1 F. 522 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1880
(in charging jury.) Gentlemen of the jury, I congratulate you that we are approaching the conclusion of this trial. It has run through many days, but has not been without interest.
The questions that have been presented are many, and some of them difficult; but the case has been thoroughly prepared. It has been zealously, exhaustively, and ably tried and argued on both sides. Whatever great ability, great zeal, thorough preparation, and a thorough knowledge of the subject is able to contribute, has been contributed to explain and illustrate this case. Science has also been called into exercise. You have had a glass model here, which shows you the internal condition of these mines. You have had another
Counsel having ably discharged their duty, it now devolves on the court to state to you the law governing this case; and then it will be your duty, gentlemen, and your province, to determine the facts. The questions of fact are for you to determine; the weight to be given to the evidence, the credibility to be given to the witnesses; and everything relating to a disputed question of fact is for your sole consideration and determination.
If I state the testimony, I shall only do it for the purpose of calling your attention to it and stating its tendency; but I shall not go over it fully. If I intimate an opinion on a question of fact, you are not to be governed by it, unless it corresponds with your own ideas as to what the facts are. If I make a mistake in stating the testimony, or alluding to a fact, you will correct'it by your own recollection and judgment. I do not intend to expiess an opinion on the questions of fact, where the testimony is in conflict. I shall state to you the law which governs this case, and it is your duty to take the law from the court.
There are questions here that are new and have never been determined before, so far as I am aware. Some of them, as stated before, are difficult; some I may not be entirely clear about; but I have reached certain conclusions on the questions of law that have been so ably argued, and those I shall state to you so far as I deem them applicable to the case, and you will take them from the court and bo governed accordingly. Whether wright or wrong, it is your duty to act on them as given by the court. If the court makes a mistake, or an error of law, it is known where that error lies. It can be re-examined by the court on a motion for a new
Counsel on one side have presented a large number of instructions, and on the other side a less number. I have forty odd pages of instructions asked by one side. I shall not attempt to read these instructions. They are generally disconnected, and, even if correct, would serve rather to confuse than to illustrate. All, however, could not be given. I will state to counsel here that I shall only give such of their instructions as are covered by the general charge, and in my own language, as it will be delivered to the jury. In other respects, except as given in my own language, their instructions will be refused.
By an act of congress which took effect May 10, 1872, all valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United States were declared to be free and open to exploration and purchase by citizens of the United States, and those who have declared their intention to become such, under regulations prescribed by law, and according to the local customs or rules of miners in the several mining districts, so far as applicable and not inconsistent with the laws of the United States.
In order to acquire any right of location and purchase under this act, a party seeking to acquire such right must either be a citizen of the United States, or must have declared his intention to become such. If, therefore, Smith, or any other locator under whom plaintiff claims, was not a citizen, or had not declared his intention to become such at the time of making his location, he acquired no right, under the act, by virtue of such location. And whether Smith, or any other of such locators, was, at the time of his location, a citizen, or had declared his intention to become such, is a
All the locations under which plaintiff claims were made since May 10, 1872; and, at the time they were respectively made, the statute authorized a claim to be 1,500 feet in length along the vein or lode, and it was provided that “no claim shall extend more than 300 feet on each side of the middle of the vein at the surface; nor shall any claim be limited by any mining regulation to less than 25 feet on each side of the middle of the vein at the surface.”
In the absence, then, of any mining rule or custom in force at the time of the location, at the place where it is made, the location may extend to the distance of 300 feet on each side of the middle of the vein at the surface; that is to say, the claim may be 1,500 feet in length along the vein, by 600 feet wide, including 800 feet on each side of the middle of the vein.
As I construe the statute, however, and so instruct you, by implication, the miners, by a rule, regulation, or custom established and in force at the time and place of the location, may limit the width of the claim to 25 feet on each side of the middle of the vein at the surface. But such limitation to 25 feet on each side, to be valid, must be by virtue of a rule, regulation, or custom which has not only been estab
One of the locations under which plaintiff claims was made November 10, 1875, and the claim was relocated December 15, 1876, each time 300 feet wide on each side of the lode; the notice in terms purporting to locate it under the act of congress allowing such location.
It is claimed by the defendant that there was, at the time of the location and relocation, a regulation in force in that district limiting the claim to 50 feet on each side of the vein, and that the location of 300 feet is therefore void. Now, whether there was or not such a regulation or custom in force at the time is a question of fact to be found by the jury from all of the evidence in the case on that point.
