Lead Opinion
By the Court,
This is an appeal from an order denying defendant’s motion to dissolve a preliminary injunction, which had been granted at the time of the commencement of the action. In issuing the injunction, and in refusing the motion for its dissolution, the court considered the complaint and affidavits which were presented by the respective parties.
It is alleged that the plaintiff holds the patent from the State of Nevada to 160 acres of agricultural land, through the application and contract of the plaintiff’s grantor; that for many years prior to 1890 the Holmes Mining Company operated mills and mining machinery for the reduction of ores, by which a large amount of tailings were produced and impounded on the land, and that these ever since have remained in place in one body, to the amount of between 400,000 and 500,000 tons, of the value of $5 per ton; that the tailings have never been abandoned, and that they were duly sold by the sheriff to the plaintiff under a writ of execution in the suit of the Southern Nevada Gold and Silver Mining-Company against the Holmes Mining Company; that in August, 1904, the original defendants in the present action, who have since conveyed to the Belleville Placer Mining Company, located the ground upon which the tailings were situated as a placer claim, and publicly asserted that the deposit of the tailings converted the ground into mineral land, subject to placer location under the United States mineral laws; that the defendants, claiming a right, title, and interest in the tailings by reason of the placer location, in August, 1904, unlawfully entered upon the land, and proceeded to excavate and remove some of the tailings where the same were impounded by the former owners thereof; that the tailings were not the subject of mineral entry as a placer claim or otherwise; that the land was not mineral land, and that the tailings were and are the private property of the plaintiff, and were the property of the Holmes Mining Company until the title and possession passed by the sheriff’s sale to the plaintiff; that the defendants
The affidavits which were used upon the hearing of the motion raise a conflict as to a question of fact relating to whether the tailings had been impounded or abandoned by the Holmes Mining Company. Among other contentions, it is claimed on behalf of the defendant that the complaint does not state facts constituting a cause of action or warranting the issuance of an injunction; that under the case of Rogers v. Cooney,
In Marino v. Williams,
"In Russell v. Farley,
"A preliminary injunction maintaining the status quo may properly issue whenever the questions of law or fact to be ultimately determined in a suit are grave and difficult, and injury to the moving party will be immediate, certain, and great if it is denied, while the loss or inconvenience to the opposing party will be comparatively small and insignificant if it is granted. * * * The arguments and brief of counsel invite us to a consideration of the questions of law which must be finally determined upon a demurrer to the bill, or upon a final hearing of this case after answer. We have, however, found it unnecessary to decide these questions on1 this appeal, and we express no opinion upon them. They are of sufficient importance and difficulty to demand careful examination and deliberate consideration. In Glascott v. Lang, 3 Myl. & C. 451, 455, Lord Chancellor Cottenham said: 'In looking through the pleadings and the evidence, for the purpose of an injunction, it is not necessary that the court should find a case which would entitle the plaintiff to relief at all events. It is quite sufficient if the court finds, upon the pleadings and upon the evidence, a case which makes the transaction a proper subject of investigation in a court of equity.’ In Hadden v. Dooley,
Under the circumstances, we do not think that it was error to refuse to dissolve the injunction before the time had arrived for finally determining the doubtful and controlling questions involved.
The order of the district court is affirmed.
Rehearing
ON Rehearing
As the within petition raises the questions which were not called to the attention of the lower court and regarding which appellant is not precluded from applying to the lower court for relief and which are not embraced in the specifications of error, and this court is still satisfied with its conclusion regarding the matter determined by its decision, the petition for rehearing is denied.
