Pine Grove Nevada Gold Mining Co. v. Freeman

171 P.2d 366, 63 Nev. 357, 1946 Nev. LEXIS 32
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 17, 1946
Docket3453
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 171 P.2d 366 (Pine Grove Nevada Gold Mining Co. v. Freeman) 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
Pine Grove Nevada Gold Mining Co. v. Freeman, 171 P.2d 366, 63 Nev. 357, 1946 Nev. LEXIS 32 (Neb. 1946).

Opinions

*360 OPINION

By the Court,

Horsey, J.:

On July 10, 1945, the appellant, Pine Grove Nevada Gold Mining Company, a corporation, commenced an action in the First judicial district court of the State of Nevada, in and for Lyon County, to quiet the title to the patented and unpatented mining claims situated in the Wilson Mining District, Lyon County, Nevada, enumerated and described in paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint. We will, in this opinion, for convenience, in most instances refer to the parties merely as plaintiff and- defendants.

The plaintiff, Pine Grove Nevada Gold Mining Company, and its predecessors in interest, Pine Grove Gold Mining Company and Pine-Delaware Mining Company, had owned said mining claims for many years prior to the commencement of said action, had erected on the Good Luck claim a mill for the milling and treatment of ores, and had constructed buildings, equipped the property with machinery, and made many valuable improvements. The plaintiff and its predecessors in interest had also expended many thousands of dollars in development work upon the property during the years of their ownership.

On February 21, 1941, William H. Metson, acting on behalf of plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, Pine-Delaware Mining Company, made a valid millsite location of a portion of the land comprising the Good Luck claim, upon which portion the said mill was situated, and named same the Harriett millsite.

The defendants answered plaintiff’s complaint, claiming title in themselves to all, or nearly all, of the mining ground embraced within plaintiff’s unpatented claims named in said paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint, and to the said mill and all other improvements situated upon such unpatented locations, basing their claim upon the alleged fact that the plaintiff had failed to file, on or *361 before July 1, 1944, for the assessment year 1943-1944, in the office of the county recorder of Lyon County, Nevada, the office where the location notices or certificates of said claims are recorded, a notice of its desire to hold said mining claims, under the certain act, H. R. 2370, 30 U. S. C. A. sec. 28a note, entitled: “An Act Providing for the suspension of annual assessment work on mining claims held by location in the United States, including the Territory of Alaska,” approved May 3, 1943, and had failed to perform any assessment work upon said claims during or for said assessment year commencing at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1943, and ending at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1944, and that, consequently, the said unpatented mining claims were open to relocation, and that the defendants had validly relocated said unpatented claims, as the Protection, Protection No. 1, Protection No. 2, Protection No. 3, and Protection No. 4.

Plaintiff filed its reply to defendant’s answer, alleging the location of the Harriett millsite upon a portion of the ground claimed by said relocations, denying that the ground embraced within said relocations was open to relocation when the same were made, and repeating its prayer for a decree quieting its title to all of said property as described in the complaint.

The case was tried before the district court sitting without a jury, on November 20, 1945, and was ordered submitted on briefs.

On January 2, 1946, said district court filed its opinion and decision, in writing, holding, in effect, that title be quieted in plaintiff corporation to all the patented claims described in plaintiff’s complaint, to the Harriett mill-site and all improvements thereon situated, and to any improvements consisting of buildings or assay houses that may be upon the so-called Good Luck or Dump claims, together with the right of egress from, and ingress to, any buildings or improvements of the plaintiff corporation on said claims. The opinion and decision *362 of the trial court further held: “that the defendants are the owners of, and entitled to the possession of those claims known as the Protection, Protection No. 1, Protection No. 2, Protection No. 3, and Protection No. 4, and Little Jim, except insofar as they or any one of them or any portion of them do not (?) cover any ground contained within the boundaries of the Harriett Millsite claim or conflict with or overlap said Harriett Millsite, and also the buildings and improvements owned by plaintiff company upon the former claims owned by them known as the Good Luck and Dump claims.” (Interpolation ours.)

The trial coúrt signed findings of fact and conclusions of law, and its judgment, on the 28th day of January 1946, and the same were filed and the judgment duly entered on the 30th day of January 1946. The court’s findings, conclusions, and judgment conform to its said opinion and decision.

The plaintiff duly moved for a new trial of said action, and, on February 2, 1946, the trial court denied said motion. It is from that court’s order denying the plaintiff’s motion for a new trial and from the judgment of said court upholding the validity of the said relocations, namely, the Protection, Protection No. 1, Protection No. 2, Protection No. 3, Protection No. 4 and Little Jim claims, by the defendants, and the defendants’ title to the mining ground embraced therein, with the exceptions above noted, that the plaintiff has appealed.

The facts upon the basis of which the controversial legal questions involved in this case are predicated, briefly stated, are as follows: on July 30, 1943, William S. Boyle, Esq., on behalf of plaintiff corporation, caused to be filed in the office of the county recorder of Lyon County, Nevada, a notice of suspension of labor and intention to hold plaintiff’s eight unpatented mining claims, being the same claims enumerated in paragraph I of plaintiff’s complaint, during the year beginning at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1942, and ending at 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1943 (plaintiff’s exhibit I).

*363 The plaintiff, due to the serious illness of the said William S. Boyle, its attorney, upon whom it had relied to file such notices, and, perhaps, also due to the death, in January 1943, of Mr. William H. Metson, who, from his office in San Francisco, had, for years, taken care of the detailed affairs of the plaintiff corporation, failed to file, on or before July 1, 1944, any notice of suspension of labor and intention to hold said unpatented mining claims for the year from 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1943, to 12 o’clock meridian July 1, 1944, under the provisions of H. R. 2370, approved May 3, 1943, authorizing such suspension upon the filing of a notice such as required by said act.

On September 6, 1944, a paper purporting to be a certificate of location of the Little Jim claim, dated the 8th day of August 1944, and signed by W. J. Freeman and L. W. Osborn, was filed for record and recorded at the request of L. W. Osborn (defendant’s exhibit 6).

On October 13, 1944, there was filed for record and recorded, in the office of the county recorder of said Lyon County, Nevada, by Ola Goldsworthy, the following: notice of location of protection claim, dated September 18, 1944, and signed by W. J. Freeman, L. W. Osborn, J. G. Goldsworthy and V. A. Goldsworthy. (Defendant’s exhibit 1.)

Notice of location of the Protection No.

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Bluebook (online)
171 P.2d 366, 63 Nev. 357, 1946 Nev. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-grove-nevada-gold-mining-co-v-freeman-nev-1946.