Hamburg Mining Co. v. Stephenson

17 Nev. 449
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1883
DocketNo. 1061
StatusPublished

This text of 17 Nev. 449 (Hamburg Mining Co. v. Stephenson) 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
Hamburg Mining Co. v. Stephenson, 17 Nev. 449 (Neb. 1883).

Opinion

By the Court,

Leonard, J.:

■This action was brought under section 256 of the civil practice act, to determine conflicting claims to real property.

Plaintiff is a corporation, and its business is mining and milling in this state, and especially in Eureka mining district.

In the complaint it is alleged that plaintiff is, and since a long time prior to February 5, 1879, has been, the owner, in possession, and entitled to the possession of the following-described land in Eureka county, in this state, to wit: “That certain piece or parcel of land consisting 'of one hundred and sixty acres, commencing at the southerly line of the survey made and recorded by W. 0. Arnold,-and running thence one mile in a southerly direction to a fence above the spring of water, and being one-quarter of a mile in width, and known as ‘Wilson ranch,’ having been surveyed and recorded in accordance with the laws of the state of Nevada, and of record in book of surveys of Lander county, state of Nevada, No.' 1, page 77, of the transcribed records now in recorder’s office of' Eureka county.”

It is then alleged that on the fifth day-of February, 1879, under an act of congress entitled “An act to pr-omote the development of the mining resources of the United States,” approved May 10,1872, defendant made and filed, under oath, an application for a patent to five acres of land, as a mill site, which is described by metes and bounds; “that defendant claims an adverse title to the premises and land first described above to that of plaintiff, and that said claim of title of defendant is without any right, and that the land claimed in said application is a portion of the premises first above described, and that such assertion and claim are a cloud upon plaintiff’s title thereto.”

In his answer defendant denies that plaintiff is, or ever has been, the owner, in the possession, or entitled to the possession, of the premises described in the complaint, or that defendant’s claim of title to the. five acres, for which he has applied for a [455]*455patent, is without right, or that the same is a cloud upon plaintiff’s pretended title, or any title, thereto; but he disclaims having any right or title to any portion of the premises first described and claimed by plaintiff in his complaint,, except that part thereof for which he has applied for a patent from the United States government as a mill or furnace site.

He admits, therefore, that the land in controversy is a part of the premises first described in the complaint — that is to say, one hundred and sixty acres of land, one mile in length by one-fourth of a mile in width, between the points stated, known as the “Wilson ranch.” It was- unnecessary, then, to prove that the mill site claimed by defendant was embraced in the tract described and claimed by plaintiff; or, in other words, that there was a conflict of' title between plaintiff and defendant as to the mill site.

The cause was tried by the court without a jury, and the court found as facts that then, and on the fifth day of February, 1879 — -the date of defendant’s application — plaintiff was, and for five years prior to said date, plaintiff and its predecessors in interest had been, the owners, and entitled to the possession of the premises described in the complaint, and known as and called the “Wilson ranch,” consisting of one hundred and sixty acres, more or less; that on the fifth day of February, 1879, the plaintiff was in possession of the lands known as the “Wilson ranch;” that said premises were enclosed with sufficient fence or stakes so that the boundaries thereof could be readily seen and readily and easily traced, and had been so marked out a long time prior thereto; and that the land for which defendant made application for a mill site is and was included in the premises first described in the complaint, and known as and called the “ Wilson ranch,” and was in the possession of plaintiff, as set forth, on the fifth day of February, 1879.

Judgment was entered for plaintiff to the effect that defendant had no estate, right, title .or interest in the premises first described in the complaint, and especially to that portion thereof for which he had made application for a patent as a mill site; also, that plaintiff had a good and valid title to all of the premises first described in the complaint, and defend[456]*456ant was enjoined from asserting any claim whatever thereto adverse to plaintiff

No additional findings were requested by either party.

Defendant moved for a new trial, on the grounds that the evidence was insufficient to justify the findings and judgment, and that the findings and judgment were against law.

He appeals from the order overruling his motion, and from the judgment.

The case is presented by the record in a very unsatisfactory manner. The statement on motion for a new trial purports to contain all the evidence; and yet-there was a map used on the trial to which the witnesses made constant reference in giving their testimony.

The testimony shows that plaintiff' has a furnace, several houses, wire and other fences, on the premises claimed by him, the Wilson ranch, as well as tunnels, shafts and cuts made by it for the purpose of collecting water. The latter are at the south end, where we conclude the premises in controversy are situated.

But it is difficult, if not impossible, to ascertain from the record the situation of many of the fences and other improvements. For instance, Reed testified: “ The red line on plaintiff ’s map marks the exterior boundaries of the ranch. There is a line of posts, a furrow and wire fence extending from A to B. There are inclosures within the exterior boundaries of the wire fence, marked blue. The yellow shows the exterior boundaries of the desert land survey. The green shows the mill site applied for by defendant. * * * The dotted lines on the map show the roads. The black lines show the ravines and canyons. I was around the exterior lines in 1875. There was a line of posts and a furrow, except in one place, marked ‘ bluff,’' where there is a steep limestone bluff and a wire fence between points A and B. The line could be easily seen and readily traced. The lines marked ‘wire fence,’ inside the exterior lines, was a wire fence. The blue lines, near the mill site, indicate a wire fence. The improvements on the ranch are the Boselyn furnace and four houses, and a number of shafts, tunnels, etc. * * % There is a ditch along a portion of the south end, from E to F.”

[457]*457We are unable to say where many of these improvements are situated.

In its opinion the court says: “The testimony established, without contradiction, that the exterior boundaries of plaintiff’s claim were distinctly marked by posts, furrows and post holes, except for a short distance across the canyon, at the south side of plaintiff’s and defendant’s claim;” and that, as to such part, the testimony was conflicting; that as to that portion, plaintiff’s testimony showed there was a wire fence until about a year prior to the trial, when it was broken by a. flood, but that the posts and a ditch remained, by which the-line could be readily traced.

By means of the map the above facts may have been plainly shown to the court. 1'n the absence of the map, the expressions of the witnesses are indefinite, and any doubt must be resolved in favor of the judgment. (Cohen v. E. & P. R. R. Co., 14 Nev. 390.)

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Related

Rogers v. Cooney
7 Nev. 213 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1872)
Cohen v. Eureka & Palisade Railroad
14 Nev. 376 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1879)

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Bluebook (online)
17 Nev. 449, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamburg-mining-co-v-stephenson-nev-1883.