Golden v. Murphy

31 Nev. 395
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1909
DocketNo. 1780
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 31 Nev. 395 (Golden v. Murphy) 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
Golden v. Murphy, 31 Nev. 395 (Neb. 1909).

Opinions

By the Court,

Norcross, C. J.:

This action was instituted February 18, 1902, against all of the above-named' appellants excepting Alfred Chartz. Upon trial had by jury a verdict was rendered in favor of the defendants, and judgment entered accordingly. A motion for a new trial was interposed by the plaintiff, and granted by the court upon the ground that the verdict was not in accordance with the evidence. An appeal was taken to this court from said order, and the same affirmed. (Golden v. Murphy, 27 Nev. 379.) Upon a second trial of the case with a jury a verdict was rendered upon general and special issues in favor of the plaintiff and for $500 damages, judgment and decree entered accordingly, and for a perpetual injunction. A motion for a new trial was denied. From said judgment and decree, and from the order overruling the motion for a new trial, the case again comes to this court upon appeal.

Prior to the second trial the appellant, Alfred Chartz, having succeeded to the property interests of the defendant Royal Mining Company, was entered as a defendant, and permitted to file a separate answer to the plaintiff’s complaint. The action was brought to recover damages in the sum of $7,000 for the extraction of ores by the defendants Murphy and Byers within the exterior lines, extended vertically downwards, of the Table Mountain mine, a patented claim, upon a part of which they held a lease from the then owner, the said Royal Mining Company; also for an injunction restraining the defendants from the further working upon the ledge, which plaintiff alleged has,its apex upon the Canyon mining claim, claimed to be the property of the plaintiff. Prior to the second trial all of the defendants filed amended answers, and the plaintiff an amended complaint.

The issues raised by the amended pleadings were the same as at the first trial, with the exception that the defendants by their amended answer attacked the validity of the Canyon mining claim, and hence the right of the plaintiff to base any [401]*401extralateral or other rights thereon, by reason of the alleged fact that the ground covered by the said Canyon mining claim was embraced within the original town-site patent of Silver City.

The allegations in the several answers of the defendants respecting the Silver City town site and the invalidity of the Canyon location are as follows: "(a) This defendant denies that plaintiff now is, or ever was, the owner of, or ever entitled to the possession of, the mining claim described in the complaint, situate in the Devil’s Gate and Chinatown Mining District, Lyon County, Nevada, or any part thereof. And in connection herewith this defendant avers that in the year 1884 one W. J. Westerfield, being one of the predecessors in interest of plaintiff, made a location of the Canyon mining claim described in the complaint, but that at said date the land upon which said location was made had been conveyed by patent to William Hayden, District Judge of the State of Nevada, Lyon County, as trustee in trust, granting a town site to the inhabitants of Silver City, Lyon County, Nevada, and that such attempted location by said W. J. Westerfield gave him no color of title to said mining claim, or any part thereof, either express or implied, that said Silver City town site was sold by the government of the United States, as aforesaid, on or about June 26, 1868, under the act of Congresss of 1867, and that the declaratory statement was filed on or about December 2, 1867, and that the patent of the United States was issued to said William Hayden in trust as aforesaid, on or about September 20, 1873, and to the successors of said William Hayden, and that on or about May 8, 1876, the successor of said William Hayden sold and conveyed to one Joseph Angelí and Joseph Monckton lot No. 268 of said patented town site, and on or about the same day said successor of said William Hayden sold and conveyed to one W. C. Dovey, lots Nos. 267 and 269 of said town-site patent, which said lots cover all of said Canyon mining claim attempted location, (b) Defendants are informed and believe, and. upon their information and belief allege the fact to be, that on the date September 20, 1873, being the date of the issuance of the Silver City town-site patent above described, the land described [402]*402in the complaint as the Canyon mining claim was not a valid, existing, located mining claim, and that at said date said land was not known to be valuable for its minerals, and that subsequently and on or about the 8th day of March, 1876, one A. W. Piper and T. S. Davenport attempted to make a location of said mining ground, and called it the Richmond G. & S. M. Co., and that said ground at said time belonged to the Silver City town site, and was not locatable, and that on or about the 1st day of January, 1884, said Piper and Davenport abandoned and forfeited their said attempted location, and that two months and twenty-one days" thereafter, being on the ■21st day of March, 1884, one W. J. Westerfield, predecessor in interest and grantor of plaintiff, Frank Golden, attempted to make a relocation of said Richmond G. & S. M. Co. claim, and after going through the acts of location, called it the Canyon mining claim, and that all such attempted locations and acts are contrary to law, and without right.” The only amendment to plaintiff’s complaint was in reference to paragraph'3, which, as amended, reads as follows: "That for over ten years immediately preceding the acts hereinafter complained of, the plaintiff and his grantors was the owner of, and entitled to, the possession, and in the quiet and peaceable possession of the said Canyon mining claim, and the ledge thereon.”

The allegations contained in defendants’ answers- relative to the issuance of the town-site patent to Silver City ¿nd the subsequent sale and conveyance of lots within said town site covering the land embraced within the boundaries of the Canyon mining claim were established by documentary proof. The record of location of the Canyon mining claim shows that it was located by W. J. Westerfield, March 21, 1884. The record is designated "Notice of Relocation? and in the body thereof the following statement appears: "This is a relocation of the Richmond G. & S. M. claim and shall be known as the Canyon G. & S. M. claim. The said Richmond G. & S. M. claim not having had the necessary amount of labor or improvements made or expended thereon as required by the laws of the United States, This claim is situated in the Devil’s Gate and Chinatown Mining District, Lyon County, [403]*403State of Nevada.” The Richmond G. & S. M. claim is shown to have been located March 8, 1876.

Witnesses upon the part of both the plaintiff and defendants testified to the mining conditions existing in that part of the district embracing the Canyon claim at and prior to the time of the issuance of the town-site patent. The record of two mining locations Avere admitted in evidence; one .the Francis Company O’Connel ledge, covering 800 feet on what Avas designated as the ''O’Connel Ledge? dated August 24, 1860, the other, the "Richmond Company Ledge? dated November 22, 1860, and claiming 1,400 feet of the ledge. A witness for defendants, Thomas P.

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31 Nev. 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/golden-v-murphy-nev-1909.