Daggett v. Yreka Mining & Milling Co.

86 P. 968, 149 Cal. 357, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 257
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1906
DocketSac. No. 1154.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 86 P. 968 (Daggett v. Yreka Mining & Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daggett v. Yreka Mining & Milling Co., 86 P. 968, 149 Cal. 357, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 257 (Cal. 1906).

Opinions

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an action to recover damages for alleged trespass consisting in the extraction and removal of gold-bearing ore from mining ground claimed by the plaintiffs.

The material allegations of the complaint are that the plaintiffs for twenty years last past have been the owners, and, save for the interruptions alleged, have been in possession of two certain quartz mines in Siskiyou County, known as the "Evening Star Quartz Mine ’ ’ and the ‘ ‘ Central Quartz Mine, ’ ’ more particularly described as follows:—

“That certain mine known as the Evening Star Quartz Mine, situated on the head waters of Eddy’s Gulch, county and state aforesaid, commencing at a double top fir tree blazed Evening Star, and on the N. W. corner of the claim, thence in an N. E. direction fifteen hundred feet, more or less, to a pillar of rock marked ‘E. V.’ thence S. E. direction six hundred feet to a monument of stones and stake marked ‘E. V.’ thence in a S. W. direction fifteen hundred feet to a monument of stake and stones, stake marked ‘E. V.,’ thence in a N. W. direction six hundred feet to the place of beginning. *360 The location notice of which said mining claim was dated on January 1st, A. D. 1884, and filed for record on the 8th day of January A. D. 1884.

“Also that certain mine known as the Central Quartz Mining Claim, it being an extension on the northeast of the ‘Evening Star Quartz Mine,’ and ‘commencing at this notice running thence in a northeasterly direction fifteen hundred feet to stake and mound of stones, thence in a northwesterly direction six hundred feet to stake and mound of stones, stake marked X, thence in a southwesterly direction fifteen hundred feet to a stake set in mound of rocks marked X, thence in S. E. direction to place of beginning. ’ The location notice of which said mining claim was dated January 1, A. D. 1884; and filed for record on the 8th day of January, A. D. 1884”; that at various times since 1898, the defendant corporation has wrongfully, etc., entered upon said premises and extracted, carried away, and appropriated large quantities of gold-bearing ore, etc., of the value of fifty thousand dollars.

Other allegations are added as a basis for equitable relief by injunction, receiver, etc., but these are not material to the questions to be considered. The defendant answered, denying all the material allegations of the complaint. The cause was tried by jury and a verdict found for plaintiffs for one dollar damages, upon which a judgment was entered, whereby it was adjudged and declared that the plaintiffs were and ever since September, 1887, had been the owners and entitled to the possession of the Evening Star and Central quartz mines—describing them as in the complaint—and awarding the damages and costs.

From this judgment and from an order subsequently entered denying its motion for a new trial, the defendant appeals, alleging certain errors in the rulings of the court, and claiming that in several material particulars the verdict is unsupported by the evidence.

The questions of fact thus presented are the more important and will be first considered.

The place from which the ore in question was removed by defendant is altogether outside of the surface-lines of the Central and Evening Star locations, but plaintiffs contend that defendant’s mining was done in a portion of their extra-lateral claim, upon the dip of a vein covered by those loca *361 tions. Specifically, their claim is that the ore removed by defendant was taken from a section of the vein included between perpendicular planes conforming to the end-lines of the Central mine at a point about one thousand feet east and two hundred feet south of the northeast corner of the Central location, according to the survey of the ground made by them a short time before the trial of the action. The defendant denies the validity of the Central and Evening Star locations, and also contends that, even if valid, their end-lines as actually located would not include the mining-ground in controversy. Before entering upon a discussion of the evidence bearing upon these issues, it will be convenient to state a few well-settled legal propositions involved in their determination. There is no claim that the Central or Evening-Star mine was located prior to the enactment of the Mining Law of May 10, 1872. (17 U. S. Stats. 91.) The claim is in fact that the locations were both made on the first day of January, 1884. Their validity, therefore, depends upon a substantial compliance, by the locators, with the requirements of that act. Among those requirements these were essential: First, the discovery of a vein; second, the marking of the location so that its surface boundaries could be readily traced ; and third, (if the locator was to acquire any extralateral rights upon the dip of the vein) that the end-lines of his surface location should "be parallel. The act of Congress does not require any posting or recording of notices of location. It merely permits the enactment of local laws regulating that matter, with a proviso that every notice of location, in order to have any legal effect, must contain certain particulars. In this case it does not appear that the claims in question were, at the date of their location, or at any time, included within an organized mining district. There is no evidence of any local law, and it was not until March", 1897, that the legislature of California enacted a short-lived statute prescribing the manner of locating mining claims, and providing for the posting and recording of notices. (Stats. 1897, p. 214; repealed March 20, 1899,—Stats. 1899, p. 148; February 8, 1900,—Stats. 1900, p. 9.) There was therefore nothing to give any definite legal effect to the posting and recording of the notices of location of the Central and Evening Star claims in January, 1884. They did not constitute in themselves a *362 location, or any part of a legal location, of the claims, and are of no value except as acts in pais, to be considered in connection with the well-known customs and practices of mining prospectors as an item of evidence upon the question of compliance with the imperative behests of the Mining Law, with respect especially to the marking of the surface location so that its boundaries can be readily traced, which is the vital question in the present case.

As to the discovery of a vein within the lines of the Evening Star and Central claims there is no question. As long ago as 1874, a mine known as the Klamath was being profitably worked in ground adjoining the Evening Star at its southern boundary. The extent and direction of the surface boundaries of the Klamath are not shown, but one of its corners was at the forked tree which is designated in the complaint and notice of location as the northwest and initial corner of the Evening Star. The evidence shows that during the year 1874, original locations of the Evening Star and Central claims were made after the discovery of a vein within the present limits of those claims. For several years after these original locations, work was actively prosecuted on the vein, extensive tunnels, drifts, etc., were run to and on the vein, and a large quantity of ore extracted and milled by the original locators.

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Bluebook (online)
86 P. 968, 149 Cal. 357, 1906 Cal. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daggett-v-yreka-mining-milling-co-cal-1906.