Pratt v. United Alaska Min. Co.

1 Alaska 95
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedOctober 15, 1900
DocketNo. 1,148
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1 Alaska 95 (Pratt v. United Alaska Min. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pratt v. United Alaska Min. Co., 1 Alaska 95 (D. Alaska 1900).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

The first question presented by the motion for a new trial was “error of the court in refusing the continuance applied for by the defendant.” The court will, therefore, first consider this question. It may be well to recall the circumstances under which the case was originally set for trial. Mr. John R. Maloney, senior counsel for the defendant, was in court when counsel for plaintiffs moved the court to set the case for trial. Mr. Maloney urged the injury to his clients by the trial of the case before the close of the mining season, and asked that the case go over. The plaintiffs insisted upon an early trial, notwithstanding some offers of favor made by Mr. Maloney. The court suggested a later day for the trial of the case, whereupon Mr. Maloney stated very positively that, if the case was to be tried during the term, the sooner it was set for trial the better it would please him; that he would be ready for trial; and he warned the plaintiffs that they must also be ready. Under these circumstances the court set the case for trial two days later than the time suggested by Mr. Maloney. Thereafter Mr. Cobb, junior counsel for the defendant, on the day the case was for trial, appeared before the court, and presented the affidavit of Mr. Maloney setting out the absence of his clients, the inability of Hanson to attend court because of a lame back, and also setting forth the testimony of Hanson and Sutherland, two of his clients. On the presentation of this motion, and on the ioth day of October, the plaintiffs filed several affidavits, showing that Hanson was in good health, the means of travel by which witnesses could have come to court from Porcupine, and that there was nothing in the situation that should necessarily cause the absence of the defendant from court, but, on the contrary, showing very clearly that they could have been present at the trial, unless they had chosen willfully to absent themselves. The strange part of the proposition is that [97]*97these several defendants came to Haines Mission, as shown by their affidavits in said amended motion, on the ioth of the month, and had the same opportunity to be present at the trial as Sol Rapinsky, who saw one of said defendants at Haines, namely, Hanson, and Rapinsky appeared in court before the close of the testimony for the plaintiffs, and testified as a witness. He came by the steamer Alert, by which the defendants could all have come; and yet they seek to excuse themselves because they say that they heard at Haines that the trial was over, whereupon they immediately returned to Porcupine. By the affidavit of Hanson himself, attached to this amended motion for a rehearing, it clearly appears that he was able to travel, and did travel from Porcupine to Haines, and then returned the next day, giving negation to the .statement in the affidavit for continuance that he was sick, lame, and so disordered as to be unable to travel. It will be further remembered that all that the witnesses Hanson and Sutherland could testify to, as set out by the affidavit of their counsel, was admitted by the plaintiffs as testimony in the case, or that the defendants would swear as stated by their attorney, if present in court. Upon that admission, under the statute, the court permitted the case to go to trial. It was apparent to the court at the time that the effort for a continuance of the case sprang from a desire for a continuance on the part of the defendants, and not from any well-grounde'd reason therefor; that the effort to continue the case by the defendants was a scheme to serve some purpose of their own, rather than to secure a just and impartial trial. The affidavits filed by counsel since the trial confirm the court in its former opinion.

I cannot permit this matter to pass without referring to a statement made on the third page of defendant’s brief presented in support of its motion for a new- trial: “In the case at bar the plaintiffs were allowed to force the defendant to a [98]*98trial with almost indecent haste, and secure a manifestly unfair trial; and we think the interests of justice require that on this ground alone a new trial should be granted.” Without referring to what immediately precedes this statement, which, if quoted, would make the statement appear more offensive and untruthful, the court will simply say that men have been disbarred for less offensive statements than this, when deliberately made, and long after the excitement of the trial had passed .away.

But let us consider the real situation. The several defendants were at work 30 or 35 miles from Haines, within 3 miles of the Klahena river, from which point, at the mouth of the Porcupine, boats could have conveyed them in a few hours, and the steamer Alert, which made its trips every second day, would have brought them either on the 9th or nth to Skag-way, the same day on which they left their homes on the Porcupine. They had been notified to be present, had been notified by their counsel of the day set for the trial, and yet, while only a day’s travel distant from the court, they deliberately chose to remain away. And yet their counsel has the supreme hardihood to, come into court and say that the defendants were forced into trial in almost “indecent haste.” The facts and circumstances of the case not only show that the trial was set for a day desirable and satisfactory to senior counsel for defendants — and for that reason alone the defendants cannot complain — but it also clearly appears that the application for a continuance on the day set for trial was a mere subterfuge, not made in good faith or in the interests of justice. If the court were to denounce this matter as it deserves, it would be necessary to say more harsh and unkind things than the court desires to utter on this occasion. It is sufficient to remark that the conduct of counsel has not been worthy, and it is hoped that the result thereof will prove [99]*99a salutary lesson to them. The court can find no error in its action in overruling the motion for continuance. ■

The next objection made by counsel is that the third finding of fact returned by the jury is not sustained by the evidence. The jury found from the evidence that Hanson had not, prior to August 3d, corrected the boundary line of his claim by marking the same on the ground so as to make the north boundary line of his claim coincide with the south boundary of the Wooden claim. The jury also found that the initial stake of Hanson’s location of October 6, 1898, was at the dead tree pitched down the embankment with the top in the ground at the creek bed, referred to in the testimony of Cahoon. The defendant does not question the correctness of this finding; indeed, the evidence in the case is overwhelming-in support of this finding by the jury. The notice of location that was placed on the tree indicated by the finding of the jury claimed 1,500 feet running with the creek, and was recorded by Hanson in the mining record at Porcupine and in the public record at Juneau, which said location notice is in the words and figures following:

“Notice is hereby given that I, the undersigned, have, this 6th day of October, 1898, located a placer mining claim, 1500 feet, running with the creek, and 300 feet on each side of center of creek, known as McKinley creek, in Porcupine mining district, running into Porcupine river. This claim is the west extension of Dan Sutherland’s claim, about 4000 feet above First Palls in district of Alaska.
“James Hanson, Locator.
“Witness: Dan Sutherland.”

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Bluebook (online)
1 Alaska 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-united-alaska-min-co-akd-1900.