90 P. 665 | Or. | 1907
Opinion by
This is a suit to foreclose sundry miners’ liens for labor performed by the plaintiff and his assignors upon a group of quartz mines in Josephine County at the request and for the benefit of the defendants, Crawford, Smith and Poindexter, who were in possession under a lease or contract of purchase from the owner, which lease or contract had been previously recorded in a book designated as “Record of Mining Conveyances.” The statute authorizing liens on mines in favor of laborers and material-men provides that it shall not apply to the owner or owners when the mine is worked by a lessee, if a copy of the lease is recorded in the “mining records” of the county before the work is begun: B. & C. Comp. § 5668. The only question for decision on this appeal is whether the lease referred to was so recorded. To determine this question, it will be necessary to refer briefly to the legislation on the question of mining records.
By the law of 1866 (Hill’s Ann. Laws 1892, § 3834) bills of sale and conveyances of placer or surface mining claims weie required to be recorded in a book kept for that purpose by the county clerk to be called the “Record of Conveyances of Mining-Claims.” This section was repealed in 1898 (Laws 1898, p. 16), and the statute then enacted relating to mining claims required the locator of a quartz claim to file for record with the recorder
Reversed.