Davis v. Shepherd

31 Colo. 141
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1903
DocketNo. 4326
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 31 Colo. 141 (Davis v. Shepherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Shepherd, 31 Colo. 141 (Colo. 1903).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint alleged, in substance, that the defendants wrongfully and unlawfully entered upon the Refugee lode mining claim, and on the vein or veins thereof crossing the end lines and apexing within its boundaries, and wrongfully ousted and ejected the plaintiff therefrom. It is contended by counsel for appellant that the complaint does not state a cause of' action based upon extra lateral rights.- Two reasons are assigned in support of this claim: (1) That it only describes a vein within the boundaries of the Refugee extended downward vertically; and (2) it does not allege that this vein contains minerals. If rights to a mineral vein embraced in a mining location were limited as at common law, the first point made might be good. A vein properly located is part and parcel of the location within which it is embraced throughout its entire depth, within the limits defined by law, even though on its downward course it enters an adjacent location. — Sec. 2322, Rev. Stats. U. S.

The complaint alleges a trespass upon a vein apexing within the surface boundaries of the Refugee claim and intersected by its end lines. According to these averments, under the law fixing the rights to this vein, such trespass may 'have been upon the vein in ground underneath the surface boundaries of the Fairmount claim extended downward vertically, or without such ground, within the boundaries of the Refugee. This, however, is not essentially material. The charge was a trespass upon a vein which was part and parcel of the Refugee. If for any reason it was desirable to have the complaint more definite, as to the point where the trespass was committed, a motion to that effect should have been [146]*146interposed. Having answered on the merits, it is too late to raise the question now. — Rosenfeld v. Rosenfeld, 21 Colo. 16. The Refugee is a patented claim. Before patent the question of whether the Refugee vein carried precious minerals in appreciable quantities might, in an appropriate action, have been a material question of fact, but after patent it cannot be raised collaterally. The government has granted the owner of the Refugee all veins the top or apex of which lie inside of the surface boundaries of the claim extended downward vertically, and after patent the presumption must be that the vein or veins embraced within the claim are of the character which the law contemplates.

According to the description of the Refugee in the complaint, it is asserted that the claim is of greater width than the law allows, and for this reason the validity of the patent is assailed. It is not necessary to determine what might be the effect upon the patent if this claim was correct, because it appears that it is not. The end lines are not at right angles with the side lines, and, therefore, do not represent the distance between them. The width of a mining claim, when that is the only question involved, is the distance between the side lines. Thus measured, the Refugee is not of greater width than the law permits.

The vein in controversy, except a small portion, apexes entirely within the boundaries of the Refugee claim. The Fairmount is the older location, having been located in the year 1869, on the dip of the vein, and subsequently patented. Before the location of the Refugee a considerable portion of the vein was worked out by the claimants of the Fairmount. Counsel for appellants, contend that the stoping out. of the mineral has broken the continuity of the vein, and that, therefore, the owner of the Refugee can [147]*147claim no extra lateral rights in that portion of the vein below snch workings; and further claim that inasmuch as the Fairmount was located under the act relative to mining claims passed in 1866, that the Refugee has no extra lateral rights as against the Fairmount to the vein upon which that location is based. In short, that the owners of the latter are entitled to the vein for the full length of the claim without regard to its location with respect to the boundaries of the claim. -That a portion of the vein has been removed does not change the fact that the vein below the point of such removal is the same as the one apexing within the Refugee ground. That •is the test to apply in determining the question of ownership as between the parties to this action.

Under the act of congress of 1866, the right to follow a vein upon its strike is limited to the lines of the survey purporting to embrace it. This question has been definitely settled by the supreme court of the United States,—Mining Co. v. Tarbet, 98 U. S. 463,—and it is unnecessary to more than briefly discuss it. The act contemplated a location along the vein, and hence the point at which the apex of such vein, in its course, departs from either side line of the claim, marks the point where the right to follow it on the strike under such location ceases, and extra lateral rights are limited accordingly.—Wolfley v. Lebanon M. Co., 4 Colo. 112; McCormick v. Varnes, 2 Utah 355; 1 Lindley on Mines, §§ 53-60; Morrison’s Mining Rights (10th ed.), 133.

It is next contended by counsel for appellants that appellee is estopped by his conduct from maintaining this action, because he disclaimed any interest in the vein now in controversy, in effect abandoned it, and misled the appellants to their injury and prejudice; and also that the court erred in refusing testimony in support of this defense. The record [148]*148wholly fails to disclose anything supporting this claim. One of the defendants was the owner and the other the lessee of the Fairmount. It appears that what is known as the Fairmount shaft was sunk partially upon both claims; that the defendants applied to the owner of the Refugee for leave to work the Fairmount property through this shaft, which was granted. Nowhere does it appear that the owner of the Refugee ever granted them any right to work the vein in controversy within the limits of that location, nor was there any testimony offered which tended to prove that fact, or that he disclaimed any interest in this vein. On the contrary, one of the appellants admits that the appellee told him he had no objection to his working the property through the shaft, but that he did not want him to work on Refugee ground, to which the witness replied that he did not want to. At this conversation appellee further stated to the appellant that he had a vein in the Refugee which .he did not propose to let anybody work.

A shaft had been sunk on. the vein from its apex on the Refugee down to a stope extended from workings on the Fairmount. On the trial of the cause counsel for appellants asked a witness whether or not this shaft was dangerous. The court sustained the objection, and this ruling is assigned as error. If the condition of this shaft could have been the subject of expert opinion evidence, it was wholly immaterial in this case. Whether the shaft was or was not dangerous to any one who might attempt to pass through it, could have no bearing whatever upon the issues between the parties. The exclusion of immaterial testimony is not error.

It was sought to establish, on the part of the appellee, that the vein upon which this shaft was sunk was the same which the appellants were work[149]*149ing.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tyler v. District Court In & For the County of Adams
613 P.2d 899 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1980)
Tyler v. DISTRICT COURT, ETC.
613 P.2d 899 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1980)
Walsen v. Gaddis
194 P.2d 306 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1948)
Scheurmann v. Mathison
136 P. 330 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1913)
Burnham v. Grant
134 P. 254 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1913)
In re Estate of Hayes
135 P. 449 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1913)
First Nat. Bank of Tishomingo v. Ingle
1912 OK 543 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1912)
Central Eureka Mining Co. v. East Central Eureka Mining Co.
79 P. 834 (California Supreme Court, 1905)
Baden Baden Gold Mining Co. v. Jose
20 Colo. App. 260 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1904)
City of Colorado Springs v. May
20 Colo. App. 204 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
31 Colo. 141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-shepherd-colo-1903.