Green v. Gavin

101 P. 931, 10 Cal. App. 330, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 237
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 27, 1909
DocketCiv. No. 525.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 101 P. 931 (Green v. Gavin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Green v. Gavin, 101 P. 931, 10 Cal. App. 330, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 237 (Cal. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The appeal is from the judgment and the

order denying the motion of plaintiffs for a new trial. The judgment was entered April 30, 1907, and the notice of appeal was served and filed December 10, 1907.- The appeal from the judgment, therefore, cannot be considered, as it was taken more than six months after said judgment was rendered. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 939, subd. 1; County of Contra Costa v. Soto, 138 Cal. 57, [70 Pac. 1019].)

The action was brought to quiet title, and the determination of the controversy depends upon the validity of the location by defendants of a certain placer mining claim designated as lot No. 5 and situated in section 23 of township 14 north, range 10 east, M. D. M., in the county of Placer.

The principal reviewable contention of appellants is that the notice of the prior location by defendants was so uncertain and obscure as to amount to no notice at all. The said notice was partly printed and partly written and was in the following form:

“Notice is hereby given, that the undersigned, in compliance with the requirements of the Revised Statutes of the United States, have this day located the following described Placer Mining Ground, viz.:
“Commencing at the S. W. % °f the N. E. *4 of section twenty-three (23) T. 14 N., R. 10 E., situate in the Brushy Mining District, County of Placer, State of California.
“ This claim shall be known as the Canothus Placer Mining Claim.
“Located on the Seventh day of September, 1905.
“JAS. GAVIN.
“C. H. WASSON.”

In reference to this notice the defendants allege in their answer that the words “Commencing at” were in the printed form used by them and through the inadvertence and mistake of the one preparing said notice these words were not erased and that the further words of description, “the S. W. 14 of the N. E. %>” etc., were written in the notice and that it was the purpose and intention of said locators to locate and claim *333 as a placer mining claim under said location the said “S. W. % of the N. B. etc.

There is no direct evidence that the words “Commencing at” were “inadvertently” left in said notice. It does appear, however, that said notice was partly printed and partly written. It was received in evidence and was no doubt inspected by the learned trial judge who probably observed that these words were included in the printed matter. From the testimony of James Gavin it is clear that the defendants intended to locate said S. W. 14 of the N. B. ]4-Their acts show that beyond peradventure. No one believing said testimony could reach any other conclusion than that said defendants intended to describe in said notice said land which they actually did locate on the ground. It therefore follows that the words were inadvertently left in, as the notice without them would perfectly describe said legal subdivision, the S. W. 14 of the N. B. etc. The court’s finding as to the inadvertence was, therefore, justified, but the finding is immaterial as there was a substantial compliance with the requirement of the law in reference to notice, and no one could possibly suffer any prejudice in consequence of the obvious oversight as to said words.

It is universally held that “Location notices should be liberally construed, having reference to the circumstances under which and the character of the parties by whom they are generally made.” In the determination of the sufficiency of the notice the most important guide is the purpose of said notice, which is to identify the land claimed with reasonable certainty and it would seem, as stated by the supreme court in Donahue v. Meister, 88 Cal. 131, [22 Am. St. Rep. 283, 25 Pac. 1099], that “the notice is valuable chiefly as a temporary protection to the locator while the other acts are being performed. Under the law of Congress ‘distinctly marking the location upon the ground so that the boundaries may be readily traced’ is necessary and is the main act of original location. (Holland v. M. A. G. Q. M. Co., 53 Cal. 149.) In Gleeson v. Martin White Co., 13 Nev. 464, Beatty, J., delivering the opinion of the court, speaks of congressional legislation on the subject as introducing ‘a system in which the preliminary posting and recording of notices is entirely out of place, except as a means of protecting a claim *334 during the time necessary for protecting the ledge and marking the boundaries of the location. When the location is thus marked, all that the notice and record were ever intended or expected to accomplish is effected in a manner far more satisfactory and complete. ’ ”

Of course, as held therein, mining customs and the requirement of the law in relation to the posting of notices cannot be disregarded, but the whole question must be viewed in the light of the beneficent purpose of the regulations, and the acts performed by the parties in pursuance of the location notice must be considered if they tend to clarify and render certain what under the notice itself might be somewhat obscure and uncertain. This is true of a placer location as well as of a quartz mining claim considered in the Donahue case, supra.

Among the cases illustrating the -indulgent consideration shown locations in good faith may be mentioned Book v. Justice, 58 Fed. 114; Duryea v. Boucher, 67 Cal. 141, [7 Pac. 421]; Doe v. Tyler, 73 Cal. 21, [14 Pac. 375]; Kern Oil Co. v. Crawford, 143 Cal. 302, [76 Pac. 1111]; West Granite Mountain Co. v. Granite Mountain Mining Co., 7 Mont. 356, [17 Pac. 547],

Considering, as we should, the evidence in the light most favorable to the judgment of the trial court, we find that the said notice was posted on the .ground a little east of the middle of the west line; the defendant Gavin built a house upon said land and entered into the occupancy of it and has so remained and has worked the claim ever since. He surveyed the land, drove stakes at the corners, cut the brush between, and blazed trees so that no one would have any difficulty in locating the boundaries of the claim upon the ground. All this was apparent to plaintiffs when they entered upon said land. If a third party, intending to locate, can readily ascertain from what has been done by the prior locator the extent and boundaries of the claim so located, then the object of the statute has been accomplished. (Kern Oil Co. v. Crawford, 143 Cal. 302, [76 Pac. 1111].) In Duryea v. Boucher, 67 Cal. 141, [7 Pac. 421], the notice erroneously described the land in the wrong government subdivision. The court held the notice sufficient, saying: “As the claim was for thirty acres, its boundary on the west could be easily deter *335 mined. It makes no difference that the wrong legal subdivisions are inserted in the notice.

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Bluebook (online)
101 P. 931, 10 Cal. App. 330, 1909 Cal. App. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/green-v-gavin-calctapp-1909.