Campbell v. Taylor

3 Utah 325
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 3 Utah 325 (Campbell v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Campbell v. Taylor, 3 Utah 325 (Utah 1883).

Opinion

EMERSON, J.:

By leave of the court, appellants filed an amended complaint, to which the respondent demurred and answered at the same time. The cause coming on for argument on the demurrer, it was sustained, with leave to the appellants to amend, which they declined, and elected to stand by their amended complaint. Thereupon the court dismissed the complaint, with costs against the appellants; whereupon they prosecute this appeal.

The nature of the action is sufficiently set forth in the portion of the complaint copied below.

The complaint alleges that the appellants were the owners entitled to and in possession of a certain mining claim situated in Pinto Iron mining district, Iron county, Utah, known and recorded as the Tip Top, particularly describing it by metes and bounds and by reference to a section and township of the government survey; and further alleges that “said [326]*326vein or lode bears iron and other minerals, and said mining claim contains an area of nineteen thousand seven and four acres, and the whole thereof in conflict and included within the boundaries of the Great Western Iron Mountain Extension of the Mountain Peak mining claim and lode or vein sought to be patented by the defendant from the government of the United States, situated in section 25, said township and range.

“ Plaintiffs further allege that the said Tip Top vein, lode, and mining claim is a relocation of a certain lode, vein, and mining claim, located and known as the Excell lode and mining claim, bearing iron and other minerals, situated in said district, county, and territory, and that the point of discovery, or discovery monument thereof, is and was the same and identical with and that selected for and established by the plaintiffs as and for the Tip Top lode and mining claim, and that the lode and area embraced in said Excell is about and substantially the same as embraced within the said Tip Top lode and mining claim; and in fixing the boundaries and in marking the claim upon the ground, and in making the monuments of said Tip Top lode, vein, and mining claim, the plaintiffs fixed upon and selected the same points for discovery and corner monuments that had been selected and fixed for the discovery and corner monuments for said Excell lode and mining claim by the locator thereof, and which are the said discovery and posts aforesaid repaired and rebuilt by plaintiffs, defining the lode and boundaries of said Tip Top lode, vein, and mining claim as aforesaid, the word ‘ posts ’ meaning the corner monuments of the claims. And that in making the record of the location notice of said Excell lode and mining claim in and upon the mining records of said district, through inadvertence, there was a mistake made in giving the course "south twenty-three degrees fifty-five minutes west from said initial point along the said center two hundred feet to a post in a mound of stone for the center of the easterly end, making one thousand five hundred lineal feet/ when the true course was and should have been south twenty-three degrees fifty-five minutes east; and also, through inadvertence, there was another mistake made in making the record of said location notice upon said record, in this, to wit: in [327]*327saying in the record thereof ‘ the above-mentioned monument, being the discovery of claim, is situated about north four degrees east, and about two thousand three hundred and eighty feet from the south-west corner of the south-east quarter of section 25, township 36 south, range 13 west, Salt Lake meridian, and about one thousand seven hundred and eighty feet north from the Chester No. 2,’the said figures 13 should have been 14 in said recordation, making the true range in which said Excell lode and mining claim was situated and said Chester No. 2 lode and mining claim was or is situated, range 14 instead of range 13, as appears upon the record of its location upon the said mining records of said district.

“ Said record of the [notice of location of said Excell lode and mining claim, with the mistakes aforesaid, is in the words and figures as follows, to wit.”

Then follows a copy of the notice of location' of the Ex-cell, signed by the respondent, following which the complaint proceeds: i

“Plaintiffs further allege, on their information and belief, that if said Excell lode, vein, and mining claim, or the said Great Western Iron Mountain Extension of the Mountain Peak lode and mining claim, the latter more particularly hereinafter described, were or either of them ever was a valid mining claim or location, that the same and each of them were by the defendant and his grantors and locators thereof abandoned and forfeited prior to the location thereof by the plaintiffs as the said Tip Top lode, vein, and mining claim; that the amount of labor and other conditions and improvements required by law were not done or made by said defendant or his grantors upon said Excell or said Great Western Iron Mountain Extension of the Mountain Peak lodes, veins, and mining claims during each or any of the years since they or either of them were or was located, and the same and each of said lodes and claims were and was subject to relocations under the laws of the United States.”

“And that on and prior to the tenth day of February, 1879, the pi’emises hereinbefore described as the Tip Top lode, vein, and mining claim, and situated in the said Pinto Iron mining district of Iron county, Utah, were vacant, unoccupied, and unclaimed mineral land of the United States, and subject to [328]*328location under the mining laws thereof, and that on or about the tenth of February, 1879, the said plaintiffs being citizens of the United States over the age of twenty-one years, entered upon and explored said premises, found therein rock in place bearing iron, silver, and other precious metals, and thereupon, on or about said day, located and appropriated for a mining-claim for said mineral fifteen hundred linear feet of and along said vein or lode of mineral and surface ground embracing-said vein, lode, and mineral, and six hundred feet in width for the length aforesaid, three hundred feet on each side of said mineral vein or lode. That said locators, on the day the claim was located, erected a monument at the discovery on said ledge or vein of mineral, iron, silver, and other ores, and marked said mineral on the ground, distinctly by monuments, so that its boundaries could and be thereby easily traced, and posted at the discovery monument a written notice of said location containing the subscription and names of the locators, and a full description of said mining- claim located by reference to natural objects and permanent monuments, fully identifying the claim. That said locators have remained in the possession of said mining claim and worked and improved the same in compliance with all the mining- laws and customs, general and local, both of the United States and of said Pinto district. The same was recorded on or about the tenth day of February, 1879, in the office of the recorder of said mining-district, and now remains of record therein.

“That the defendant pretends to have, own, and claims a certain alleged mining- claim which is by said defendant called the Great Western Iron Mountain Extension of Mountain Peak mine or vein bearing iron, containing, as is alleged, one thousand five hundred linear feet by six hundred feet in width, designated by the field-notes and official plat on file in the United States land office at Salt Lake City, Utah, on application for patent, as lot No.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Utah 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-taylor-utah-1883.