Mammoth Mining Co. v. Grand Central Mining Co.

213 U.S. 72, 29 S. Ct. 413, 53 L. Ed. 702, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1854
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 8, 1909
Docket97
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 213 U.S. 72 (Mammoth Mining Co. v. Grand Central Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mammoth Mining Co. v. Grand Central Mining Co., 213 U.S. 72, 29 S. Ct. 413, 53 L. Ed. 702, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1854 (1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holmes

delivered the opinion of the court.

' This suit was begun by the Grand Central Mining Company *73 to recover for the removal of ores from beneath the surface of its Silveropolis mining claim, and for an injunction. The defendant, the Mammoth Mining Company, filed a counter claim, setting up that it was the owner of certain mining claims, especially the First Northern Extension of the Mammoth Mining Claim, Lot No. 38, being senior to all the other claims concerned; the Bradley, and the Golden King; the last two being to the west of the Mammoth Extension, between it and the Silveropolis, with more or less overlapping; and that the vein or lodé from which the ore in question was taken has a part of its apex in the Mammoth Extension for 1,100 feet; which, if true, would entitle the Mammoth Company to the ore. It prayed that the plaintiff’s claim be adjudged invalid, both because of the foregoing alleged facts and on the ground that the plaintiff’s patent gave it no right to the ore unless the apex of the lode was within its claim, and it prayed also that the Mammoth Company’s title be quieted and confirmed. After a trial the counter claim of the Mammoth Company was rejected; the judgment of the trial court was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Utah in an elaborate decision, and then the case was brought here, on the counter claim alone.

Both of the parties are Utah corporations, and the suit was in a state court. The ground on which this court is asked to take jurisdiction is that the decision of the Supreme Court on the facts rested on a definition of a lode orvein which the plaintiff in error contests, and therefore turned on the construction of Rev. Stats., § 2322. There is-a faint argument on the other point that we have mentioned, that the defendant in error had no right to ore beneath the surface of the Silveropolis claim, unless from a vein having its apex there, but that, if relevant, has been' disposed of by previous decisions of this court and may be disregarded. St. Louis Mining & Milling Co. v. Montana Mining Co., 194 U. S. 235. So also may an attempt to reopen the findings of fact. Of course, if these findings rest on a false definition they may have to be reconsidered, and cannot be assumed to be correct. But the evidence will not be discussed here. The only *74 question with which we shall deal is whether the plaintiff in error makes out the alleged mistake of law. Chrisman v. Miller, 197 U. S. 313, 319; Egan v. Hart, 165 U. S. 188, 189.

The record discloses that the Mammoth Company in its cross complaint set up the proposition as the limits of the title under the Silveropolis claim that we have dismissed, and that' it alleged that it set up a title under the laws of the United States. The record also shows that at the trial the judge called in an advisory jury, and that he gave them certain instructions as to what constitutes the apex of a vein, &c.; and it is argued that it must be assumed that the judge, when he made his findings of fact adverse to the Mammoth Company was governed by the same views of the law. But the cross complaint by itself shows no warrant for this writ of error, and as the case went to the Supreme Court by appeal, and the facts were discussed at great length and reestablished by that court, it is in the opinion of that cou'rt alone, if anywhere, that the supposed error must be found.. Indeed the instructions to the jury were treated as immaterial by that court, and held not to be a ground for reversal, even if wrong, if the judgment was right upon the evidence. It is necessary, therefore, to show the nature of the case and of the course of reasoning followed by the.Supreme Court of the State.

For the character of the country where the question arises we quote from the judgment under review:

“ The mines are found in a lime belt which covers about two square miles, and is the great producing area of the Tintic district. In some places the limestone beds are upturned, large areas tilted upon edge, the beds dipping nearly vertically down; while in other places they dip at lower angles, arid in special areas the dips are quite uniform; and again, though, it seems, not frequently, anticlinals exist. This limestone is surrounded on all sides, except the north, by igneous rocks. The sedimentary rocks are broken up and fractured, evidently the result of igneous intrusion. The limestone carries some iron, the different forms of iron oxide,-also some manganese, and in places the limestone is crushed, crumbled, and brecciated. . ... The *75 surface of the limestone area, wherever exposed, is marked with innumerable seams, cracks, and small fissures filled with carbonate of lime, stained more or less with iron, and sometimes manganese. Quartz, spar, and. other materials, characteristic, in general, of mineral-bearing limestone areas, are present, and in places the surface is brecciated and.recemented. A trace of mineral, and of one or more of the precious metals, and, in places, more than a trace, even where there is no known vein, seems also to be a characteristic of that lime belt.”

In the belt thus described the Mammoth. Company’s Lot 38 runs northeasterly, and the Silveropolis claim about north, its southerly boundary being considerably further north than the southern boundary of Lot 38. It is admitted that the apex of a vein extends northerly in Lot 38 from its southern boundary for six hundred and ninety feet to' a point ninety feet south of the southern boundary of the Silveropolis claim extended. But the Utah courts found that at that, point the vein on its strike and at its apex, wholly departs from Lot 38, in a northwesterly and then in a more northerly direction, whereas the Mammoth Company contends that it continues in that lot to a line 1,100 feet distant from its southerly lineand that large deposits of ore, taken by the court to represent the strike of the vein, really are upon its dip.

In coming to its conclusion the Supreme Court, after, stating the presumption that the ore belongs to the owner of the claim under which it is found, lays great stress on the fact that the Mammoth Company could not locate the: hanging or foot wall of the supposed vein north of the point at which the vein was found to leave Lot 38. It goes on to find that by the preponderance of evidence the surface indications.for a long distance east and west of Lot 38, north of the point indicated above, are the same as those in the lot. It reaches the samé result from assays of numerous samples, taken from the open cuts and exposures in the same part of the lot. It then elaborately discusses the workings, underground. It says.that the fact is clear that the ore always is found near the line of the'great ore bodies. *76 whether they be on the strike or on the dip of the vein, northwesterly beyond the above-mentioned point.

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Bluebook (online)
213 U.S. 72, 29 S. Ct. 413, 53 L. Ed. 702, 1909 U.S. LEXIS 1854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mammoth-mining-co-v-grand-central-mining-co-scotus-1909.