Gurney v. Brown

32 Colo. 472
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1904
DocketNo. 4445; No. 4449
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 Colo. 472 (Gurney v. Brown) 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
Gurney v. Brown, 32 Colo. 472 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Chief Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court.

The main question presented for determination in both of these causes is the same, and the mining-premises in controversy embraces practically the [475]*475same tract. For these reasons the two cases will he disposed of in one opinion.

Appellee Brown applied for patent on a mining claim known as the Scorpion. Appellant Gnrney adversed this application as the owner and claimant of the Hobson’s Choice, and the appellant Small as the owner and claimant of the P. G. Thereafter each brought suit in support of his adverse claim. The causes were tried on an agreed statement of facts, whereby the main question presented is, When, with respect to the three locations, did the premises in controversy become subject to location1? The following diagram will aid in understanding this question:

The facts presenting it are as follows:

From this diagram it will be observed that the Kohnyo was segregated- into two disconnected tracts by the Mt. Rosa, a patented placer claim. The north [476]*476end of the Kohnyo, approximately 500 feet in length, embraced the discovery shaft. The south end was some 700 feet in length, and was without development work of any kind. The local land office permitted the claimant of the Kohnyo to enter the two tracts as one claim, but the land department ultimately refused to issue a patent for such tracts, basing such refusal upon the ground that two disconnected portions of a lode mining claim separated by a patented placer could not be included under one location, within the same patent. The land office, however, gave the applicant the privilege of proceeding, to patent upon either of the segregated tracts, and directed that in default of an. election or appeal by the claimant within sixty days from the date of the order, that the entry of that portion of the claim lying south of the Mt. Rosa placer should be canceled without further notice. This decision was rendered May 28, 1895. No appeal was taken from this decision, but the claimant of the Kohnyo instituted proceedings against the claimants of the Mt. Rosa placer, the purpose of which was to secure title to the vein of the Kohnyo, which, it was claimed, passed through the portion of the placer conflicting with the Kohnyo location. These proceedings were prosecuted before the land department, with the result that on May 7, 1898, a decision was rendered against the Kohnyo claimants’, contention of a known vein in the placer conflict. June 14,1898, the claimant of the Kohnyo filed in the local land office a written instrument, whereby election was made to retain and patent the north end of the Kohnyo claim, and in which the right to further question or review the decision of the land department of May 7, 1898, was waived. July 15, 1898, the commissioner of the general land office canceled the entry of the Kohnyo claim as to that portion south of the Mt. Rosa placer. May 13, 1898, appellee [477]*477Brown located this 700 feet as the Scorpion lode claim. June 23, 1898, appellant Gurney located the same premises as the Hobson’s Choice lode, and July 16, 1898, appellant Small located the same ground as the P. G. lode claim. July 15 and 16,1898, the claimant of the Scorpion filed amended and second amended location certificates. On these facts judgment was rendered for defendant in each case, from which the plaintiffs appeal.

Other facts were stipulated, which have not been summarized because they are of that character, and cover such questions, that the rights of the respective claimants to the premises in controversy are wholly dependent upon the legal conclusions deducible from those stated. Counsel for appellee, however, contend that the judgment must he affirmed because the agreed facts fail to identify the premises in dispute as part of the Kohnyo claim; do not establish the validity of that location, nor affirmatively show that the premises, when located as the Scorpion, were not part of the unappropriated public domain. The agreed statement will not hear this construction. It is evident from the record and the briefs of counsel that the only question submitted for trial, and the only one which the.parties intended to litigate and have determined by the trial court, was the time when the premises in controversy reverted to the public domain, and the judgment respecting their rights which would follow the conclusion of law on this question. Or, in other words, the only question really submitted for trial was the point of time at which the premises in controversy were open to location. Upon the determination of this question the decision as to which of the respective locations was valid, depended. This is apparent from the agreed statement of facts, for thereby it was conceded that each of the parties litigant had complied with all the requirements of the [478]*478law in the location of their respective claims, as set forth in their respective pleadings, saving and excepting it was not admitted that at the time of the respective locations the ground in controversy was subject to location. As to' each claim this question was reserved for the decision of the trial court by the following proviso: “Provided, however, that it is not admitted that at the time of said location the ground embraced in said location was a part of the vacant and unappropriated public domain.”

Counsel for appellee concede that the tract in controversy is substantially identical with the south tract of the Kohnyo lode, but say that such fact is not disclosed by the record. If not, it is rather strange that in the preparation of the agreed statement the various steps affecting the Kohnyo location were set out with such particularity. A discussion of the main question in the cases will demonstrate that the stipulated facts do establish the validity of the Kohnyo location, and that at the date of the location of the Scorpion the premises therein included were not a part of the unappropriated public domain. Appellee, however, is estopped from raising any of these questions now. His counsel state in their brief:

“Upon the trial in the court below the stipulation of facts was not read by either party. * * * It was upon taking up the record before this court for the preparation of appellee’s brief that the question of the relevancy of the exhibits attached to the stipulation of facts first presented itself, * * *. From an examination of the record it would appear to be a certainty that the case was tried in the lower court upon assumptions which are wholly unsupported by the written evidence contained in the agreed statement of facts. * # * The truth of the matter is, that after the preparation, execution and filing of the agreed facts, the stipulation contain[479]*479ing such facts was never again read or digested by any of the parties in interest. The trial court and counsel for all tbe parties litigant assumed that the stipulation covered facts which, upon investigation, we fail to find.”

Facts assumed to be true on the trial of a cause cannot afterwards be contested on appeal. — 2 Cyc. 675. In short, it appears that counsel for both sides, on the trial of the cause, construed the stipulated facts as covering these questions, and on appeal they will be held to that construction. Again, none of these questions were raised in the court below.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Wagner v. Allen
688 P.2d 1102 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1984)
Matter of Application for Water Rights
688 P.2d 1102 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1984)
O'Reilly v. Noxon
113 P. 486 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1910)
Peoria & Colorado Milling & Mining Co. v. Turner
20 Colo. App. 474 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1905)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Colo. 472, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gurney-v-brown-colo-1904.