Gleeson v. Martin White Mining Co.

13 Nev. 442
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1878
DocketNo. 894
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 13 Nev. 442 (Gleeson v. Martin White Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gleeson v. Martin White Mining Co., 13 Nev. 442 (Neb. 1878).

Opinions

By the Court,

Beatty J.:

This is an action to determine the right of possession of certain mining ground in the Ward district, White Pine county. The plaintiff deraigns title from the locators of a claim called the Shark, and the defendant is the grantee of the locators of the Paymaster. Both claims were located on the same ledge — the Paymaster in July, the Shark in September — and the principal question in the case is as to the validity of the Paymaster location. The facts in regard to [450]*450this location are very clearly and fully presented by the findings of the district judge, which embrace the special verdict of a jury upon a number of issues submitted to its decision. No exception whatever is taken by either party to the findings of the jury, and the objections of the appellant to the additional findings of the court relate rather to the conclusions of law involved than to the facts upon which they are based. The question before us is therefore narrowed down to a construction of the legislation of congress and the local rules of the Ward district governing the location of mining claims.

Before entering upon a discussion of the purely legal questions involved in the case, however, it will be best to give a connected statement of the facts, which are as follows : Mineral deposits were first discovered in what is now the Ward mining district, by Thomas F. Ward, in March, 1872. On the first of May the district was organized, a set of local rules adopted, and (it seems) Ward appointed recorder. The rules so first adopted were, in their general features, like the rules everywhere prevalent on this coast before the enactment of the law of congress of May 10, 1872. Claims were to be located by posting a notice at the point of discovery; the notice to be recorded in fifteen days; this to hold the claim good for one hundred days, within which time a certain amount of work was to be done on the ground in order to hold the claim a year. Each locator was to have fifty feet of the surface on each side of his ledge or vein, but this not to carry the right to any mineral deposit therein distinct from the one located. These rules, so far as they were not inconsistent with the act of congress of May 10, 1872, continued in force until the first of October following, when the miners adopted a new set of rules.

Such being the law of the district for the location and holding of claims, Ward, on the seventeenth of July, 1872, discovered the vein or ledge which is now in controversy, and placed upon the croppings at the discovery-point the following notice:

“Paymaster location notice. — We, the undersigned, do hereby locate and claim fifteen hundred (1500) feet on this [451]*451ledge, lode, or deposit of mineral bearing quartz or rock, with all its dips, spurs, angles and variations, together with all privileges prescribed by the mining laws of the United States and this district, and intend to hold and work the same according. We claim three hundred (300) feet easterly, and twelve hundred (1200) feet westerly from this monument, running along the course of the vein. This shall be known as the Paymaster. Ward mining district, July 17, 1872, situated about fifteen hundred feet N. W. by N., from Mountain Pride lode.”

To this notice were appended the names of the locators, and opposite the name of each was set the number of feet (undivided) to which he was to be entitled.

On the following day, July 18, the claim was recorded by Ward, as mining recorder of the district, by copying it into a small memorandum-book which he carried in his pocket, and which at that time constituted the record-book of the district. Subsequently, about the first of August, a larger book was obtained, and the records transcribed from the little book. In the meantime, however, the Paymaster notice, and the record of it, had been changed as follows: It seems that there was some sort of an agreement subsisting between Ward, John Henry, E. G. Hardy and three others, that they should be equally interested in the locations made by Ward. But in the location of the Paymaster, Ward had omitted Hardy’s name, and inserted that of Dave Pearson, who was not a member of the company. A few days after the location and recording of the claim, Henry called Ward’s attention to the fact that Pearson’s name was improperly on the notice, and Hardy’s name improperly omitted. He also objected to the unequal distribution of the claim among the six locators. Ward thereupon changed the notice on the ground, and the record in the little book, by erasing the name of Pearson and substituting the name of Hardy, and by changing the figures following the names, so as to give to each locator two hundred and fifty feet of the claim. These changes in the notice and in the little book were made before the transcription to the large book which, since the first of August, 1872, has contained the records of the ward district.

[452]*452Subsequent developments have shown that the vein or ledge upon which this Paymaster claim was located has a course or strike from south-east to north-west. According to the magnetic meridian (variation 16|-°) it runs more nearly east and west.

In September, 1872, some work, it does not appear how much, had been done on the Paymaster location, but the course of the vein was not clearly determined.

Such being the condition of that claim, on the ninth of September the locators of the Shark discovered the crop-pings of the same vein at a point about four hundred feet north-west of the location point of the Paymaster, and posted the following notice:

Shark mine No. 1. Notice. We, the undersigned, do hereby locate and claim fifteen hundred (1,500) feet on this ledge, lode or deposit of mineral-bearing quartz and rock, Avith all its dips, spurs, angles and variations, together with all privileges prescribed by the mining laws of the United States and this district, and intend to hold and work the same accordingly. We claim seven hundred and fifty feet on each side of the monument running along the course of the vein. This shall be known as the Shark mine No. 1.

“ Ward Mining District, Nye County, Nevada, September 9, 1872.
“John Taylor, three hundred and seventy-five feet.
“ Thomas Connor, three hundred and seventy-five feet.
“ Mathew Gleeson, three hundred and seventy-five feet.
“Chas. Strutenberger, three hundred and seventy-five feet.”

On the following day this notice was recorded, the certificate to the record being as follows:

“Recorded September 10,1872, at ten o’clock A. m. Situated ab'out sis hundred feet north-easterly from Young American mine, and about three hundred feet north-westerly from Paymaster mine.
“Thomas P. Ward, Recorder.”

Some significance is attributed to the fact that Ward, the locator of the Paymaster, going upon the ground for the purpose of making this record, and necessarily observing [453]*453the proximity of the Shark to the Paymaster, made no complaint at the time that the Shark locators were on his claim. It was not until October, and after some work had been done by the locators of the Shark, that notice was given that they were on the Paymaster vein. They, however denied that it was the same vein.

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13 Nev. 442, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gleeson-v-martin-white-mining-co-nev-1878.