Lewis v. Carr

246 P. 695, 49 Nev. 366, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 21
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1926
Docket2722
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 246 P. 695 (Lewis v. Carr) 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
Lewis v. Carr, 246 P. 695, 49 Nev. 366, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 21 (Neb. 1926).

Opinion

*368 OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J.:

This is an action brought by appellants to quiet title to a group of mining claims, 14 in number, situated in the Tonopah mining district. Respondents claimed possession and right of possession to all except one of said claims by virtue of relocations. The relocations of the claims in question were made upon the belief that the required amount of assessment work for the year ending July 1, 1924, had not been performed upon the claims. It was stipulated by counsel at the trial that appellants’ locations were valid, and also that the relocations were legally made if such assessment work had not been done. The trial court found that the necessary annual assessment work for the year ending July 1, 1924, had not been performed upon the claims, and rendered judgment quieting respondents’ title thereto.

The appeal is taken from the judgment and order denying the motion for a new trial. The principal *369 error assigned is that all of the findings of the court, to the effect that the necessary annual assessment work for the period mentioned had not been performed upon the claims, are against the evidence. This contention is not sustained by the record. While some work was shown to have been done, there was very substantial evidence to support the finding that it was not sufficient to comply with the law. In reaching this conclusion we have not lost sight of the rule which should have controlled the court — that the burden of proving that appellants had forfeited the claims was upon respondents. We will not undertake to review the evidence further than to discuss later certain evidence which the trial court held was not of a character to be counted as assessment work. As the mining claims involved, 14 in number, constituted one group for the purposes of developing the property, $1,400 worth of work done or improvements made was required by statute to hold possession of the claims.

Chapter 109 of Stats. 1923, p. 184, provides:

“The amount of work done or improvements made during each year to hold possession of a mining claim shall be that prescribed by the laws of the United States, to wit: One hundred dollars annually. In estimating the worth of labor required to be performed upon any mining claim, to hold the same under the laws of the United States, the value of a day’s labor is hereby fixed at the prevailing wages of the district in which such claim is situated; provided, however, that in the sense of this statute eight hours of labor actually performed upon the mining claim shall constitute a day’s labor.”

The trial court held that the services claimed by Lewis in areal geology work could not apply as assessment work. It is insisted that the court erred in this, and it is claimed that, even assuming that the court was correct in holding that only $700 worth of labor had been done on the claims in actual excavation work, the services in areal geology work testified to by Lewis as *370 having been done by him. on the claims constituted assessment work, and that together they were of suffix cient value to more than meet the requirements of the statute. In regard to the latter class of work the appellant Lewis testified that he had studied geology at Harvard ■ College, and had read various works on the geological formations of the district in which the mining claims were located. He testified that during the year ending July 1, 1924, he walked over the mining properties a number of times prospecting, collecting samples of ores, and studying the formations. He used an aneroid barometer to determine the altitude of the hills. He made a map of the claims showing also, as he claimed, the different formations. The map was introduced in evidence, and the witness testified concerning the different formations represented on it. He testified that he was engaged in this work 100 days, and that his services in this respect were worth $10 per day and were beneficial to the claims.

Two mining engineers, residents of Tonopah mining district and in the employ of local mining companies, testified in behalf of appellants. In their testimony they gave their definitions of areal geology. They stated that it was beneficial to mining claims, and was a part of the work done by mining companies on taking over claims. On this phase of the case the trial court has written a very clear and convincing opinion, which we adopt in part as the opinion of this court. It is as follows:

“Areal geology is that branch of geology which pertains to the distribution, position and form of the areas of the earth’s surface occupied by different sorts of rock or different geologic formations, and to the making of geologic maps. (Le Forge) Bulletin 95 — Department of the Interior, by Albert H. Fay. While Gunther, in his, ‘The Examination of prospects.,’ p. 40, does not define areal geology, yet the term bears out the above definition, for the chief purpose of this branch of geology is to study the surface conditions, and, after obtaining sufficient data, to make a map, which is helpful in many ways.
*371 “Two mining engineers testified for the plaintiffs regarding areal geology, and stated that it was the study of the surface conditions for the purpose of making a map, from which an imaginary idea might be obtained as to the conditions under the surface.
“Plaintiff Lewis testified that he made several trips over the ground in dispute, and also adjoining ground, and obtained data, and from this data he made the geologic map, Plaintiff’s Exhibit G, and that these services were worth at least $10 per day, and that it took him about 100 days. Just what character of labor or improvements is required is not specified either in the federal or state statutes. The land department of the government has taken a definite stand upon this question, and is firmly committed to the doctrine that the labor or improvements contemplated by the federal statute are such as bear some direct relation to the development of the mine, and which tend to facilitate the extraction of ores therefrom. Golden Giant M. Co. v. Hill, 27 N. M. 124, 198 P. 276, 14 A. L. R. 1450.
“In Fredericks v. Klauser, 52 Or. 110, 116, 96 P. 679, 682, the court said: ‘The word “improvement,” as thus used,. evidently means such an artificial change of the physical conditions of the earth in, upon, or so reasonably near a mining claim, as to evidence a design to discover mineral therein or to facilitate its extraction, and in all cases the alteration must reasonably be permanent in character.’
“In Snyder on Mines, sec. 498, the doctrine of the cases is summarized as follows: ‘ * * * The test in all cases which should be applied to annual labor is whether the work or improvements tend to develop the claim and facilitate the extraction of the mineral and valuable contents therefrom. Any labor or improvements meeting this requirement will satisfy the statute; nothing else will.’
“In Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636, 26 L. Ed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
246 P. 695, 49 Nev. 366, 1926 Nev. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lewis-v-carr-nev-1926.