Overman Silver Mining Co. v. Corcoran

15 Nev. 147
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1880
DocketNo. 979
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 15 Nev. 147 (Overman Silver Mining Co. v. Corcoran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Overman Silver Mining Co. v. Corcoran, 15 Nev. 147 (Neb. 1880).

Opinion

By the Court,

Hawley, J.:

Eespondent is a mining corporation engaged in the business of mining, milling, and the reduction of ores in Storey county, and instituted this proceeding to have condemned and appropriated to its use certain lands belonging to appellants, under the provisions of the act entitled “an act to encourage the mining, milling, smelting, or other reduction of ores in the State of Nevada” (approved March 1, 1875), so as to enable it “ to develop its mine and successfully carry on its said business.”

The lands in question have been for several years located and claimed as mining ground.

The court before which this proceeding was tried, in its finding of facts, says: “That at the time of the location [151]*151made by said defendants and their predecessors in interest in the said tracts of land, no vein or ledge of gold, silver, or other metalliferous-bearing ores, earth, or rock in place, had been discovered within any one of the said tracts of land, nor within any mining claim or claims of which said tracts of land, or any one of them, is or are claimed by the defendants to be a part of the surface ground, nor has there been since such locations were made, any vein, or ledge of gold, silver, or other metalliferous-bearing ores, earth, or rock in place, discovered or developed within any one of said tracts of land, or within any mining claim or claims of which said tracts of land, or any one of them, are claimed by defendants to be a part of the surface ground. * -s- «• That a necessity exists for the appropriation to the use of the petitioners of the three tracts of land described in the petition herein, for the purpose's alleged in its petition, and particularly for the working and developing of its mining claim and quartz ledge, situated upon the Comstock lode in said Gold Hill mining district, and that the said three tracts of land are á part of the public lands or domain of the government of the United States of America.”

Appellants seek to set aside the order of the court condemning their lands upon the following grounds, which they claim “are supported both by legal principles and the decided cases,” viz:

1. “That the act authorizing the condemnation of property by mining companies for their own purposes is unconstitutional, because not taken for a public use.”

2. “That'the act in question does not authorize the condemnation of mining claims; that the words ‘ real estate,’ as used in it, does not include mining property.”

3. “If mining is a public use, the land in question was, at the time it was sought to be condemned, appropriated to such public use, and could not therefore be condemned by any other company, unless the statute expressly authorized the taking of the property so used.”

1. This court, in Dayton G. & S. M. Co. v. Seawell, 11 Nev. 394, after a very thorough examination of all the decided cases then published, held that the act in question was [152]*152constitutional. The only additional authorities now cited by appellants, upon which we are asked to overrule the decision in Dayton v. Seawell, are Consolidated Channel Co. v. Central Pacific R. R. Co., 51 Cal. 269; Salt Company v. Brown, 7 W. Va. 191; and Petition of Deansville Cemetery Association, 66 N. Y. 569. These cases shed no additional light upon the question discussed in Dayton v. Seawell.

The truth is, as stated by Mr. Justice Cooley, that courts often find that they are somewhat at sea when they undertake to define, in the light of judicial decisions, what constitutes a public use.

“The reason of the case and the settled practice of free governments must be our guides in determining what is or is not to be regarded a public use, and that only can be considered such where the government-is supplying its own needs, or is furnishing facilities for its citizens in regard to those matters of public necessity, convenience or welfare, which, on- account of their peculiar character and the difficulty, perhaps impossibility, of making provision for them otherwise, it is alike proper, useful and needful for the government to provide.” (Cooley’s Const. Lim. 532. See, also, Mills on Eminent Domain, from secs. 10 to- 20, and authorities there cited.)

This question was discussed at length in Dayton v. Seawell, and without again attempting to review the authorities, it is enough to say that we are satisfied that the reasoning of this court in that case is sufficient to justify the conclusion there reached that the act in question is constitutional.

2. If the findings of the court as to the non-existence of any vein or ledge of gold, silver, or other metalliferous bearing ores, earth or rock, is sustained by the evidence, then the second and third points (as above stated) relied upon by appellants, need not be considered, for under the laws of congress no valid location of a mining claim can be made until a vein or deposit of gold, silver, or metalliferous ore or rock in place has been discovered. (Gleeson v. Martin White M. Co., 13 Nev. 457.)

Are the findings sustained by the evidence?

It is claimed by appellants that the evidence conclusively [153]*153shows that “one or more ledges of gold and silver-bearing quartz rook in place were discovered prior to the location of the claims, and have been developed since,” and that upon this point “there is no substantial conflict.”

This view is sought to be sustained upon the ground that the testimony of the witnesses introduced upon the part of the appellants was given after a careful examination, and is direct, clear, and positive, while the testimony of respondent’s witnesses was given without anything more than a superficial examination, and is simply negative in its character.

The record, however, shows that all of respondent’s witnesses had be.en engaged for several years in the business of mining in Storey county, and were familiar with the Comstock lode. They say that assays of gold and silver can often be found in the country rock; that quartz can be found in many places over the hills from Virginia City to "Washoe valley; that there are small seams of quartz and some quartz bowlders to be found within the surface boundaries of the land sought to be condemned; but that there is no. quartz vein, or lode, or anything to indicate a vein formation. Perhaps the strongest objection urged against the insufficiency of respondent’s testimony is as to the superficial examination of the shaft “A,” in the sinking and timbering of which, according to the testimony of one of the witnesses for appellants, some sixteen thousand dollars was expended.

This shaft is fifty feet deep. A witness for appellants testifies that it contains quartz-bearing mineral, having walls on each side of the ledge; that this ledge was, near the surface, about the width of his hand, but after going down about twenty feet “it widened between four and seven feet.” The witnesses for respondent did not go down into this shaft, as there were no means then provided for their going down. They examined the dump containing the earth and rock taken out of the shaft. They found porphyry, feldspar, mixture of lime and broken up quartz bowlders, but nothing, in their judgment, to indicate a quartz vein.

Every lawyer at all familiar with the trial of mining cases where the question of existence, or non-existence, of a lode

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Bluebook (online)
15 Nev. 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/overman-silver-mining-co-v-corcoran-nev-1880.