Francoeur v. Newhouse

43 F. 236, 14 Sawy. 600, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1642
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedAugust 6, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 43 F. 236 (Francoeur v. Newhouse) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Francoeur v. Newhouse, 43 F. 236, 14 Sawy. 600, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1642 (circtndca 1890).

Opinion

Sawyer, J.,

(orally charging jury.) I announce to you that I have prepared some special issues in addition to the general verdict, upon which I desire you to find. It may save future litigation. I will read them to you so that you will be prepared to appreciate what I have to say upon these points. The first is — “We the jury in the above-entitled case find for the” — plaintiff or defendant, whichever it turns out to be. You will write in either “plaintiff” or “defendant,” according as you find on all the issues in the case.

SPECIAL ISSUES.

The next one is: (1) Was the land in question known to be mineral, or was there good reason to believe it was mineral, at the date of filing the map of general location of the route of the road, and the withdrawal of the lands by order of the secretary of the interior, on August 2, 1862? (2) Was the land in question known to be mineral, or was there good reason to believe that it was mineral, at the time that the line of the road was definitely located in 1866? (3) Is the land in question, in fact, mineral land? (4) Had the defendant and his grantors been in the continuous, open and notorious adverse possession of the premises in question, claiming to be in the rightful possession under the laws, and afterwards under a patent of the United States adverse to [237]*237the I'hiim of the plaintiff and his grantor, for a period of five years next before the commencement of this suit, on June 28, 1889?

Gentlemen, I will now proceed to state to you the law which governs this case, which is the province of the court to determino. You will take, and apply it as .given to you by the court, whether it meets with your approbation or not. It will then be your province to find the disputed facts in the case, and those issues you are to find, upon the testimony before you, either for the plaintiff or for the defendant, as the preponderance of proof in your judgment requires. It only requires a preponderance of proof. You are the exclusive judges of the testimony, and to you alone belongs the finding of the facts. You are to examine the testimony of each witness. You are the judges of the credibility of the witnesses. You are to consider the intrinsic character of the testimony, whether it is intrinsically probable or not. You will consider any circumstances which affect the credibility of the witnesses, and give the testimony of each witness such weight as you think it is entitled to receive, and render your verdict as the preponderance of the evidence appears to be in your minds. The deed to the plaintiff from the Central Pacific Railroad Company is dated February 13, 1889, only two or three months before the commencement of this suit. The deed, it is true, is a quitclaim deed, hut if the title to the premises in question was in the Central Pacific Railroad Company at- that time, that deed conveyed the title to Prancoeur, and in that case, if tins title was in the Central Pacific Railroad Company and conveyed to Prancoeur, there must be a verdict for the plaintiff on that issue, and the plaintiff will bo entitled to recover unless the other defence of the bar, by the statute of limitations, is found in favor of the deiendant, in which case, of course, that will control.

The first great question to determine, is, was the title in the Central Pacific Railroad Company at the date of that deed? If it was, it must have passed under the act of 1862, granting lands to aid in the construction of the Central Pacific Railroad Company, and if the title vested under that act, then the United States had nothing left in it, and it could afterwards convey no title by patent to the defendant in this case. The act of 1862 granted all sections numbered with odd numbers within a space of 10 miles on each side of the road to the Central Pacific Railroad, to which other right had not attached at the date of the final definite location of the road, and mineral lands wore excepted. If the land in question was mineral land within the meaning of that act, the title never passed to the Central Pacific Railroad, because it was not granted. It was excepted out of the grant. If it was not mineral land, and there is no claim that any other rights had attached, then course the title passed to the Central Pacific Railroad Company, so it is important to inquire whether, at the time the right of the company specifically attached to this land, it was mineral land, within the meaning of this provision of the statute. If you should determine that it was mineral land, that ends the case, because the company had no title which it could convey to the plaintiff in this case, and he relies upon [238]*238no other title. The complaint alleges and shows, and all of the testimony shows, and there is none to the contrary, that these premises are in fact mineral land. They were worked for years and a large quantity of gold taken out of them. They are in fact now, and were at the commencement of this suit according to their own allegations, mineral lands. If they were in fact mineral lands at the time of the commencement of this suit, they must necessarily have been in fact mineral lands in 1862, at the date of the passage of this act, and such lands as congress designed to exclude or except from the operation of the grant, for the character of the lands in this particular has not changed; but it has been held by the courts that only those are to be regarded as mineral lands-within the meaning of the act of congress, which were known to be mineral, or wdiich there was satisfactory reason to believe were mineral at the time of the attaching of the right of the company to those particular lands. As it has been stated in the language of the courts, the words-“mineral land,” as used in the act of congress, mean land known to be mineral at the time the grant took effect, and attached to the specific land in question, or which there was satisfactory reason to believe were such at said time. Only such land as was known to be mineral, or which there was satisfactory reason to believe was mineral at the time the grant, attached to the land, is excepted from the grant.

Gentlemen, you have the starting point that these premises were in. fact mineral lands at that time. The question then arises, whether or not they were knownj or there was sufficient reason'to believe, at-the-time this grant attached — and that is when the line of the road became definitely fixed, according to my construction of the act — to be mineral land, or whether there was sufficient reason to believe they were mineral lands. Perhaps that is a little too restricted, because there may be mineral land on portions of land so apparent and obvious that any one seeing it, would know it on sight, and yet no one may have been at that point to observe it at the time; yet because no one happened to be there,, if the fact of their being mineral land is so -obvious that it would have been manifest to any one who inspected it, that, 1 take to be mineral land within the meaning of this act. But it is sufficient for this case to take the other definition. For the purpose of this case, these lands were, in fact mineral. The question is, were they known to be mineral within the meaning of the act, or was there good reason to believe they were mineral.

Gentlemen, you have heard the testimony on that point. There is testimony here tending to show that persons did visit them, saw7 this mine, and saw men at work on this very ledge as early as 1862, and earlier. That is a long time ago.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
43 F. 236, 14 Sawy. 600, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 1642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/francoeur-v-newhouse-circtndca-1890.