Duggan v. Davey

26 N.W. 887, 4 Dakota 110, 1886 Dakota LEXIS 1
CourtSupreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota
DecidedFebruary 9, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 26 N.W. 887 (Duggan v. Davey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court Of The Territory Of Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duggan v. Davey, 26 N.W. 887, 4 Dakota 110, 1886 Dakota LEXIS 1 (dakotasup 1886).

Opinion

Church, J.

This was an action in equity, brought by the plaintiffs, as owners of the Silver Terra mine, to restrain the defendants from prosecuting certain mining operations, by which it was alleged they had already approached, and were threatening and intending to enter within, the lines of the plaintiffs’ claim, and remove certain valuable bodies or deposits of silver ore therefrom. The complaint alleged ownership by the plaintiffs in fee of the Silver Terra mine, (mineral claim lot No. 364,) and described the same by metes and bounds. It also stated sufficient grounds for equitable relief by way of in[115]*115junction, and prayed (1) for the usual injunction yen cíente lite; (2) for perpetual injunction at the final hearing; (3) for general relief. A preliminary injunction was granted, and, upon a motion to dissolve, was continued in force.

The answer of the defendants, after denying ‘‘each and every allegation of the complaint, except as hereinafter specifically admitted,” proceeded to allege with great particularity of detail their ownership and possession of a certain quartz mining claim known as the “Sitting Bull” lode, with all veins, lodes, or ledges of valuable mineral bearing rock in place, throughout their entire depth, having their top or apex within the exterior surface boundaries of said Sitting Bull lode or mining location, under a location made by Donegan and Coehrau, grantors of defendants, September .26, 1876; a relocation by Donegan and Cochran, March 16, 1877; an entry for patent by John H. Davy, January 8, 1883; and continuous and uninterrupted possession by defendants and their grantors. The answer further alleged that the discovery on the Sitting Bull lode was made on a vein, lode, or ledge of rock in place, bearing silver; that the top or apex thereof was within the surface lines of said claim, extended downward vertically; that said claim was located along the said vein or lode; that defendants, in working and developing the same, had followed it for a distance of about 600 feet from the top or apex thereof, on a departure from the perpendicular, through and beyond the vertióle southerly side line of the Sitting Bull claim, and in so working, developing, and following the same had reached a point on said vein or lode where the same reached or passed through and beyond the vertical northerly side line of the Silver Terra claim; that throughout its entire course, as so worked, developed, and followed by them, the ore body contained in said vein was continuous, without break or interruption, and that the vein, lode, or ledge bearing silver, upon which they (the defendants) were working, as alleged in the complaint, and which is claimed to be the property of the plaintiffs by virtue of their Silver Terra mining claim, is the same vein, lode, or ledge so discovered, worked, developed, and followed [116]*116by the defendants in and from their said Sitting Bull location; that the said vein at the point where they were working the same, as alleged in the complaint, lies between vertical planes drawn downward through the end lines of said Sitting Bull location, continued in their own direction; that the defendants are the owners of said vein, in possession and entitled to the possession thereof at said point, and at all points within the Silver Terra claim; that they have the right to follow the same so long as it shall continue to be continuous, and to depart from the perpendicular, and that as such owners they are following the same, and claim the right to do so, within the vertical side lines of the Silver Terra claim, and through and across the same; and that plaintiffs have no right, title, or interest in or to said vein, or any jDortion thereof, by virtue of their ownership of the Silver Terra claim.

At the time the complaint was filed plaintiffs had entered the Silver Terra for patent. Subsequently a patent was issued to them therefor, and thereafter, by leave of the court, they filed a supplemental complaint, alleging — First. The issue of said patent, and that it was based upon a location made by Daniel Egan, April 1, 1881, and claiming relation of title and possession to that date. Second. Alleging that defendants were prosecuting their workings under a claim of right so to do as the proprietors of a vein having its top or apex within the Sitting Bull claim, and that said claim and pretense were false, fictitious, and fraudulent, and defendants without right to enter and commit the acts complained of, and that plaintiffs were ignorant of this claim at the time their original complaint was made. Wherefore they prayed that the defendants might be restrained from setting up or asserting any right, title, or interest in or to their said mining ground, or the ores, metals, or minerals contained therein, on account of said alleged vein in said Sitting Bull claim.

For answer to this supplemental complaint the defendants, among other things, denied any knowledge or information as to the issuing of the patent to the plaintiffs; denied that said patent was based upon a location made by Egan, April 1, 1881, [117]*117or any other time; and alleged that Egan never, at any time, made any valid location of said Silver Terra claim, or any discovery thereon of any vein of quartz or other rock in place, containing valuable mineral; and that the pretenses of Egan and the plaintiffs in this behalf are fraudulent and unfounded. They further reassert, but in more general terms than in their previous answer, their right to prosecute the work of extracting and mining the ore complained of by plaintiffs by virtue of their proprietorship of a vein having its top or apex outside of the lines of that claim, and extending thence on a departure from the perpendicular, in its downward course, to the place where they were working, within the vertical boundaries of the Silver Terra. This answer also avers that the plaintiffs have no right, title, or interest in said vein, lode, or ledge by patent from the United States, or otherwise, nor any right to the ores contained therein; and prays that it may be adjudged that the defendants are the proprietors of the vein upon which they were working at the commencement of the action herein, and that plaintiffs have no estate, right, title, or interest in or to the same.

The issues presented by these pleadings were tried by the court,' without a jury. Fifty-six working days were occupied in the trial, during the course of which 35 witnesses were examined for the plaintiffs and 60 for the defendants, the testimony altogether covering some 7,000 pages. Once during the progress of the trial, and again after the testimony was closed, the presiding judge visited and made a thorough inspection and examination of the premises in controversy, in company with a representation selected by each party. Subsequently the court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, adjudging the plaintiffs entitled to the relief demanded, and a final decree was entered in accordance therewith. A motion for a new trial was made and denied, and an appeal was therefrom taken to this court. The record shows 100 assignments of error, which it will be impossible for us to consider in detail. We shall notice only some of the more important involved in the appeal.

[118]*118Several of these assignments relate to the admission or exclusion of evidence concerning the location of the Silver Terra mining claim.

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

Related

Bowen v. Sil-Flo Corporation
451 P.2d 626 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1969)
Bowen v. Chemi-Cote Perlite Corporation
423 P.2d 104 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1967)
Brugger v. Lee Yim
55 P.2d 564 (California Court of Appeal, 1936)
Tom Reed Gold Mines Co. v. United Eastern Mining Co.
209 P. 283 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1922)
Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Payne
64 So. 617 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1914)
Stewart Mining Co. v. Ontario Mining Co.
132 P. 787 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1913)
Parrot Silver & Copper Co. v. Heinze
64 P. 326 (Montana Supreme Court, 1901)
Wakeman v. Norton
24 Colo. 192 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1897)
Doe v. Waterloo Min. Co.
54 F. 935 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California, 1893)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 N.W. 887, 4 Dakota 110, 1886 Dakota LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duggan-v-davey-dakotasup-1886.