Merchants' Nat. Bank v. McKeown

119 P. 334, 60 Or. 325, 1911 Ore. LEXIS 230
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 119 P. 334 (Merchants' Nat. Bank v. McKeown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merchants' Nat. Bank v. McKeown, 119 P. 334, 60 Or. 325, 1911 Ore. LEXIS 230 (Or. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Eakin.

This is a suit instituted to establish an adverse right to a mining claim, for which defendants have applied to the United States’ Land Department for a patent. The Golden Star claim is one of a group of mines originally owned by the Copperopolis Copper Company, in Grant [327]*327County, Oregon, to whose title plaintiff has succeeded. On January 2, 1908, defendants relocated it as the Argonaut quartz mining claim.

It is conceded that the Copperopolis Copper Company did no annual labor, as required by section 2326, U. S. Rev. St. (U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1430), upon the Golden Star claim for the year 1907. But plaintiff asserts that until June, 1906, it was performing labor in excavating a tunnel, and was erecting machinery upon the Protection & Oregon Bell claims, being patented claims in a group with the Gloden Star, known as the “Home Group,” for its development, and had constructed more than 600 feet of tunnel and had several thousand dollars’ worth of machinery and buildings thereon; that for lack of funds it had ceased work thereon in June, 1906, and its superintendent, W. W. Gibbs, his wife, and son, had remained upon the property as keepers of the property until June, 1907. Gibbs’ salary as superintendent was $150 per month. The son’s salary as chore boy and the wife’s as cook was $40 each per month. Plaintiff relied on these expenditures to constitute the annual labor for the 10 unpatented claims in that group. Defendants allege in the answer the forfeiture by plaintiff’s grantors of the Golden Star claim as follows:

“That on the 2d day of January, 1908, the plaintiff or its grantors or predecessors in interest had performed no work or improvements upon said Golden Star quartz claim as the annual labor and assessment work for the year 1907, and all rights or interest under or by virtue of said pretended location and amended location were forfeited and the said premises so attempted to be located were forfeited on account of the failure to do said annual work, and the same was on the 2d day of January, 1908, unappropriated public domain of the United States, and subject to be located as such.”

1. Plaintiff now for the first time insists that the answer does not sufficiently allege a forfeiture, in that [328]*328it does not state that work on the claim had not been resumed in 1908. Generally forfeiture as a defense must be specially pleaded, but it is stated in 2 Lindley, Mines, § 643, that this rule does not necessarily obtain in a proceeding to determine adverse claims under U. S. Rev. St., § 2326, where the title of each party is in issue, and neither can recover without proof of title. See, to the same effect, Willson v. Cleaveland, 30 Cal. 192; Trevaskis v. Peard, 111 Cal. 599 (44 Pac. 246); Steel v. Gold Lead M. Co., 18 Nev. 80, 86 (1 Pac. 448).

2. Furthermore, there is not a total absence of allegation thereof; it being alleged that on January 2, 1908, plaintiff had performed no work or improvements as annual labor or assessment work for the year 1907, and the same was on January 2, 1908, unappropriated public domain, subject to location, and that defendants located it on that day. This may be a defective statement of the fact that work was not resumed, but not an omission. There was no contention at the trial that work was resumed in 1908, prior to defendants’ location and it is too late to raise that question in this court for the first time. A pleading unobjected to until after trial will be liberally construed. Patterson v. Patterson, 40 Or. 560 (67 Pac. 664).

The only other contention of plaintiff is that the evidence established the fact that plaintiff’s grantors performed the annual labor for the year 1907 as required by the United States statute. It is not contended by plaintiff that any labor was performed on the Golden Star c’iaim during that year, but that, it being a part of the “Home Group,” work done and improvements made on the Protection and Oregon Bell claims prior to 1907, which was for the development of all claims, inured to the benefit of the Golden Star, and that the work of the watchman above mentioned in 1907 should be taken as the annual labor for those claims.

[329]*3293. When defendants established that no work had been done upon the Golden Star claim for the year 1907, which was admitted by plaintiff, the burden shifted, and was upon plaintiff to establish the fact that work done outside of the claim was ■ for its benefit. 2 Lindley, § 630; Dyer v. Brogan, 70 Cal. 136 (11 Pac. 589); Hall v. Kearney, 18 Colo. 505 (33 Pac. 373); Sherlock v. Leigh-ton, 9 Wyo. 297 (63 Pac. 580, 934). It appears from the evidence that in June, 1906, the Copperopolis Copper Company ceased operation upon the group and the men were discharged except Gibbs, a stockholder and officer of the company and superintendent of the operation, who remained upon the properties in the employ of the company, until June, 1907, as watchman or keeper. The improvements upon the Protection and Oregon Bell claims consisted of two engines and boilers, concentrating tables, two gigs, a gasoline engine, a dynamo, an ore crusher, an air compressor which was used in operating a drill in the tunnel, a ventilating system, operated in the tunnel by the gasoline engine. A part of this plant was obtained only to experiment on the ore from the Oregon Bell claim, and was not used more than a month or two. The only work done at any time which tended to develop the Golden Star claim was the tunnel which had reached within a few hundred feet of the claim; and the only machinery or improvements that related to it was such as were used in extending the tunnel. When the mine was shut down in June, 1906, the company had evidently no immediate prospect of resuming work. It ceased work for the reason that it had no money and was making an effort to sell the mine. Thereafter, in June, 1907, the property was attached for debt and placed in the hands of a receiver, and through such proceeding the property was transferred to this plaintiff.

4. It is not contended that there was any work done on any of the group that could constitute development [330]*330work for the year 1907, other than the expense of the watchman from January 1 to June 1, 1907, and the sufficiency of that expense to constitute the annual work for the Golden Star claim depends upon the necessity for the watchman, and whether the expense was sufficient for that purpose.

5. During that period Gibbs was upon the property as keeper, but the services of the son in cutting wood for the house and caring for the team of horses and those of the wife as cook were not necessary; nor was the company justified in paying a superintendent's salary for a watchman. There is no evidence as to the value of the services of a watchman, but it does appear that McClernan during the same time was performing annual assessment work upon the Kimbell group, belonging to the same company, at $3 a day, and paid his own board, and the expense of the watchman should be no more.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P. 334, 60 Or. 325, 1911 Ore. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merchants-nat-bank-v-mckeown-or-1911.