Madeira v. Sonoma Magnesite Co.

130 P. 175, 20 Cal. App. 719, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 209
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 1006.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 130 P. 175 (Madeira v. Sonoma Magnesite 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
Madeira v. Sonoma Magnesite Co., 130 P. 175, 20 Cal. App. 719, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 209 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

*721 CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action to determine the conflicting claims to certain mineral land situated in Sonoma County. Plaintiffs claim by virtue of an alleged location made by plaintiff Madeira on April 12, 1905, called the Madeira Magnesite Mine. Defendant claims as grantee of certain alleged several locations, made by Arnold, Davis, and Woods, on September 14, 1905, embracing the land claimed by plaintiffs. The cause was tried by the court without a jury and defendant had findings and judgment in its favor.

Plaintiffs claim that the following findings are not supported by the evidence: ‘ ‘ II. That said attempted location of said Madeira covered the ground described in paragraph 3 of the complaint herein and other ground. III. That the attempted location, viz., the Madeira Magnesite Mine, was not at the time of the attempted location thereof on or about April 32, 1905, or for more than a year thereafter, and long after the location on the same ground of the Cecilia, Flora, Marie, Seymour, and Cyril claims of defendant, distinctly marked on the ground, or marked at all, so that its boundaries could be readily traced.”

Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment on transcript of all the proceedings in the case.

There aré but two questions discussed in the briefs: 1. Assuming that Madeira made a location, was it void because of the excess of land included in it? and, 2. Was his location marked on the ground so that its boundaries could be readily traced?

Plaintiffs introduced a blue print map of the original Madeira location and as it was corrected on a relocation by Madeira in June, 1906. With the aid' of this map and the testimony of plaintiffs’ witness, Riley, who made the survey for plaintiffs, a fairly clear conception may be gained of what Madeira did, as shown by his testimony, in making his location in April, 1905. Austin Creek passes along a considerable portion of the southerly end line of the claim and meanders along its easterly boundary trending easterly at the northerly end line, as we understand the map; the points of the compass are not indicated. A trail ran along near this creek which was the means used by Madeira in passing from one part of the claim to another to locate his corners. As near as we can understand the process from his testimony, he *722 made right angle offsets where he could and estimated the distances by stepping off the land. The country, he testified, is very rough and hilly and covered with a dense growth of chaparral along the east line impassable and generally difficult to penetrate except by cutting one’s way through. The notice posted by him was as follows:

“Austin Creek Apr. 12th 1905
“Notice of Mineral Location
“I the undersigned claim 1500 feet by 600 feet of this lode for mining purposes. Located in sec. 21 twp. 9 N. R 11 W. adjoining the lands of Dr. Otner near Redslide, beginning at a tree and stake with monuments on South bank of East Austin Creek running 1500 feet in a Northwest and Southeast direction, with 300 feet on each side of lode with corner stakes and monuments on each corner. Lode crops high. Claimed for quicksilver, gold, silver or magnesite. George Madeira.”

His claim is in section 20 and not section 21, as stated in the notice. Madeira was familiar with the locality and with this particular ground and had made mineral locations before and claimed to know the requisites of the law governing the method of making them. He had some knowledge of surveying and civil engineering and carried a pocket compass on April 12,1905. He testified: That he- placed the first notice at “the point of discovery about 15 feet from the (south) end of the ledge on the south bank of the creek ... on account of the creek raising in the winter, it would carry it away if it was on the ledge; '. . . built a monument of rock around the base of the tree where the notice -was posted, and that was the center, of the ledge or lode. ’ ’ He then followed the trail leading up and down the creek to a point where “there was a pair of bars directly upon the trail.” He picked up a board which he found at the base of a so-called juniper tree, nailed it to the tree and on it nailed a copy pf his notice. He testified that any one going through these bars would see the notice. This was what he intended as his southwest corner. It was 276 feet away from where it should have been as shown, in the corrected location. He found his southeast corner by following the trail. “I would step straight east and then offset and go east again to maintain as straight a line as it was possible to do.” Reaching what he supposed was the southeast corner, he testified: “Posted a notice and built a monument of *723 earth there, there was no stone there, I had what I call my geological pick and I dug up the earth and made a mound of earth and put a picket from the fence in it and nailed the notice on the fence.” This was in fact 283 feet beyond where it should have been. There was no evidence as to the size of this monument nor was there any evidence that he drove the picket into the ground. He then followed the trail “on the right bank of the creek 1500” feet, measuring the supposed distance by stepping, to what he intended as his northeast corner, where, he testified, he “built a monument of rocks and placed a stake in it immediately on the bank of the creek.” The size of the monument is not given nor does it appear that the stake was driven in the ground nor how it was placed among the rocks. This point was 145 feet north and away from where it should have been. “I then went directly west arid stepped the ground the same way as I did before, it is very difficult to get across the creeks and I had to guess at the distance; . . . then I came to the center, I called it the center of the claim again, and there I built a large stone monument in the gulch, in a little bit of a gulch that came down there . . . and placed a stake in that, but no notice on that end at all. Prom there I went west 300 feet from that stepping it up the hill through the brush, there I found a small dry tree, I suppose three or four inches in diameter, I broke the top off, and dug a mound of earth again with a pick, there was some small boulders or rocks lying around there and I gathered them up and piled them around the base of the tree. That marked the northwest corner of the claim.” This was 364 feet north of where his corner should have been on the west side of his claim, which, according to his testimony, was practically impassable, and he made no effort to get through it. Summing up the matter, the court said, in its opinion printed in defendants’ brief: “Madeira intended to step off a claim 1500 feet by 600 feet, but he really, marked out an irregular parallelogram over 2000 feet long on the west side; 1600 feet in the center; 1700 feet on the east side and probably 800 feet wide on the north side.” Madeira visited his claim twice prior to defendants’ location, once in April and once in July, and renewed some of his notices, but placed no new ones and did nothing more toward marking his claim; he also took away some specimens *724 of the rock but performed no work on the claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 P. 175, 20 Cal. App. 719, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madeira-v-sonoma-magnesite-co-calctapp-1912.