26 Cal. 263 | Cal. | 1864
The respondents make certain technical objections to the record in this case, which come too late. The case was decided upon its merits by the late Supreme Court, and thereafter upon petition that Court granted a rehearing ; but after the rehearing was had the record became lost and no final decision was made. At the April term of this Court' the appellants, with the consent of the respondents, were allowed to file the present transcript to supply the place of the former. In view of the history of the case it can hardly be presumed that the defects insisted upon, if they existed in the old record, were not in some way disposed of before the merits were reached, either by an adverse decision of the. Court or an express or implied waiver on the part of the respondents. Moreover, if the case' was now before the Court for the first time, these objections come too late. The case was submitted upon its merits on briefs by consent of parties, without • any exception being taken to the transcript, and it makes no difference that such submission was made prior to the day on which the case was set for argument. Technical objections to the transcript, not taken before the final submission of the case upon
The action was brought to recover the possession of a mining claim. The plaintiffs aver title, possession and ouster in the usual form. The defendants specifically deny all the material averments in the complaint, and affirmatively aver a forfeiture and abandonment by the plaintiff under the mining-laws of the district embracing the claim, and that thereafter, finding the premises vacant and unappropriated, they lawfully entered and occupied the same. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiffs. The exceptions are to the admission of evidence, and to the giving and refusing of instructions.
It is insisted by counsel for respondents that the exceptions to the instructions must be disregarded, because the same were not taken at the proper time. The record shows that the exceptions were taken after the jury had withdrawn to consider of their verdict and before the verdict was rendered. In support of this proposition The Life and Fire Insurance Company v. The Mechanics’ Fire Insurance Company, of New York, 7 Wend. 31, decided at the May term, 1831, is cited. In that case, as in the present, an exception was taken- to the charge of the Court after the jury had withdrawn and before they had returned with their verdict. The Court refused to allow the exception upon the ground that it came too late and should have been taken, if at all, before the jury had withdrawn. On appeal this action of the Court below was sustained by the ■ Supreme Court. Yet the same Court, but a" little more than a year afterwards, at the October term, 1832, in Wakeman v. Lyon, 9 Wend. 241, where the bill of exceptions expressly stated that the exception to the decision of the Judge was taken after the verdict was delivered, said: “We will presume that the exception was taken in due time unless it is expressly shown that it was not taken until after the verdict. We do not regard the manner in which the'proceedings on the trial are stated in the bill, and so we have repeatedly ruled.” In Jones v. Thurmond’s Heirs, 5 Texas, 318, it was held that
The one hundred and eighty-eighth section of the Practice Act thus defines an exception : “An exception is an objection taken at the trial to a decision upon a matter of law, whether such trial be by jury, Court or referees, and whether the decision be made during the formation of a jury, or in the admission of evidence, or in the charge to a jury, or at any other time from the calling of the action for trial to the rendering of the verdict or decision.”
This section does not in terms fix the precise time at which an exception must be taken, but it implies, we think, that the exception should be taken at the time the ruling is made, that is to say, before any further steps are taken or progress made in the trial, and in time to enable the opposite party or the Court, as the case may be, to remedy the objection if it be deemed a substantial one. The question is doubtless one which rests very much in the discretion of the Court below, and which the District Courts might regulate by a rule, as provided in the twenty-eighth section of the Judiciary Act. In the present case the Court below allowed the exceptions, and we think it was not error to do so, and, had the Court refused to do so, we should have been of the same opinion.
It appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs,, with the exception of William 0. St. John, did not seek to recover upon the ground of a location by themselves, but by virtue of a
The exceptions taken to the admission of evidence all relate to the testimony which was offered for the purpose of proving title under the first location, and the sales thereafter made by the then locators, except the one taken to the bill of sale from Jones & Co. to William St. John, made on the seventh of February, 1857. As we understand the evidence, which we confess as presented in the record, is somewhat obscure, this latter bill of sale is of the interest which Jones & Co. acquired under the second location, and not of that purchased by them of Randall, which he held under and by virtue of the first location. Aside from this last exception, we deem discussion unnecessary, for the reason that under the view which we take of this'case the rulings of the Court below upon the evidence relating to the title derived under- the first location, whether erroneous or not, become immaterial, for the reason that they could not have possibly affected the verdict.. So far as the plaintiffs attempted to derive title from the first location and the transfers under it, they, in our judgment, utterly failed. But under the second location, as we shall presently see, they
The exception to the bill of sale from Jones & Co. to William Sfc. John was not well taken. The grounds of the exception were, first, that the bill of sale was not under seal; and, second, that it purported to be executed by Jones, one of the grantors, by his attorney in fact, who it was shown had at the time a written power which was not produced at the trial. The first objection is answered by the statute concerning the conveyance of mining claims (Statutes of 1860, p. 175) which provides that mining claims may be conveyed by bills of sale or instruments in writing not under seal, and that all conveyances of mining claims heretofore made by bills of sale or instruments in writing not under seal, shall have the same force and effect as prima fade evidence of sale as if they had been made by deed under seal. The second objection does not go to the admissibility of the bill of sale, but to its effect when admitted. It was the bill of sale of Sweet and Barney as well as Jones. Its execution by Sweet and Barney was fully proven, and that was sufficient to entitle it to admission. If its execution by Jones was not proven, counsel for the defense should have asked the Court at the proper time to so instruct the jury, and direct them to disregard the bill of sale so far as it purported to convey the interest of Jones, and if the Court refused, taken his exception. Such is the only way in which, under the circumstances, counsel could have made the point which he sought to make by his demurrer to the evidence. But this course was not pursued, there being no exception except to the ruling of the Court admitting the bill of sale in evidence, which ruling, as we have seen, was correct.
But if there was a failure of proof as to the sale by Jones,
We now come to the exceptions to the giving and refusing of instructions.
- The defendants relied upon an alleged forfeiture or loss of the right to mine the ground on the part of the plaintiffs, if they had ever acquired such a right, by a failure to work the ground and keep the right alive, as required by the mining rules and regulations in force in the district. And that, by
Without noticing in detail the instructions of the Court, it is sufficient to say that the jury were instructed in effect that if they found from the evidence that the plaintiffs had acquired a right to mine the ground in controversy prior to the entry of the defendants, that right could not be divested by a noncompliance on their part with any rules or regulations adopted by the miners ; but that such rules and regulations might be considered by them in connection with the other evidence for the purpose of determining whether or not the plaintiffs had abandoned their claim. We understand the learned Judge of the Court below to have here used the term forfeiture in its mining law sense, and the word abandonment in its common law sense. Such being the case, the jury were, in effect, instructed that there was not, and could not be, any such thing as a forfeiture under mining rules and regulations, and if so, the instruction was undoubtedly erroneous.
The term forfeiture as used in our mining customs and codes means the loss of a right to mine a particular piece of ground, previously acquired, by neglect or failure to comply with the rules and" regulations of the bar or diggings in which the ground is situated, prescribing the acts which must be done in order to continue and keep alive that right after it has been once acquired. As a defense it is entirely distinct and separate from that of abandonment. It involves no question of intent, but rests entirely upon the mining rules and regulations, and involves only the question whether, in point of fact, those rules and regulations have been
That the miners may make rules and regulations to govern the acquisition and tenure of mining rights has been expressly and, in our judgment, wisely declared by the Legislature, with the further declaration that such rules and regulations shall be' admitted in evidence and shall control the decision of mining controversies. (Prac. Act, Sec. 621; Morton v. The Solambo Mining Company, decided at the present term.)
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered. /