Alder Gulch Con. Mining Co. v. Hayes

9 P. 581, 6 Mont. 31
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 9 P. 581 (Alder Gulch Con. Mining Co. v. Hayes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alder Gulch Con. Mining Co. v. Hayes, 9 P. 581, 6 Mont. 31 (Mo. 1886).

Opinion

Galbraith, J.

"We would be warranted in refusing to determine this cause, for the reason that it does not comply with the rule of this court as to the mechanical method of its presentation. It should not. have been filed with the clerk. But on account of its importance we have concluded to consider it.

It is an appeal from a judgment. The evidence has been stricken out of the transcript. But even if it were not, it would not be considered on this appeal from the judgment alone. To enable us to look into the evidence, and to determine whether or not the findings of the court were supported thereby, a motion for a new trial was necessary. Allport v. Kelly, 2 Mont. 343; Chumasero v. Viall, 3 Mont. 376.

There are no bills of exception. The only question, therefore, which this record presents for our consideration is whether or not the judgment is inconsistent with the express findings of the court. Chumasero v. Viall, supra; Mathews v. Kinsell, 41 Cal. 512; Thompson v. O'Neil, id. 683.

[33]*33It is a principle of law that all facts which are necessary to support the judgment, and which come within the issues raised by the pleadings, although not expressly found, will be presumed to be in accordance with the judgment. Thompson v. ONeil, supra.

The findings of the court below were as follows, viz.:

1. That the plaintiff, at the commencement of this action, was, and is now, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the territory of Montana, and doing business as such in its corporate name of Alder Gulch Consolidated Mining Company.

“2. That said plaintiff, in April, 1883, was, and ever since has been, and is now, the owner and possessor of the Placer mining ground situated in Alder gulch, county of Madison, territory aforesaid, described in the complaint of plaintiff; that said ground is valuable for the gold and precious metals therein contained. That plaintiff had constructed on said ground in April, 1883, and ever since said time has had a bed-rock flume, a reservoir, and dams, and other structures for the purpose of mining said ground.

“3. That the defendants, for more than seven years prior to the commencement of this action, were, and ever since have been, the owners and possessors of the Placer mining ground in said defendants’ answer described; and that the ditch of defendants, which is mentioned in the complaint and answer on file herein, was constructed by the' defendants to mine their said ground.

“4. That said ditch of the defendants is intended to divert the water flowing in said Alder gulch at a point where the Cover dam was constructed in A. D. 1883, and to convey the same by about two thousand feet of said mining ground of the plaintiff and said reservoir of the plaintiff, and discharge the same at a point on said ground of the defendants about eight hundred feet west and below said reservoir, and that plaintiff is thereby deprived of the use of said water in said reservoir, and about eight hundred feet above the head-gates of the flume of plaintiff.

[34]*34“5. That in 1883 Cover bar, on the east side of said Alder gulch, and Fairweather bar, on the west side of said gulch, the latter being about one thousand eight hundred feet below the former, were located at the same time and notice of location by the original discoverers, Cover, Fair-weather, Edgar, and Hughes, who are partners; that the discovery claims were four hundred feet long on each claim bar; that said discoverers, as partners, then claimed the privilege of constructing a ditch on each of said bars, commencing at the discovery claims thereon, and thence running up until it intersected said Alder gulch, and using the water of said gulch for mining purposes on said bars.

“ 6. That said discoverers immediately thereafter constructed said ditches and worked their claims on said bars by the use of the waters of said Alder gulch or creek, which then flowed in or near the middle of said gulch.

7. That said Cover bar has been nearly worked out, and that mining operations thereon have ceased, and no water was, at the commencement of this action, used on said bar, or demanded therefor, but the same flowed by said bar, and was used below by the plaintiff on its said ground.

“8. That the water for said Cover bar was obtained by means of a dam across said Alder gulch or creek and a ditch running therefrom to said bar on the line thereof as originally located.

“ 9. That the Fairweather bar has been worked extensively, but has not been exhausted, and that the defendants, whose said ground includes a part of said bar, intended to mine the same by means of their said ditch.

. “ 10. That the said discoverers obtained water originally for the said Fairweather bar through the Fairweather ditch, as located by them in 1863; that the head of said Fairweather ditch was about one hundred feet below the point in said Alder gulch or creek where the water was discharged from said Cover bar after being used thereon by said discoverers and their successors; that said water from said Cover bar thence flowed through said Fairweather [35]*35diteli to said Fairweather bar; and that the said Fair-weather ditch had not, prior to the commencement of this action, been used for a period of five years, and had been,through mining operations, washed out and destroyed in some places; and that these operations have been carried on by water obtained from the Cover bar and ditch, on Cover bar and above it.

“ 11. That the defendants own the Cover dam and ditch' and water-right, and claim the right to use the water originally located for mining purposes on Cover bar by means' of their said new ditch upon their said ground in said answer described. ,

“ 12. That the plaintiff, at the commencement of this action, owned, and has ever since owned, mining ground in said Alder gulch, on which the head and a portion of said Fairweather ditch were originally constructed, and that water used upon said Cover bar would flow into the natural channel of said Alder gulch or creek, and thence into the said reservoir of said plaintiff.

13. That the said ground has, and ditches hereinbefore mentioned have, always been situated in Fairweather mining district, and that the miners thereof adopted and passed, upon September, 1861, and October 2, A. D. 1867, laws, rules and regulations which are in force.

“As conclusions of law from the foregoing facts, the-court now hereby finds and decides:

“ 1. That the diversion of said water by defendants by' means of their said new ditch, at the time in said complaint mentioned, was an interference with the rights of the plaintiff to the use and enjoyment thereof in its mining operations upon its said ground.

“ 2. That the plaintiff is not estopped from asserting its rights and claims, as in said complaint alleged, by any act on its part.

“ 3. That the plaintiff is entitled to a decree as prayed for in the complaint to make perpetual the injunction herein-before issued against the defendants and each of them, and - [36]*36also a judgment for its costs and disbursements herein expended, and judgment is hereby ordered to be entered accordingly. John Coburn, Judge, First Jud. District.”

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Bluebook (online)
9 P. 581, 6 Mont. 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alder-gulch-con-mining-co-v-hayes-mont-1886.