McCann v. McMillan

61 P. 31, 129 Cal. 350, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 984
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 653.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 61 P. 31 (McCann v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCann v. McMillan, 61 P. 31, 129 Cal. 350, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 984 (Cal. 1900).

Opinion

THE COURT

Plaintiffs brought this action to quiet their title to three mining claims known as the Compromise, Handy, and Sixteen to One, situate in Calico mining district, San Bernardino county. Findings and judgment were for the plaintiffs, and defendant Barkley appeals from the judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial. Defendant McMillan answered, disclaiming all interest in the property involved.

A general outline of some material facts is essential to a comprehension of the points in controversy.

Prior to January 1, 1896, H. B. Stevens and Eugenia D. Porter located certain mining claims covering the same ground now claimed by plaintiffs under locations made by themselves on January 1, 1897, the validity of which is the ultimate question here involved. Ho assessment work was performed by the prior locators during the year 1896 on any of the claims. On December 38, 1896, said Stevens and Porter sold and conveyed their said claims to the defendant McMillan. On December 30, 1896, *352 McMillan and one C. E. Calm went upon said claims, and, as claimed by defendants, abandoned them, and afterward, upon the same day and the next, relocated them for and in the name of defendant Barkley. Plaintiffs made their alleged locations on the morning of January 1, 1897, assuming that the ground was then open to location.

Plaintiffs’ title is controverted by appellant on each of two principal grounds, which will be noticed in their order.

1. That the ground in controversy was not open to location by the plaintiffs, because of the locations made for defendant Barkley on December 30, 1896.

That the locations made prior to 1896, and which were conveyed by Stevens and Porter to McMillan on December 38, 1896, were at that time valid locations is not questioned; and, but for the alleged abandonment of them by McMillan on December 30th, would have continued to be valid until midnight of December 31st, when the ground would become forfeited and vacant because no assessment work was done for the year 1896. The court found that the ground was not vacant at the time the Barkley locations were made, but was vacant on January 1, 1897, when plaintiffs made their locations, and therefore found, in effect, that there was no abandonment of the claims by McMillan on December 30th, but that he forfeited them by failing to do the assessment work on them, which failure left them vacant on January 1, 1897.

We think the finding that there was no abandonment is justified by the evidence. “Abandonment,” as was said in Myers v. Spooner, 55 Cal. 260, “is a question of intention, and of this intention the jury were to judge in view of all the facts and circumstances of the case. It is true, as stated in the brief of counsel for appellants, that Leathe testified at the trial that there was no intention by him or his colocators to abandon the claims. But his testimony to that effect was not conclusive.” They knew when they purchased the claims that the assessment work for 1896 had not been done, and that their title would expire with the expiration of the year. They intended, as was explicitly stated, to relocate for themselves; but to wait until January 1st would expose the claims to location 'by others who had an even chance with them. They could not relocate before *353 in anyone’s name without an abandonment, and to say to each other that they abandoned, and within ten minutes, and without leaving the ground, locate them in the name of a person in New York, and thus burden an absent friend with mining claims which they assert were not, to them, worth doing the assessment work upon, is at least improbable. But we find at the conclusion of Mr. Calm’s testimony the statement: “When I went on the ground on the 22d of January I did not look for tools. We had men on the ground at that time, and if I had seen tools they might have been theirs. I did not notice whether there were any tools there that did not belong to us or our men.” / ¡/y 7

Who the witness meant by “we” or “us” is not stated. It nowhere appears that Barkley was at any time informed of the location having been made, or that he gave any directions or authority to have any work done. McMillan by his answer disclaimed all right, title, or interest in said claims or either of them; but he testified that he was there in January and April, 1897, and did work on the Mars in April of that year; that the Dauntless and Minerva also had work done upon them in 1897, and added, “I was there in possession of those claims”; that work was done in January and February, and that he was there in possession doing the work when the injunction was served.

McMillan further testified that he was on those claims on December 31st, the day after the alleged abandonment; that “there was no way of getting in there except on horseback, and I went to see if I could find a good place for a wagon road”; and that he was there on January 16th also.

Barkley’s deposition was not taken, nor was there any evidence that he was ever informed that these mining claims were located in his name, or that work was being done for him, or that Calm or McMillan were his agents. Barkley’s answer was verified by McMillan, but even that he did not do as agent, but as one of the defendants in an action in which he disclaimed all interest.

We have gone into this matter thus fully because of the direct testimony of McMillan and Calm to the alleged abandonment. It was for the trial court to determine the fact, and we think the circumstances justify the conclusion that there was no» abandonment.

*354 2. Appellant further contends that plaintiffs have not shown title because “there was no proof that the ground contained veins or lodes of mineral bearing rock in place.”

It is said that the ground contained a deposit of borate maternal or borax, and that such deposits cannot be located as lode «claims, but only as placer claims.

v The locations made by plaintiffs or their predecessors in interest do not profess to he lode claims, or that they contain veins or lodes of mineral bearing rock in place.

The notices are “that we, the undersigned, have this day located this ground for borate mining purposes,” and describe claims fifteen hundred feet long and six hundred feet wide, while appellant’s locations describe them as lode claims.

But the point made is immaterial. It is said in Bindley on Mines, section 432: “That, generally speaking, the acts required to be performed in order to complete a valid location under the federal laws applicable to placers, are the same as required in cases of lode locations.” (See, also, U. S. Rev. Stats., sec. 2329.) Appellant does not point out any defect in respondents’ notices as' notices of placer claims, and we perceive none.

It is further contended that the certificates or notices of location of respondents’ mining claims do not describe them with reference to natural objects or permanent monuments, nor describe them as being distinctly marked on the ground so that the boundaries could be readily traced.

We think the reference in plaintiffs’ location notices to natural objects or permanent monuments is sufficient.

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Bluebook (online)
61 P. 31, 129 Cal. 350, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccann-v-mcmillan-cal-1900.