Gilpin County Mining Co. v. Drake

8 Colo. 586
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 8 Colo. 586 (Gilpin County Mining Co. v. Drake) 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
Gilpin County Mining Co. v. Drake, 8 Colo. 586 (Colo. 1885).

Opinion

Beck, C. J.

The first assignment of error discussed in the briefs of counsel is, “ That the court erred in permitting parol evidence of the contents of the alleged agreement, signed by the plaintiff, to go to the jury under the notice given to produce the same in open court upon the trial of said action.”

The complaint, as amended, alleges the sale by the plaintiff below of a certain mining claim, on the 15th day of April, 1879, to the Gilpin County Mining Company, defendant, and the execution of a written agreement in duplicate, setting out the terms and conditions of the contract; that one copy thereof was executed by the plaintiff and delivered to the defendant company, and that the other copy thereof was executed by the defendant and delivered to the plaintiff.

The defendant in its answer denied that a duplicate of said agreement was ever made by the plaintiff, or that such copy was ever delivered to or received by the defendant. The only notice to defendant to produce the duplicate copy was given upon the trial.

If the averments of the answer respecting the duplicate copy be true, this is a case where a notice to produce would not avail either party. It would not avail the defendant, because it could not produce what it never received, and it could not avail the plaintiff, for the reason that he could not be allowed to produce parol proof of the contents of an instrument which never had been executed and delivered to the defendant.

The plaintiff proved upon the trial that a duplicate of the agreement had been duly executed by the plaintiff and delivered to the defendant at the time of the original transaction, but this fact being established, was it proper for the court to admit parol proof of the contents of the instrument, without first requiring the plaintiff to serve [588]*588a notice on the defendant to produce the document itself, as required by section 382 of the Civil Code?

If this was error, however, it was error without prejudice. The answer of the defendant, as we have seen, substantially denied that the alleged duplicate was in its possession, or was, or ever had been, in existence.

The affidavit of defendant’s attorney, filed on the motion for a new trial, averred that affiant had had several conversations with Mr. Cooper, the secretary and acting manager of the defendant company; that he was the only representative of defendant present at the time of the transaction of the purchase and sale of said claim; and that said Cooper always stated to affiant that to the best of his knowledge he never had received, nor had in his possession, said duplicate contract, and had no knowledge concerning it. This affidavit, accompanied with the written admisson of plaintiff’s attorney that if Mr. Cooper had been present at the trial he would have testified to the same facts alleged therein, was admitted upon the hearing of said motion.

It is fair to say, therefore, that, in so far as the defendant was concerned, the duplicate agreement was lost and could not be produced, and' that parol evidence of its contents became admissible, under section 382 of the Civil Code. Hence the defendant was not prejudiced by the admission of parol proof. Another ruling of the coui-t below complained of was the refusal to admit in evidence the location certificate of Jordan and Weitbrec of the location of the Weitbrec lode.

Among the objections made to this certificate were: 1. A failure to comply with the mining law in making the relocation; and 2. Want of sufficient description of the property, by reference to natural objects or permanent monuments, to designate the ground located.

The location certificate offered in evidence appears to us to be too indefinite to identify the claim, as we understand the application of the word “identity” in the fed[589]*589eral and state statutes. One of the important requisites of a location is that it “ must be distinctly marked on the ground, so that its boundaries can be readily traced.” R. S. U. S. sec. 2324.

Another requisite of the same section is that such a description of the claim be given in the location certificate, “by reference to some natural object or permanent monument, as will identify the claim.”

The only references in this rejected certificate to anything analogous to natural objects or permanent monuments is as follows:

“Beginning at the westerly end of the Gilpin County Mining Company’s property on the Williams lode in Lake Gulch mining district, runs thence in a westerly direction a distance of fifty feet to the easterly end of Packard & Updegraph’s property on said lode.”

It is conceded that, the claims referred to are patented claims, and that they supply the permanent monuments required by the act of congress; still the references thereto in the location certificate, and the description of the claim located, are too indefinite to enable the same to be fully identified, or its boundaries readily traced from this certificate alone.

“Beginning at the westeiiy end” of a certain mining claim. At what point of this westerly end? Was it at a corner or in the center, or at some other point on the line of its westerly end ? The certificate does not tell. “Runs thence in a westerly direction a distance of fifty feet to the easterly end of Packard & Updegraph’s property on said lode.” What part of the easterly end of this property did this line intersect? What kind of monuments, if any, were at the point of commencing and at the point of closing- this easterly and westerly line ? Through what part of the Weitbrec location did this line pass ? Was it through its center or along one side line ? Where was the discovery shaft situated with [590]*590reference to this line ? To what fixed points is said shaft or any other part of said claim tied ?

It is apparent that no information is furnished by this certificate which would enable any one to trace the boundaries of this claim. The discovery shaft is tied to nothing definitely, nor is any corner or point of the claim, so far as appears from this record.

The statute pronounces such a location certificate void. There was, therefore, no error in rejecting it.

It is also assigned for error that the jury was improperly instructed as to the measure of damages.

When suit is brought upon a written contract, it is .examined in order to ascertain its obligations and terms; the pleadings are inspected to see what relief is sought, and to ascertain whether, under the issues formed, the plaintiff is entitled to such relief, provided the averments of his complaint be established by evidence.

In this case we find an executory contract for the purchase and sale of a mining claim, executed in duplicate, whereby one party binds himself to sell and tide other to buy. The contract price was $2,500, payable on a day certain, or as soon thereafter as the title should be cleared of incumbrances.

The complaint alleged that the title was duly freed of incumbrances, as provided by the contract, and' that a good and sufficient deed, with covenants of warranty as called for by the contract, had been duly executed by the •plaintiff and delivered to the defendant, which the defendant refused to accept; also, that defendant at the same time refused to pay the purchase money.

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Bluebook (online)
8 Colo. 586, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilpin-county-mining-co-v-drake-colo-1885.