Crœsus Mining, Milling & Smelting Co. v. Colorado Land & Mineral Co.

19 F. 78, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 366
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 19 F. 78 (Crœsus Mining, Milling & Smelting Co. v. Colorado Land & Mineral Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crœsus Mining, Milling & Smelting Co. v. Colorado Land & Mineral Co., 19 F. 78, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 366 (circtdco 1884).

Opinion

Hallett, J.

This controversy arises out of conflicting locations of mining claims on the' public mineral lands. At the trial plaintiff had a verdict, which defendant now moves to set aside, on various grounds. The errors alleged with reference to defendant’s title will first be mentioned.

Defendant’s Title— May 12, 1881, D. E. Huyele and C. M. Collins located the Maximus lode, in Pollock mining district, Summit county, Colorado. July 8th, in the same year, they filed a certificate of location. The lode was discovered on the eastern or southeastern slope of a very steep mountain, and about 160 feet below the crest of the mountain. The locators intended to lay the claim across the mountain, so that one-half or more should be on the northwestern slope. At that point the mountain is almost impassable at any season of the year, and on the 8th of July, when the survey was made, it was thought to be wholly so. What was done towards setting stakes at the northwestern end of the claim is described by the surveyor by whom the work was done, as follows:

“We then went back to the discovery cut and chained up the mountain some distance, when we came to a perpendicular precipice, or cliff of solid rock, over or around which we could not climb, owing to its precipitous nature and the fact that the crevices in the rock, and places where a foothold might have been had by one active enough to climb up the cliff, were filled with snow and ice, and it was both impracticable and dangerous to life and limb to get at the points where the stakes should be set. The side posts or stakes were set on the boundary lines of the survey somewhat short of or below the middle of the claim, and the end posts were placed farther on, in conspicuous places, as near the side boundary lines as we could find places to put them. With my instrument I took the direction of the proper places of the upper end and side posts, and calculated the distances between the places where we did set them and their proper places, and marked its distance and [368]*368direction from its proper place on each stake. The two middle side stakes and the two end stakes were set in such a way as to be evident and most likely to attract the attention of any one going up the gulch, and were within plain view of any one coming to the edge of the precipice above and looking down.”

At the time of this survey there was a practicable trail at no great distance south, and a wagon road some miles north, upon either of which it would have been possible to go to the other side of the mountain for the purpose of setting the northwestern end stakes. And later in the season it was possible to pass over the mountain at the place where the Maximus claim was located, or very near that place. The same surveyor surveyed another location, called the Bernadotte, which covered a part of the Maximus territory, for the same parties, on the 30th day of August in. the same year. With reference to the matter of getting over the mountain at that time, he testified as follows:

“This survey was made much later in the season than the other, and the difficulties of snow and ice which we had encountered in surveying the Maximus did not then exist, and we were able to climb up to the top of the ridge and set the end stakes in their proper places.”

Because of the difficulty or impossibility of getting over the mountain on the line of the Maximus claim on the 8th of July, when the survey was made, no stakes were set at the northwestern end of the claim. In lieu thereof, witness stakes were placed on the southeastern slope of the mountain, as described by the surveyor in his testimony quoted above. The northwestern end of the claim was not inaccessible from that side of the mountain. The stakes were properly set at that end of the claim in August, 1882, and it is not claimed that the point was then or at any time inaccessible, except as to the matter of getting over the mountain in a direct line from the discovery cut. Upon'these facts a question was presented at the trial whether the Maximus claim was properly marked on the surface at the northwestern end in .July, 1881, or at any time before August, 1882, when a survey for patent was made, and stakes were properly set. Defendant relies on a statute of the State, (R. S., 630,) in these words:

[369]*369“ Where in marking the surface boundaries of a claim, any one or more of such posts shall fall by right upon precipitous ground, where the proper placing of it is impracticable, or dangerous to life or limb, it shall be legal and valid to place any such post at the nearest practicable point, suitable marked to designate the proper place.”

But the act affords no support to the defendant’s position. It relates to the matter of setting stakes where the point or place where they should be set is inaccessible, and not to such circumstances as were shown in the evidence. The locators of the Maximus claim could have reached the northwestern end of the claim, at the date of the location, by routes which, although circuitous, were entirely practicable; and later in the season they could have passed over the mountain at the very place where the claim is located. To hold such marking of boundaries to be sufficient would be to disregard the act of Congress (Sec. 2324) and of the State (R. S. 630) which manifestly require something more. Upon full argument and mature consideration, the ruling at the trial that the Maximus claim cannot have effect on the northwestern side of the mountain before the date of the patent survey in August, 1882, when the stakes were properly set, seems to be correct. Defendant also asserts title to some part of the ground in dispute under another location called the Bernadotte, made in the latter part of August, 1881. No question was made as to the manner of setting the stakes on this location, but there was a controversy as to the situation of the discovery cut with reference to the side lines of the claim, the existence of a lode therein, and perhaps some other matters. During the trial but little attention was bestowed on that location, but at the close counsel for defendant proposed to discuss its validity before the jury and to ask a verdict for some part of the ground in dispute on that title, and he now complains that he was not permitted to do so.

The ruling of the Court in respect to that matter was founded on a change in the location at the time of the survey for a patent in August, 1882, which, as to the ground in dispute, was supposed to defeat the earlier location in 1881. In the first location of the Maximus and Bernadotte, in the year 1881, [370]*370they were relatively to each other and the crest of the mountain in the position shown in diagram A.

In the survey for patent in August, 1882, the Maximus was carried something like 190 feet in a southeasterly direction, so as to give it greater length on the southeastern slope of the mountain, and less on the northwestern slope; and the general direction of the claim was changed so as to carry it over on plaintiff’s claim a distance of 30 feet more than was previously covered by it. The Bernadotte claim was changed to the northeasterly side of the Maximus and parallel with the latter, so as to make them uniform in length and direction. The relative position of these claims thus changed is shown in diagram C.

And the position of the claims as originally located and in the survey for patent, together with plaintiff’s claim, the Nova Scotia Boy, is shown in diagram B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
19 F. 78, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 366, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crsus-mining-milling-smelting-co-v-colorado-land-mineral-co-circtdco-1884.