57 P. 641 | Ariz. | 1899
(after stating the facts).—The last four assignments of error, numbered 8, 9, 10, and 11, may be grouped together. Counsel for appellant have made an exhaustive • argument upon them, and have placed the errors there assigned in a prominent attitude. Grouped together, they relate to the rights of the parties to a trial by a common-law jury. The cause was tried before a panel of twelve. The court instructed them that: “Under the law in this class of cases, it is not required that a unanimous verdict be returned by the jury. If, therefore, you do not unanimously agree upon a verdict, but three fourths of you, or more, do agree upon a verdict, such verdict will be signed by your number constituting said three fourths, or more, and returned into court,”—upon which instruction a verdict was returned, signed by but nine of the jurors. Act No. 51 of the Session Laws of Arizona of 1891 provides as follows (section 1): “That in all trials of civil cases and in all trials of misdemeanors in the courts of this territory, where a jury of twelve persons shall be impaneled to try such ease, the concurrence of three fourths (%) of such jury shall be sufficient to render a verdict therein. And in all such trials, when the said jury of twelve persons shall unanimously agree upon a verdict, said
The question, then, as to whether the court committed an error in instructing the jury that a verdict could be rendered by three fourths of their number, and by afterwards receiving a verdict signed by but nine of their number, can be settled by determining whether this particular action is a common-law action. This action is on an “adverse” filed in the land office to contest the right of an applicant for United States patent. In Doe v. Mining Co., 43 Fed. 219, the question was raised by demurrer as to whether an “adverse” was a law action or a suit in equity. The demurrer raised the point that the suit should be dismissed for the reason that the complaint showed upon its face that the plaintiff had a full, adequate, and complete remedy at law by the ordinary action in ejectment. The court, after discussing the common-law actions for the recovery of land, decided that in the proceeding contemplated by the statute no such judgment could be rendered as was rendered in common-law actions; that the proceeding there provided for has not for its object the recovery of possession of the mining ground, nor is possession made by the statute the test of either party’s right; that the action could be maintained whether either in or out of possession. “The sole object of the proceeding in court is the determination of the contest that arose .in the land office, the point of which is, Which of the applicants, if either, is entitled to receive the patent from the government? The right of possession referred to in the statute is not the right which flows from and is a part of the title of ownership of private land. It has no relation to such right, but it is the right which flows from -a compliance with the laws prescribed by Congress for the acquisition of a government patent for mineral lands.
2. The first assignment of error is upon the following instruction: “And you are further instructed that the burden of proof is upon the defendant to show that the said O’Donnell failed to do the amount of $100 worth of work upon what is known as the ‘Wizard Claim’ in the year 1895.” Under the issue this was not an erroneous instruction. The answer admitted the former location of plaintiff’s Wizard claim. Defendant made his locations upon the same ground upon the apprehension and theory that plaintiff’s Wizard claim had been forfeited, and made such allegation in his answer. In the ease of Hammer v. Mining Co., 130 U. S. 291-301, 9 Sup. Ct. 552, where the same question was decided, it was said: “As to the alleged forfeiture set up by defendant, it is sufficient to say that the burden of proving it rests upon him;
3. Assignments of error numbered 2 and 3 relate to instructions of the court to the effect that the location notice of the Hillside mining claim, containing, as it does, the assertion that the Hillside location is a relocation of the Wizard mining claim, makes an implied admission on the part of the defendant and its grantors of the validity of the location of the Wizard. In the case of Wills v. Blain, 4 N. Mex. 378, 20 Pac. 798, the supreme court of New Mexico, in regard to a similar instruction, held that the same was good. They say: “The relocator, when he so describes himself in the notice, solemnly admits, in an instrument which is made a matter of record, that he is not a discoverer of mineral, but an appropriator thereof, on the ground that the original discoverer has forfeited his right. The notice becomes in some sense an instrument of title —a record. It is the equivalent of an admission of record of an original locator that the locator claims a forfeiture by reason of the failure on the part of the first locator to make his annual expenditure. This we believe to be the doctrine of Belk v. Meagher, 104 U. S. 279, and on that authority sustained the instruction of the court below on that point.” We need not take space in this opinion to insert the instructions given in this case and the instructions given in the case of Wills v. Blain, to compare them, but it will be sufficient for us to say that both use such language as, in effect, says that such a recital in the location notice of the relocated claim impliedly admits the validity of the prior location.
4. The fourth assignment of error is that the court erred in permitting the introduction of the location notice of the Wizard claim to be read in evidence, and specifies as the reasons,—1. That the citizenship of the locators had not been shown; and 2. That the location was vague and indefinite. The reason why the location notice was claimed as vague and
5. The fifth assignment of error is that the court erred in admitting testimony as to the acts of location of the Wizard claim, and appellant argues the assignment of error upon the ground that the complaint did not state such facts in regard to the location as would warrant any evidence of the location notice. Without making a reference to the allegations in the complaint, we think it will be sufficient for us to say that appellant’s contention in that particular cannot be sustained.
6. The remaining assignments of error, numbered 6 and 7, relate to the proof of citizenship of McKeague, one of the locators of the Wizard. At the trial, McKeague was' absent. Plaintiff showed that he had used every effort to find his whereabouts, and to have him present at the trial, but Mc-Keague was unable to be found, which fact compelled the plaintiff to resort to proof of McKeague’s citizenship from other sources. Evidence was adduced to show he had made declarations of his citizenship to his friends and companions; that he had voted at the elections held in the territory of Arizona, and that his name had appeared upon the great register of Yavapai County; and that while he was a resident of Big Bug Mining District, in Yavapai County, Arizona, he
Davis, J., and Doan, J., concur.