The defendant, to show a regulation limiting the location to 50 feet on each side, introduced the minutes of proceeding .of a miners’ meeting in the district, held July 10, 1860, in which there is a rule making such limitation, and minutes of meetings held at various times subsequently, amending the rules, but continuing this rule in force down to and including November 13,1867, at which time the last action in respect to modifying the rules and regulations was had till December 30, 1876, which is‘after said location and relocation, and nine years after any meeting amending said rules. At said meeting of December 30, 1876, the miners declined to adopt the “United States mining laws;” and no action upon the subject of rules is shown to have been since had by any miners’ meeting.
The plaintiff, to meet this testimony, introduced the min
“A custom reasonable in itself and generally observed will
The statute also provides, gentlemen of the jury, that “no location of a mining claim shall be made until the discovery of the vein or lode within the limits of the claim located.” So that no rights can be acquired under the statute by a location made before the discovery of a vein or lode within the limits of the claim located. A vein or lode authorized to be located is a seam or fissure in the earth’s crust filled with quartz, or
I instruct you further, that if a party should make a location in all other respects regular, and in accordance with the laws, and the rules, regulations and customs in force at the place at the time, upon a supposed vein, before discovering the true vein or lode, and should do sufficient work to hold the claim, and after such location should discover the vein or lode within the limits of the claim located, before any other party had acquired any rights therein, from the date of his discovery his claim would he good to the limits of his claim, and the location valid. So, also, gentlemen of the jury, where a party has made a location of a mining claim upon a mineral vein or lode discovered by him, in all respects valid, he is entitled to “have the exclusive right of possession and enjoyment of all the surface included within the lines of
The same principle and instruction applies to the Keystone and East Noonday North claims. If the plaintiff has a valid location to those claims, or either of them, then it is entitled to all the veins or lodes under similar circumstances, the apices or tops of which lie within the surface lines of such valid location, or locations, extended vertically downwards.
The next point to which I shall call your attention, gentlemen of the jury, is the location. To make a valid location, under the statute, it is required that “the location must be distinctly marked on the ground, so that its boundaries can be readily traced;” but the law does not define or prescribe what kind of marks shall be made, or upon what part of the ground
If the center line of a location of a lode-claim lengthwise along the lode be marked by a prominent stake or monument at each end thereof, upon one or both of which is placed a written notice showing that the locator claims the length of said line upon the lode from stake to stake, and a certain specified number of feet in width on each side of said lino, such location of the claim is so marked that the boundaries may be readily traced; and, so far as the marking of the location is concerned, is a sufficient compliance with the law.
If, therefore, as the testimony tends to show, the locator of the North Noonday mining claim planted a prominent stake at a shaft sunk in the earth on a vein, lode or ledge, upon the northern side of which was placed a notice, stating that he claimed 1,500 feet on “this the Noonday Quartz Lodo,” including all the dips, spurs, angles and feeders, together with BOO feet on each side; that said claim begins at a point in the center of a small shaft about one-fourth of a mile northerly Irom Queen Bee Hill, and extends thence in a northerly direction 1,500 feet to a post and mound upon which is inscribed “Noonday Quartz Lode, Charles Smith’s Northern Boundary,” and erects such mound and stake at said northern boundary, and marks said inscription thereon, the location is distinctly marked on the ground, so that its boundaries can be readily traced within the meaning of the act, and is a compliance with the law in that particular. The same principle is equally applicable to the Keystone location, and to that of the East Noonday North.
There is testimony tending to show that the rule and custom of miners in Bodie district, at the time the several locations under which plaintiff claims wore made, required mining claims to be recorded. If you find such to have been the rule or custom in force at the time, then a record was necessary, otherwise not.
In order to make a valid record, it was necessary for it to
The natural objects or permanent monuments here referred to are not required to be on the ground located, although they may be; and the natural object may consist of any fixed natural object; and such permanent monument may consist of a prominent post or stake firmly planted in the ground, or of a shaft sunk in the ground. The record of each location of the North Noonday, Keystone, and East-Noonday North, introduced by plaintiff in evidence, contained the names of the locators, the date of their location, and a description of the claim located, by reference both to a shaft and to stakes planted in the ground having notices of .the location thereon.
If you are satisfied, from the evidence, that these records were in fact made, (and there is no evidence to the contrary,) and that the descriptions of the several claims located therein contained, by reference to the natural and permanent monuments mentioned, were such as would identify the claims with reasonable certainty, then you will find the records sufficient and valid in this particular, otherwise insufficient.
