Morton v. Solambo Copper Mining Co.

26 Cal. 527
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1864
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 26 Cal. 527 (Morton v. Solambo Copper Mining 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
Morton v. Solambo Copper Mining Co., 26 Cal. 527 (Cal. 1864).

Opinion

By the Court, Sanderson, C. J.

This action was brought to recover an undivided interest in a copper mining claim called the Solambo Claim. The plaintiff recovered judgment in the Court below and the defendant appealed. The case comes before us upon the following statement:

On the trial it was proven that at the time of the location of the Solambo Claim the mining customs, usages and regulations in force in the mining district where said claim is located (there being no written mining laws) adopted and in use in locating such claims were : That the discoverer placed up a notice on the vein or lode, claiming the same for himself and such persons as he thought proper to place with him on the notice, in the proportion of three hundred feet for the discoverer and one hundred and fifty feet for each of the parties so associated with him on said notice, and then entering upon and working such vein or lode. That on or about the 26th day of January, 1863, Joseph Dejon, the discoverer of said lode, in accordance with said mining customs, usages and regulations, located a copper vein or lode, placing thereon the following notice:
“ ‘ No. 1—Discovery Claim, Solambo Lead.—We, the undersigned, claim three thousand nine hundred feet in this copper lode, running one thousand nine hundred feet northwest and une thousand nine hundred and fifty feet southeast from this notice, with all dips, angles and spurs, the lode being three thousand and nine hundred feet in length, and five hundred feet on each side of the lode.’
[531]*531“ To this notice, Joseph Dejon, the discoverer, appended his own name, with sufficient other names to make up the amount claimed in parcels of one hundred and fifty feet.each, and afterward placed said notice, so containing said names, on the lode, entered, took possession of, and worked the same. Among the names so placed by Joseph Dejon on said notice, were those of Victor Amy, Joseph Vigoreux and Victor Reviere, grantors of the plaintiff, and comprising three shares of one hundred and fifty feet each, or four hundred and fifty in all.
“ The name of Victor Amy was placed on said notice by his permission and consent. The names of the other parties were placed upon said notice without their knowledge, and Dejon had no authority to use their names from any of them except Victor Amy.
“ After the claim had been so located by said Dejon, and said notice had remained thereon a few days, and before the aforesaid parties, except Victor Amy, knew that their names were on said notice, Joseph Dejon took down and destroyed said original notice, and placed up another, claiming the same ground, but omitting the names of all the foregoing parties and substituting others in their stead.
“ The parties so substituted transferred their alleged interest to defendant, who took exclusive possession, refusing to permit said parties above named whose names were first placed on the notice by Dejon to enter upon the claim or to recognize them as having any right therein.
“ Said first named parties transferred their respective interests to plaintiff. On the trial the Court charged the jury as follows : ‘ That if they believed from the evidence that Dejon was the discoverer of. the lode in question, and had located the same in accordance with the mining customs of the district, by placing upon said lode a notice such as had been given in evidence, and containing the names of plaintiff’s grantors thereon, and had entered upon and worked the same thereunder, such location and entry in point of law, gave said parties, whose names were so placed on said notice, a vested right as tenants in common in said lode, and said Dejon had no right [532]*532afterward, without their knowledge or consent, to tear down the first notice and place up another omitting their names. That such conduct on his part did not destroy any right they acquired by the mining customs under said location, and that unless it was shown that such alteration was made with the knowledge or consent of said parties, it could not affect their rights; and they would be entitled to recover to the extent of their respective interests.’
“ To this instruction defendant’s counsel then and there excepted, and now assign the same as error.”

The six hundred and twenty-first section of the Practice Act provides that: “In actions respecting ‘mining claims’ proof shall be admitted of the customs, usages or regulations established and in force at the bar or diggings embracing such claims; and such customs, usages or regulations, when not in conflict with the Constitution and laws of this State, shall govern the decision of the action.”

At the time the foregoing became a part of the law of the land there had sprung up throughout the mining regions of the State local customs and usages by which persons engaged in mining pursuits were governed in the acquisition, use, forfeiture or loss of mining ground. (We do not here use the word forfeiture in its common law sense, but in its mining law sense as used and understood by the miners who are the framers of our mining codes.) These customs differed in different localities and varied to a greater or less extent according to the character of the mines. They prescribed the acts by which the right to mine a particular piece of ground could be secured and its use and enjoyment continued and preserved and by what non-action on the part of the appropriator such right should become forfeited or lost and the ground become, as at first, piiblici juris and open to the appropriation of the next comer. They were few, plain and simple, and well understood by those with whom they originated. They were well adapted to secure the end designed to be accomplished, and were adequate to the judicial determination of all contro[533]*533vcrsies touching mining rights. And it was a wise policy on the part of the Legislature not only not to supplant them by legislative enactments, but on the contrary to give them the additional weight of a legislative sanction. These .usages and customs were the fruit of the times, and demanded by the necessities of communities who, though living under the common law, could find therein no clear and well defined rules for their guidance applicable to the new conditions by which they were surrounded, but were forced to depend upon remote analogies of doubtful application and unsatisfactory results. Having received the sanction of the Legislature, they have become as much a part of the law of the land as the common law itself, which was not adopted in a more solemn form. And it is to be regretted that the wisdom of the Legislature in thus leaving mining controversies to the arbitrament of mining laws has not always been seconded by"the Courts and the legal profession, who seem to have been too long tied down to the treadmill of the common law to readily escape its thraldom while engaged in the solution of a mining controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
26 Cal. 527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-solambo-copper-mining-co-cal-1864.