148 F. 678 | 9th Cir. | 1906
after stating” the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
We find it necessary to consider only the second ground on which the court. found the equities with the appellee and dismissed the bill. ,The trial court upon the evidence found that there had been no discovery of mineral sufficient to sustain the placer location. Although in some instances courts have questioned the necessity of an actual discovery of mineral upon gold placer ground, it is established by the decided weight of authority that appropriate discovery is as necessary to the location of a placer claim as to the location of a lode claim. 1 Lindley on Mines, § 437; 20 Am.& Eng.Ency.of Law, 708, and cases there cited.
The evidence of the discovery of mineral on the placer claim is as follows: The appellant testified that for about 10 days prior to locating the claim he prospected the ground, and in so doing panned frequently, with the result that in most instances he secured colors of gold and in some instances fairly good prospects of gold. Another witness, one Woodward, who was hired to further prospect on the claim, testified that the result of his panning “showed colors of gold in each instance, and many of such pans showed what miners and prospectors are in the habit of calling 'good prospects’ of gold.” The testimony of another witness was that he panned several pans of gravel and dirt on said claim and found colors of gold in each instance, and that, while there he saw several pans washed out by Mr. Woodward with somewhat better results, all of said pans contained colors readily and easily seen and in some instances quite a number of them. The sum and substance of this evidence is, not that gold had been discovered on the claim in such quantities as to justify a person of ordinary prudence in further expending labor and means with a reasonable prospect of success, but that colors of gold had been found which were fairly good
The court quoted with approval, also, the following from Lindley on Mines, § 336: “The facts which are within the observation of the discoverer, and which induce him to locate, should be such as would justify a man of ordinary prudence, not necessarily a skilled miner, in the expenditure of his time and money in the development of the property.”
The decree of the District Court is affirmed.