65 P. 67 | Idaho | 1901
This is an appeal from an order granting the plaintiffs a temporary injunction restraining the defendants from removing from the Golden Group placer mining claim logs cut by the defendants from trees growing thereon, which logs are now banked upon the Middle Boise river, upon said mining claim. It is contended by the appellants that the order granting said injunction was unauthorized, for the reason that the appeEants are solvent, and that a plain and adequate remedy exists in behalf of the respondents, either by action of replevin, or by action to recover damages for said timber, in the event of plaintiffs establishing title to said mining claim. It is contended by said appellants that the remedy of injunction is purely equitable, and should not be invoked or exercised in this case. Appellants cite many authorities showing the old equitable doctrine and rules of chancery relating to injunctions. The principal authority relied upon by the appellants is the case of Heaney v. Commer
In the ease at bar the plaintiff’s complaint shows his right to a certain mining claim; shows that the defendants were trespassing thereon, cutting timber for the purpose of removing the same, and would remove the same unless prohibited by the process of the court. It is true that the answer denies the title in the plaintiff, but it admits that the defendants were cutting timber upon said mining claim at the time the action was commenced. Suit was commenced October 9, 1900. The temporary injunction complained of was issued on the twenty-sixth day of February, 1901. The notice of the application for the injunction stated that an injunction would be asked "restraining the above-named defendants and all other persons from removing the timber and logs cut off from what is known as the ‘Golden Group Placer Claim’ by authority of defendants, and now banked on the Middle Fork of Boise river, ready for floating down said river to Boise, Idaho.” Appellants complain that the injunction went further than this. This is true, as said injunction commanded that the defendants "do absolutely desist and refrain from entering upon the land and premises, or any part thereof, described in said complaint, and called the ‘Golden Group Placer Claim,’ and from cutting and removing or cutting or removing timber trees therefrom, or from removing saw logs heretofore cut from said premises, and banked upon the south bank of the Middle Boise river, upon said premises, and ready for floating down said river, and from committing any waste or nuisance upon said premises, or interfering in any manner whatever with the possession of the plaintiffs of, in, and to said premises, and the trees, timber, and logs thereon, until further ordered in the premises.” It was shown at the hearing of the application for the temporary injunction complained of that appellants had ceased cutting timber upon said mining ground. The temporary injunction issued restrains them from further trespassing upon said premises, and from removing said logs or from cutting timber. It is true that the injunction goes somewhat further than the notice specified, yet inasmuch as
But, going beyond the statute cited, and the case of Gilpin v. Mining Co., supra, and Aveline v. Ridenbaugh, 2 Idaho, 158, 9 Pac. 601, the trend of modern decisions and authorities upholds the right of plaintiffs to the remedy of injunction granted them temporarily by the district court. See the following authorities: Davis v. Reed, 14 Md. 152; Fulton v. Harman, 44 Md. 253; Shipley v. Ritter, 7 Md. 408, 61 Am. Dec. 371; Smith v. Rock, 59 Vt. 232, 9 Atl. 551; De La Croix v. Villere, 11 La. Ann. 39; Lanier v. Alison (C. C.) 31 Fed. 100; United States v. Guglard (C. C.), 79 Fed. 23; Smith’s Appeal, 69 Pa. St. 474; King v. Campbell (C. C.), 85 Fed. 814; Disbrow v. Hardwood Co., 17 App. Div. 610, 59 N. Y. Supp. 378; King v. Stuart (C. C.), 84 Fed. 546; Watson v. Sutherland, 5 Wall. 74, 18 L. ed. 580; Irwin v. Lewis, 50 Miss. 368; United States v. Parrott, 7 Morr. Min. Rep. 335; Boyce v. Grundy, 3 Pet. 210, 7 L. ed. 655. In Watson v. Sutherland, supra, the court said: “If the remedy at law is sufficient, equity will not relieve, but it is not enough that there is a remedy at law. It must be plain and adequate, or, in other words, as practical and efficient to the ends of justice and its prompt administration as the remedy in equity.” We are not in sympathy with the idea that a trespasser, notwithstanding that he may be solvent, may go upon the lands of another and cut timber thereon, and that the owner of such lands is not, under our statute cited supra, entitled to a temporary injunction to restrain the removal of said timber until the owner can establish his title to said land in an action commenced for that purpose. As was well said by Mr. Chief Justice Beatty in Gilpin v. Mining Co., supra, the inconvenience to the defendant from a temporary injunction will be less than would be the injury to plaintiff should plaintiff succeed in establishing his right.
In closing, it is well to suggest that the appellants here do not assert title to the mining property claimed by plaintiffs, but disclaim any claim thereto. They claim their right to the timber in question on the ground that the land is vacant mineral land of the United States government. This does not help their ease. Plaintiffs set up a placer mining location of said ground, and claim title thereunder. The property in question should be preserved until their alleged title is determined. Section 3333 of the Eevised Statutes of the United States secures the plaintiffs, under their location, if legally made, the possession of their mining claim. That section of the statute provides that the locator or owner “shall have the exclusive right of possession and enjoyment of all the surface included within the lines of their location,” etc. The right granted by this statute is a strong and additional reason why the temporary injunction complained of here should not be disturbed pending the litigation as to the title asserted by plaintiffs. For the foregoing reasons, the order granting the temporary injunction appealed from should be, and is, affirmed. Costs awarded to respondents.