Me. Boys' Tunnel Co. v. Bos. Tunnel Co.

37 Cal. 40
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 37 Cal. 40 (Me. Boys' Tunnel Co. v. Bos. Tunnel Co.) 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
Me. Boys' Tunnel Co. v. Bos. Tunnel Co., 37 Cal. 40 (Cal. 1869).

Opinions

By the Court, Sprague, J.:

This is an action for an alleged trespass of defendant upon the mining claim of plaintiff.

The only controverted question of fact, upon the trial, seems to have been whether the locus in quo of the alleged trespass is within the boundaries of plaintiff’s claim.

Upon a careful review of the whole testimony, we have not been able to discern any substantial conflict in the evidence tending to establish the following preliminary facts, upon which this ultimate fact depends:

Early in the month of January, 1855, defendant’s grantors located, by marking out and establishing the four corners, and commenced work upon, a certain piece of mining ground, situate on Table Mountain, in Tuolumne County, and on the 29th of the same month caused a record of their location, with the metes and bounds thereof, to be made in the office of the Recorder for the mining district in which the same was located. Subsequently, about the 15th of January, 1855, the grantors of plaintiff located mining grounds immediately south of the defendant’s claim, and [44]*44between defendant’s claim on the north and claims previously located on the south, known as the Scraperville or Welsh Boys’ claims; and thereafter, on the 28th November, 1855, caused records of such location, with assumed metes and bounds thereof, to be made at the office of the ¡Recorder for the minino; district.

There seems to have been no controversy at the trial as to the true southwest corner of defendant’s and northwest corner of plaintiff’s claims; this corner is admitted to be a white oak stump, which stump is the southwest corner of defendant’s and northwest corner of plaintiff’s claim.

About the 1st of January, 1855, defendant’s grantors marked out the western line of their claim, and established and marked their northwest and southwest corners, the northwest corner being a large pine tree, and the southwest corner being a large white oak tree, (now a stump.) On the following day, or a few days thereafter, they marked out their south, east, and north lines, and established their southeast and northeast corners, their northeast corner being a small pine tree, and their southeast corner being a mound of stones; the distance between defendant’s northwest' and southwest corners and between their northeast and southeast corners, as measured at the time, and as by them recorded on the 29th January, 1855, being three thousand feet.

The plaintiff’s claim, subsequently located about the 15th January, 1855, was located between the defendant's claim on the north and the Scraperville or Welsh Boys’ claim on the south; and was marked out by marking the northwest established corner of the Scraperville claim as their southwest corner, and the northeast corner of the Scraperville claim as their southeast corner, and marking the established southwest corner of defendant’s claim as their northwest corner; and their northeast corner was intended to be made identical -with the established southeast corner of defendant’s claim; but not being able at the time to discover defendant’s southeast corner, a notice was posted on a nut pine tree as plaintiff’s northeast corner, stating that “that ivas the Maine [45]*45Boys’ claim, bounded on the south by the Scraperville and on the north by the Boston claim.”

No other or different location of plaintiff’s claim was ever made or attempted, except that a month or two after this first location the party ivho made the same was shown the southeast corner of defendant’s claim by defendant’s company, the same being a pile of stones. He then made the same pile of stones plaintiff’s northeast corner. But subsequently, in November, 1855, on making a record of its claim, plaintiff described its location by metes and bounds, without reference to any other claim, except the Welsh Boys’ claim, and gave the distance from its southeast to its northeast corners, and from its northwest to its southwest corners, as one thousand seven hundred feet. The measurement of these lines was not made or attempted at the time the ground was located in January, 1855, nor does it appear that any measurement of these lines was made or attempted prior to the making of the record, or at any other time, until a short time before the commencement of this suit, except, in 1856, one Alfred Roberts, a member of plaintiff’s company, measured the west and east lines of its claim, and found the west-line to be from one thousand six hundred to one thousand eight hundred feet in length, and the east line to be five or six hundred feet in length.

The true location of the southeast corner of defendant’s and northeast corner of plaintiff’s claims appears to have been the only material point in controversy on the trial.

Witnesses, who made surveys of the respective claims a short time before the trial, testify to two piles of stones on the eastern brow of Table Mountain—one about six hundred and twenty-five feet north of the other. The plaintiff claims this north pile of stones as defendant’s true southeast corner, and as its own true northeast corner; and defendant claims the south pile of stones as its ,own true southeast corner and plaintiff’s true northeast corner. Starting from the oak stump on the west side of the mountain, which is agreed to be the true southwest corner of defendant’s claim and the [46]*46northwest corner of plaintiff’s, and running a direct line from thence easterly to the most southerly pile of stones on the east brow of the mountain, claimed by defendant as its true southeast corner, the locus in quo of the alleged trespass is entirely within the limits of the defendant’s claim; and by running a direct line easterly from the same oak stump to the northerly pile of stones on the east brow of the mountain, claimed by plaintiff as its true northeast corner, the defendant has worked south of this line one hundred and seventy-seven feet; and if this be the true dividing line between plaintiff’s and defendant’s claims, defendant has trespassed upon plaintiff’s claim to the extent of running a tunnel one hundred and seventy-seven feet upon and in its ground.

There is no positive evidence as to the precise time when, or by whom, either of the two piles of stones were erected on the east brow of the mountain, and there is no evidence tending to establish that plaintiff, or those under whom it claims, ever erected either of those piles of stones, or ever established any northeast corner of its claim, other than the nut pine hereinbefore stated, and about two months thereafter making the pile of stones, pointed out by the “Boston Boys” as their southeast corner, plaintiff’s northeast corner.

There is no conflict in the evidence tending to establish the fact that the southerly pile of stoucs claimed by defendant as the southeast corner is the identical pile of stones pointed out by the “Boston Boys” to the party locating the “ Maine Boys’ ” claim within two months after the first attempt at location of the same, as hereinbefore stated, and is the identical pile of stones which the same party then made the “Maine Boys’ ” northeast corner.

Witness Atherton, called by defendant, is the only witness who testifies as to the time and manner of locating plaintiff’s claim. He says: “I know plaintiff’s and defendant’s claims. I located plaintiff’s claim about the middle of January, 1855. I found a vacant piece of ground between the Boston and Scraperville, and went to find the southwest corner of Bos[47]

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Bluebook (online)
37 Cal. 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/me-boys-tunnel-co-v-bos-tunnel-co-cal-1869.