As there has been much comment upon the record of the East Noonday North location, I think it proper to call your attention more particularly to it.
The record appears to be a copy of the notice placed on the claim, and would, doubtless, so be understood by a miner reading it for information. A person reading the record would be informed by it that the owners of the Noonday claim were the claimants, and that the claim was named the East Noonday North, probably, with reference to the Noonday claim; that it was located on Silver Hill, a natural, well-known object; that the claim commenced at a stake with a notice on it, of which the record is a copy, placed east of the Noonday shaft, which is a permanent object, having, as the testimony tends to show, already existed eight or ten years,
There was, then, in the record, a description of the location with reference to Silver Hill, a natural object, and the Noonday shaft, a permanent object, and it is for the jury to determine whether a miner, seeking information from this record, could go to the permanent object, the Noonday shaft on Silver Hill, and thence east, and find the stake and notice pointing out the location on the ground with reasonable certainty. If so, the jury will he justified in finding that there is such a description of the claim in the record, with reference to some natural or permanent object, as to identify it, and that the location is valid in this particular. It was not necessary for the claimants to finally mark the location on tho ground till after the record was made, and the testimony tends to show that the location was not fully completed till the next day after the record was made, when the locators planted this stake with the notice on the south line of the claim, and of the North Noonday claim 100 feet east of the Noonday shaft, with another at the northerly end, and that this became the final location on the ground, and which, the testimony tends to show, was ever after claimed, and subsequently surveyed, and stakes placed at the comers.
If the jury find that the location was at that timo actually marked upon the ground by stakes and notices, so that its boundaries could be readily traced in the manner I before instructed you, was sufficient with reference to the North Noonday claim, thon'the location was sufficient in this particular also.
The testimony also tends to show that, prior to any rights being acquired by the defendant, plaintiffs grantors, in addition to the lode line stakes set up at the location of their several claims, planted other stakes and monuments at the various corners of their claims, thus forming a parallelogram 1,500 feet long by 300 feet wide, including the Keystone, Bast Noonday North, and a portion of the original North Noonday claims, with a line of five stakes on each end of the parallelogram; and that they and the plaintiff renewed these
The testimony tends to show, and there is none to the contrary, that Smith did no work on the North Noonday within the year after he located it, in 1875, and supposing he had forfeited his claim he procured Loekberg to relocate it for him, and convey it, on December 16, 1876; that Loekberg did so relocate it on that day and immediately conveyed it to Smith, who then, either alone, or in connection with others interested with him, entered upon the claim and did sufficient work during the year to hold it for that year; and that Smith paid the recording fees, $15.
If these be the facts, and no other rights had in the meantime attached — and there is no evidence that any had attached — then, if the location made by Loekberg was otherwise sufficient and legal, and Loekberg and Smith were American citizens, Smith, by the several proceedings, had acquired a valid right to the claim.
The statute requires $100 in value of work to be done on each claim located after May 10,1872, in each year, in order to hold it; and, in default of such work being done, authorizes the claim to be relocated by other parties, provided the first locator has not resumed work upon it. But if the first locator resumes work at any time after the expiration of the year, before other rights attach in favor of relocators, he preserves his claim.
The statute nowhere authorizes a person to trespass upon
It is urged by defendant that Smith was not a citizen, and, therefore, that he could acquire no right by location. In view of this claim, and in case you find from the evidence this to be the fact, I give you this further instruction:
The testimony shows that Smith, at various times, before defendant acquired any interest, conveyed portions of whatever right he had to other parties next hereinafter named, and finally, on September 28, 1878, conveyed all his remaining interest in all of the claims, by specific description, to said parties, Irwin, John and James Welch and Patrick Clancy, in wdiom, whatever interest had before been acquired by virtue of said several locations, at this time had become vested.
If Smith, even though not a citizen, performed all the acts necessary to make a valid location, and did the work necessary to keep his claim good, had he been a citizen, until he conveyed to Irwin and others, and if Irwin and his co-grantees were citizens, and after the conveyance to them took possession and control, and kept up the monuments and markings, and performed the necessary conditions to keep the claims good, then they acquired a good and valid right to the claim, as against defendant, from the date of the conveyance to them, provided that no other rights had attached in defendant’s favor prior to súch conveyance to them, and such subsequent performance of said required conditions by them.
