Holmes v. Salamanca Gold Mining & Milling Co.

91 P. 160, 5 Cal. App. 659, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 267
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 1, 1907
DocketCiv. No. 344.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 91 P. 160 (Holmes v. Salamanca Gold Mining & Milling Co.) 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
Holmes v. Salamanca Gold Mining & Milling Co., 91 P. 160, 5 Cal. App. 659, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 267 (Cal. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

ALLEN, P. J.

Action to recover possession of certain unpatented mining claims. Defendants had judgment. Plaintiffs in due time appealed, upon a statement, from the order denying a new trial.

The only questions presented upon this appeal relate to the action of the trial court in admitting certain testimony and as to the sufficiency of the evidence to support certain material findings. The complaint is in the usual form, alleging plaintiffs’ ownership, possession and right of possession on December 30, 1903, of three unpatented lode mining claims, designated as the “Bonanza,” “Blossom” and “Lucinda,” and of plaintiffs’ ouster therefrom by defendants. The answer is a denial of the ownership and right of possession in plaintiffs, and of the ouster.

Under these issues the court found that on the date named plaintiffs were not the owners or entitled to the possession of said mining claims, although they were in actual possession; that plaintiffs had not performed the annual assessment work thereon for three years, and that defendants had made valid locations of such claims after forfeiture by plaintiffs and had taken peaceable possession and continued work thereon up to the commencement of the trial.

Plaintiffs deraigned title through mineral locations, the validity of which is not questioned, and through deeds from such locators and intermediate owners. The court, under objections, permitted the defendants to introduce testimony tending to vitiate two deeds affecting plaintiffs’ title to the “Bonanza” claim. This action of the court is assigned as error, *661 because no question of fraud was raised by the answer. The recent decision of Chrast v. O’Connor, 41 Wash. 360, [83 Pac. 238], would seem to settle this question adversely to appellants. That decision is based upon Mather v. Hutchinson, 25 Wis. 27, where it is held that under a complaint averring ownership in general terms, the defendant must he allowed to prove anything which would defeat the title offered by the plaintiff. The reason assigned is most convincing, for plaintiff not being required to set up his deraignment of title, he might upon the trial prove under such general averment any source of title available. Any other rule applying to defendants would require them to foreknow and avoid, by specific allegations, a title which plaintiff was not bound to disclose at all. This rule has support, also, in Cooper v. Miller, 113 Cal. 246, [45 Pac. 325], Goldberg v. Bruschi, 146 Cal. 710, [81 Pac. 23], and Sparrow v. Rhoades, 76 Cal. 211, [9 Am. St. Rep. 197, 18 Pac. 245].

The court found that the plaintiffs were not the owners or entitled to possession of the mining property on December 30, 1903, nor were they on said date ousted therefrom by defendants. These findings are attacked by appellants upon the ground that there is no evidence in the record sufficient for their support. The findings of the court as to the ownership and right of possession may be sustained upon either of two theories: First, that plaintiffs failed in their deraignment of title from the original locators; or, second; that all rights under the original location had lapsed by reason of the failure to do the annual assessment work required by the federal statutes in order to perpetuate the possessory right, and that defendants exercising a right of citizenship had entered thereon and made a subsequent location before resumption of work by appellants.

The first theory, in so far as the “Bonanza” claim is concerned, derives its support alone from the testimony of one Acosta, which is to the effect that he never knowingly or voluntarily made any conveyance of this mine to plaintiffs, and never knew that he had any title to the mine and never made any claim of ownership thereto; that his only contract with the plaintiffs was that if they would pay him $400 in settlement of a claim of $650, which he held against certain trustees, he would give them a receipt in full; that pursuant *662 to this agreement he went with plaintiffs to the town of Hedges, where several papers were spread upon a counter; that when he signed one, plaintiffs took it away and presented him with another; that in that way he signed two, three, or four papers; that no notary or other officer ever made known to him the contents of the papers so signed, or asked him any questions in relation thereto; that personally he did not know or care what he was signing, but simply wanted to get his money and get away from the mine; that he had never had knowledge of any deed having been made to him by such trustees until he received that information in court upon the trial. If the court accepted Acosta’s statements as true, which fact is suggested by the findings, it would follow that the possession of the deed from Acosta was obtained by the plaintiffs surreptitiously. A deed, the possession of which is fraudulently or wrongfully obtained from the grantor, without his knowledge, consent or acquiescence, is no more effectual to pass title to a supposed grantee than if it were a total forgery. (Devlin on Deeds, see. 267, and cases cited.) The validity of the deed from Acosta to plaintiffs depends upon his due execution thereof and voluntary delivery. That such deed be voluntary, it is essential that the character of the instrument be known, as well as that the act of delivery should be intended by the party. If the delivery be not voluntary, the instrument is a nullity, unless some act is shown in respect thereto which would estop the grantor from denying its validity, or by some subsequent act a ratification is established. There is nothing in the record from which it may be claimed that plaintiffs were, by the conduct of Acosta, led to do what they otherwise would not have done to their pecuniary prejudice—this being said to be the vital principle of equitable estoppel. (Carpy v. Dowdell, 115 Cal. 677, [47 Pac. 695].) If Acosta’s statements be true, under the contract with plaintiffs the payment of the $400 made t>y plaintiffs was not upon the faith of any conveyance, nor was it intended that a conveyance should enter into the transaction connected with the payment of money to him. Neither can it be said that, with knowledge of the transaction brought home to him, Acosta ever acquiesced in said deed or ratified the same.

*663 As to the “Blossom” mine, the record discloses that the title thereto was never in Acosta; that as early as 1891 the owners of said mine joined in a conveyance of the “Blossom” mine to a corporation known as the Blossom Mining and Milling Company. If the plaintiffs ever acquired any title to this particular mine, it was through a conveyance directly to them by the Blossom Mining and Milling Company, authorized by the board of directors in 1902. It appears from the testimony of the secretary that, notwithstanding the authorization at the date last named and the physical signing of the deed pursuant thereto by the president and secretary of the corporation, the secretary retained possession of the deed, and put the same in the minute-book of the corporation, where it remained until long after the commencement of this action; when the officers acknowledged the same and it was placed upon record.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P. 160, 5 Cal. App. 659, 1907 Cal. App. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-salamanca-gold-mining-milling-co-calctapp-1907.