Ninemire v. Nelson

249 P. 990, 140 Wash. 511, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 730
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1926
DocketNo. 19823. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 249 P. 990 (Ninemire v. Nelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ninemire v. Nelson, 249 P. 990, 140 Wash. 511, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 730 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Askren, J.

— This is an action brought to recover possession of an undivided one-half interest in a mining claim in Skamania county. From a judgment entered on a directed verdict in favor of plaintiffs, the defendants C. O. Nelson and R. F. Brown appeal.

*512 In the summer of 1923 one J. J. Baxter discovered gold in the Nigger Head Mining District of Skamania county. He posted notice, blazed lines and set stakes to mark the boundaries. He then' filed his notice of location in the office of the county auditor, naming his discovery the Gold Dollar Claim. Thereafter he conveyed the whole thereof to the defendant McGlothlin, who in turn reconveyed to Baxter an undivided one-half interest. Baxter then conveyed this interest to Morgan and Ninemire, the respondents.

On December 15, 1923, the appellant Brown entered upon the premises included within the notice of the Gold Dollar location and claims to have discovered gold at approximately the same point where Baxter made discovery. He thereupon posted a notice of location and established lines and monuments for a claim to be known as the La Biea. The lines of the claim were such as to carve out of the Gold Dollar claim the points of discovery (the only apparently valuable part thereof), the northwest and northeast corners being identical, and the claim proper running diagonally across the Gold Dollar in an easterly direction. The notice of relocation was filed with the county auditor. Brown, subsequent to the posting of the notice but prior to its filing with the county auditor, conveyed an undivided one-half interest to McGlothlin. Thereafter Nelson became interested in the claim through Brown. McGlothlin, Nelson and Brown took possession of the claim and have refused the respondents access to, or any right therein.

Upon trial, the evidence disclosed that Brown, prior to his alleged discovery on December 15,1923, had been upon the Gold Dollar claim in November and had observed the cut made thereon by Baxter, and had told Morgan that the claim was not properly located. The evidence shows that some one thereafter removed the *513 markings made by Baxter and used some of tbe monuments by obliterating or chopping off tbe Baxter notice; and Brown produced at tbe time of trial tbe original notice of Baxter’s discovery that bad been placed in a can at tbe point of discovery. Tbe record fully disclosed that any claimed discovery made by Brown was made after full knowledge of tbe location by Baxter, and of tbe monuments and marks delineating' tbe same, and that any location made by him can only be upheld if tbe court can say that tbe notice of location by Baxter was clearly void. Tbe evidence also shows that Brown’s attempted location as being on forfeited or abandoned property did not refer to tbe forfeiture or abandonment of tbe owners of tbe Gold Dollar, for be never believed at any time that tbe Gold Dollar, claim was either abandoned or forfeited, but thought defects in tbe notice would permit him to take possession thereof. • ° ■

Bearing in mind that tbe law does not look with favor upon him who deliberately and knowingly seeks-to appropriate to himself tbe fruits of another’s labor,: and that'tbe policy of tbe law will always uphold unoriginal discovery, even though there be technical, defects, if tbe location is made in good faith, and tbe notice is not such as misleads others, our inquiry must first be directed to tbe objections made to tbe sufficiency of Baxter’s notice.

It must be admitted that tbe claim is not described with that degree of precision that might be wished for, and that tbe notice could hardly be used as a model for others. But that it is such that anyone wishing to identify tbe location of tbe claim could reasonably do so cannot be doubted.

In Bismark Mountain Gold Mining Co. v. North Sunbeam Gold Co., 14 Idaho 516, 95 Pac. 14, is found a *514 clear statement of the purpose of the notice. The court said:

“It is the well-settled doctrine of all of the later decisions that location notices and records should receive a liberal construction, to the end of upholding a location made in good faith. In Londonderry M. Co. v. United G. M. Co., 38 Colo. 480, 88 Pac. 455, where the court was considering the sufficiency of a location notice, it is said: (Every case where this question is raised must therefore depend upon its own circumstances. As previously stated, the purpose of such location certificate is to give notice to subsequent locators; and, if by reasonable construction the language descriptive of the situs of the claim, aided or unaided by testimony, aliunde, will do so, it is sufficient in this respect. In other words, the object of requiring a reference to a natural object or permanent monument is to furnish means by which to identify the claim, and whatever reference will accomplish this object satisfies the law.’ ”

The purpose of the notice is to notify others that the ground is taken. That purpose was served here, because from Brown’s own testimony he knew all about the claim. One of the objections to the notice is that it fails to tie the claim up to some natural monument from which its permanent location can be definitely identified and established. The notice, after giving the dimensions, described the claim as “bordered on the north end by Camp creek. It also joins the Gold Eagle on the south.” Section 8622, Rem. Comp. Stat. [P. C. § 3778], requires that the notice shall contain:

“ . . . such a description of the claim or claims located by reference to some natural object or permanent monument as will identify the claim.”

It seems to us that Camp creek, and Gold Eagle claim are natural objects or permanent monuments within the meaning of the statute. That learned *515 author, Mr. Lindley, in his work on Mines, vol. 2 (3d ed.), p. 908, states the rule as follows:

“ ‘Natural Objects’ and ‘Permanent Monuments’— The words ‘natural objects’ and ‘permanent monuments’ are general terms, susceptible of different shades of meaning, depending largely upon their application. What might be regarded as a permanent monument for one purpose might not be so considered with reference tó a different purpose. The same rule applies to natural objects. There is no particular necessity for drawing a distinction between ‘natural objects’ such as streams, rivers, ponds, highways, trees, and other things, ejusdem generis, and ‘permanent monuments,’ which may imply an element of artificial construction, it being the manifest intent of the law that any object of a fairly permanent character, whether natural or artificial, may, if sufficiently prominent, serve for the purpose of reference and identification.
“As to whether a given notice or certificate of location contains such a description of the claim as located by reference to some natural object or permanent monument as will identify it, is a question of fact to be determined by the jury, and parol evidence is admissible for the purpose of proving that the thing named in the certificate is, in fact, a natural object or permanent monument.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 P. 990, 140 Wash. 511, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ninemire-v-nelson-wash-1926.