The East Noonday North claim was located by Welch, Smith and Irwin November 27, 1877, before any rights had been acquired by the Orient Company, defendant. The claim contains no more than one man was authorized to locate. So that, if one or more of the locators were citizens, in that particular the location of the claim was good as to such citizen or citizens, even though one or more of the others were aliens and not entitled to locate. If, therefore, one or more of these loca
The North Noonday Mining Company, plaintiff, is a corporation, created and existing under the laws of California, and is, therefore, to be deemed a citizen within the meaning of the statute, and as such is competent to purchase and hold a mining claim. Irwin, the Welches, and Clancy, as locators of the East Noonday North and grantees of Smith of the other claims and of his interest in the East Noonday North, held all the interest in all said claims acquired by the various proceedings in question, and so holding such interest on November 20, 1878, conveyed all their interest in all said claims to the North Noonday Mining Company, plaintiff, which thereby became vested with all the interest that could be acquired by virtue of said transactions. If, therefore, the grantors of plaintiff had performed all the acts necessary for a citizen to perform in order to locate and hold said several claims down to the date of said conveyance, and the said plaintiff took possession and control of said several claims upon receiving said conveyance, and thereafter kept the said claims properly marked on the ground and performed all the conditions necessary to maintain their said claims, then said plaintiff acquired a good title to such of said claims as were so properly in form located and kept up as against said Orient Mining Company, defendant, provided said defendant acquired no rights in said claims, or any of them, prior to the acquisition of said interest by said plaintiff through said conveyance, and such subsequent acts of said plaintiff to preserve their rights to said claims, even though one or more of said original locators should be found not to have been citizens, and, on that ground, incompetent to acquire any title under said act of congress.
The testimony tends to show various work done on the several claims by the claimants Welch, Smith and others, during 1877 and 1878, claimed by plaintiff to be sufficient to hold
The testimony further tends to show, and, as to this part of the testimony, I believe there is none to the contrary — if there -is any you will remember it — that the interest in all the throe claims having been concentrated in the plaintiff, the North Noonday Mining Company, in the preceding November, the plaintiff, in March, 1879, before any other parties had entered upon those claims, or made any claim thereto, located and made arrangements to sink a three-compartment shaft, known as the combination shaft, for the benefit and to he used for the development of all the claims, and also the Noonday claim to the south; that machinery and supplies were at once collected and brought upon the ground for the purpose of sinking said shaft, and developing and jointly working all said claims; that from that time on the plaintiff, by its agents and servants, was actually on the ground erecting machinery and buildings, exercising acts of ownership and dominion over the claims, claiming title to the whole; that the plaintiff commenced sinking the combination shaft on or about April 5, 1879, and from that timo to the present has been, by its agents and servants, actually on the ground, constantly and vigorously prosecuting the work of developing and working the mines claimed by them, and constantly exercising dominion over them; that by Juno 1st buildings and machinery had been erected and brought upon the ground and supplies collected to the amount of more than $30,000.
If you find these to he the facts, gentlemen of the jury, then there was not at this time merely a constructive possession of these mining claims by virtue of the mining laws alone,
If you find title and rightful possession in the plaintiff, as just indicated, as to all or any of said mining claims, you will then inquire whether the vein or lode in question which the defendant cut in the head of the winze at the end of its cross-cut, called by defendant Orient Lode No. 3, is one of the veins or lodes discovered in any of the claims, the right, title, and possession to which you find to be in the plaintiff as against defendant; and if you find that is one of such veins or lodes, or if you find that it is not one of those lodes, but that it has its apex or top within the side lines of any such claim, the title and possession to which you so find to be in the plaintiff, drawn vertically downwards, then, in either case, it belongs to the plaintiff, and your verdict will be for the plaintiff. But if you find that said vein or lode so cut by defendant is not one of the veins or lodes discovered within any claim, the title to which you find in the plaintiff,
If you find for the plaintiff, gentlemen, you will then inquire what the damages are. The testimony on the question of damages is that about 55 tons of ore have been taken out, and I think the testimony is that it is about $25 or $30 per ton in value. The damages will he the value of the quartz removed; at all events, if you cannot agree on the damages, they are entitled to nominal damages, say one dollar.
If you find for the plaintiff, your verdict will be—
“We, the jury, find for the plaintiff, and assess the damages at so many dollars.”
If, on the other hand, you find for the defendant, your your verdict will be—
“We, the jury, find for the defendant.”
The verdict of the jury was for the plaintiff, • with one dollar damages.