanding of the merits of the cause. But we shall not resort to the transcript, and must decline to perform for counsel the work which should be done by him, and shall, as accords with our established practice, consider alone the abstract of record as prepared.
The Golden Crown mine was located July 7, 1891. In his answer defendant avers that his grantors located the Extension lode in March, 1881, and that ever since that time he and they have made compliance with the various provisions of the statute which are essential to keeping good a mining claim as against subsequent locators. The original locators of the Extension were Brown and Scott. They sold it to William
It thus appears that there was an intention upon the part of the defendant to abandon what rights he may have acquired to this property by the Mitchell deed, and it was error for the district court to refuse the request of plaintiff, as asked, to direct the jury to that effect. There was not an attempt by defendant, as there was in the case of Johnson v. Young, 18 Colo. 625, to relocate the property for the purpose of protecting his rights under the location of 1881, for until after the rights of plaintiff attached, defendant relied solely upon the new location as made by A. L. Kennan. That being so, it cannot be held that the new location inured to the benefit of the original claim. The abandonment restored the ground to the public domain, and, after it became segregated by plaintiff, could not be reclaimed by defendant merely because after plaintiff’s rights attached defendant learned, as he says, that he might have held the ground without abandoning and locating, through his son, the same lode as a new claim. It was then too late to recall the abandonment and rely upon other rights that once may have existed. It is possible that defendant supposed he was bringing himself within the principle laid down in the Johnson-Young case, and that the case as made below was within it; but the evidence, as contained in the abstract, does not warrant that inference. It may further be observed that the pleadings did not justify any evidence respecting the location of the Extension lode made in 1891 by A. L. Kennan, but there seems to have been no objection of that kind made by plaintiff; but there is such an absence'of any showing of a valid location by A. L. Kennan that nothing further need be
As to the discovery of mineral under the Scott Brown location of 1881, as well as the other steps necessary to be taken to perfect a location, we remark that the evidence is exceedingly indefinite and meager, as possibly counsel for defendant and the-court below were aware; hence the unusual instruction as to the inference that might be drawn from certain other facts in evidence.
Notwithstanding these observations, we are strongly impressed with the equities of defendant, not only because of the apparent attempt of his grantors in good faith to segregate from the public domain a mineral claim, but because of the recognition by plaintiff in dealings between them that defendant’s rights to the controverted strip of ground were superior to his. We have striven to affirm the judgment, but cannot, in the light of the record before us, arbitrarily, or otherwise wrest from plaintiff property which belongs to him, unless defendant has shown, as he has not, superior rights by compliance with the law under which only has he any right to the territory in dispute. Upon another trial these doubtful points may be so elucidated that justice will be done. Our references to the questions discussed but not decided, as well as to those determined, are applicable only to the very facts as set forth in the abstract, and not as they may otherwise appear on a new trial.
Reversed.