25 Mont. 139 | Mont. | 1901
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The principal question presented by the appeal can best be understood by reference to the subjoined diagram, which illustrates the contentions of the parties:
The plaintiff is the owner of the Adventure of the claim, with all the rights conferred by a partner thereto from the United States.The defendant F. Augustus Heinze is the owner of thirty-one undivided thirty-sixths, of the Nipper claim, also patented, lying to the north. When this controversy arose the defendant Arthur P. Heinze was in possession of the Nipper claim as lessee of the interest of F. Augustus Heinze, and was engaged
Defendants on their part contend that the evidence .shows that the apex of the vein, as demonstrated by developments at and beneath the surface within the boundaries of the Nipper claim, follows the general direction of the side lines from near the west end line, through the point of discovery at D, and crosses the south side line into the Anaconda at a point near the southeast corner of the Nipper claim. The position of the vein under this contention is indicated by the letters C, C, C. There is some evidence tó show that there is also a branch of this vein passing off in the.direction indicated by the letter Gr.
There is a sharp conflict in the evidence introduced to support these adverse contentions as to the strike of the vein. The district court issued the injunction after a hearing. It is evident, from the situation as illustrated by the diagram, that that
Upon the evidence submitted the district court might have found in favor of defendants’ contention; as it did not, however, and as there is substantial evidence tending directly to support plaintiff’s contention, we do not feel justified in holding that the showing made by plaintiff was not reasonable, or that the court abused its discretion in finding as it did. The rule heretofore applied by this Court in this class of cases is that the granting of a preliminary injunction is so largely a matter of discretion that it will be sustained, upon appeal, where there has been a reasonable showing made in support of the application in the court below. (Anaconda Copper Min. Co. v. Butte & B. Min. Co., 17 Mont. 519, 43 Pac. 924; Montana Ore Purchasing Co. v. Boston & M. Consol. Copper & Silver Min. Co., 20 Mont. 528, 52 Pac. 273; Butte & B. Consol. Min. Co. v. Montana Ore Purchasing Co., 21 Mont. 539, 52 Pac. 375; Montana Ore Purchasing Co. v. Boston & M. Consol. Copper & Silver Min. Co., 22 Mont. 159, 56 Pac. 120.) Por present purposes, therefore, we shall assume the finding in favor of plaintiff as to the course of the vein through the Nipper claim to be correct, and proceed to determine the legal question presented upon this theory of the case.
Prom this point of view it is apparent that the apex of the vein, in its course through the Nipper claim, crosses both side lines. The defendants, therefore, have no right to* follow the vein on its dip in the direction of the Adventure claim. The supposed side lines of the Nipper claim are in fact end lines, and whatever rights its owners have to follow the vein in the direction of the Adventure are limited by a vertical plane passing downward -through the south side line extended in its own
It is equally as Avell settled by the adjudicated cases that the extralateral rights of the owners of the Oden claim, lying to the south between the Nipper and the Adventure, if they have any at all upon the vein in question, are limited toward the west by a vertical plane passing downward through' the point II, and parallel with the east end line of that claim. Assuming that the end lines of the Oden are parallel, a condition is presented which was considered by this Court in Fitzgerald v. Clark, 17 Mont. 100, 52 Am. St. Rep. 665, 42 Pac. 213, 30 L. R. A. 803, and the conclusion there stated is that, where the apex of the vein passes through one of the parallel end lines and a side line, the extralateral rights are bounded by the vertical plane of such end line and a parallel plane passing downward through the point where the apex crosses the side line. This case was affirmed on appeal by the Supreme Court of the United States (171 U. S. 92, 18 Sup. Ct. 941, 43 L. Ed. 81) upon the authority of Del Monte Min. & Mill. Co. v. Last
It thus appears that neither the owners of the Nipper nor of the Oden have, by virtue of their title to the portion of the apex within' their respective boundaries, the right to follow the vein on its dip into' the ground underlying the Adventure; in other words, these claims have no extralateral rights in the direction of the Adventure.
The question presented for determination upon this condition of affairs may therefore be stated thus: Assuming that the apex of the vein from which the appellants are extracting ore beneath the Adventure surface is in the Nipper ground, and that the vein in its strike crosses both of the side lines of the Nipper, so that the owners of the Nipper may not follow the vein on its dip to the south; can the plaintiff, who owns the Adventure claim, successfully assert title to the ores in that part of the vein beneath its surface and within the planes of its exterior boundaries ? The defendants insist that it cannot do so, because, not having the top or apex of the vein within the exterior boundaries of the Adventure claim, it has. no title to the part of the vein lying under the surface, notwithstanding defendants have no title thereto. In other words, this part of the vein wras not granted to the plaintiff by its patent, and. therefore the defendants, though without title themselves, commit no wrong upon plaintiff in entering beneath the surface and taking away ores to which it has no title. This contention has no foundation either in law or reason. Under the common-law rule as. adopted in this country, a grant of lands without specific reservation conveys all rights above and beneath the surface, usque ad coelum ei ad or cum. It is not uncommon,, however, for such conveyances to make reservations of rights both above and below the surface, and the fact that this is true in a particular case in no way affects the validity of the particular conveyance.
In what respect does a grant frrnn the United States under
The passage quoted from the opinion of Judge Ross in Doe v. Waterloo Mining Go., supra, is directly in accord with the view expressed by the Supreme Court of Dakota in Duggan v. Davey, 4 Dakota 110, 26 N. W. 887, as well as with the result of King v. Amy and Silversmith Mining Go., supra. In the latter case the defendant was the owner of the Amy claim. The plaintiff and the defendant were tenants in common in the Non-Consolidated claim, having a common boundary with the Amy on the north. The apex of the vein in the Amy crossed both side lines and passed into the Non-Consolidated across the common boundary. The defendant had taken a large amount of ore from within that portion of the Non-Consolidated east of a plane passing downward through a line parallel with the end lines of the Amy at the point where the vein passed into the Non-Consolidated. This Court (9 Mont. 543, 24 Pac. 200) held that this ore belonged to the defendant by virtue of its right to follow the vein on its dip toward the north. Upon appeal the Supreme Court of the United States reversed the judgment of this Court, holding that the side lines of the Amy were its end lines, that the extralateral rights of the defendant
Under the provisions of the statute, as they have been construed by these and the other cases heretofore cited,' it is only the locator, or his successor, or a patentee, who has any right to follow a vein into the boundaries of an adjoining owner, and the latter, holding under a location or patent, is prima facie entitled to everything beneath his surface. He may assert this prima facie title to prevent intrusion by any one who cannot show that he comes with the right acquired by a compliance with the provisions of the statute. This conclusion is also in accord with the spirit of all the statutes regulating the disposition of the public lands, which make it manifest that it is the policy of the government to grant every right therein, except where express reservation is made.
Defendants cite and rely upon Montana Co. v. Clark (C. C.) 42 Fed. 626, and Driscoll v. Dunwoody, 7 Mont. 394, 16 Pac. 726, as conclusive of their contention. It is true that in Montana Co. v. Clark, Judge Knowles reached a conclusion directly contrary to that here stated, but that case is contrary to all the authorities so> far as we are advised, and does not meet with our approval. The case of Driscoll v. Dunwoody is not pertinent, as it does not deal with any phase of the question involved in the case at bar.
The order of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.