Puett v. Harvey

268 P. 41, 51 Nev. 40, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 9
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1928
Docket2764
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 268 P. 41 (Puett v. Harvey) 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
Puett v. Harvey, 268 P. 41, 51 Nev. 40, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 9 (Neb. 1928).

Opinion

*43 OPINION

By the Court,

Ducker, J.:

This is an action to quiet title to certain mining-ground situated in Rochester mining district in Pershing County, Nevada. The complaint alleges that plaintiff located two lode mining claims known as and named South Extension No. 1 and South Extension No. 6,- the former on the 27th day of November, 1915, and the latter on the 5th day of July, 1924, and subsequently *44 fully performed all acts necessary to complete valid locations of said claims.

In their answer defendants deny the validity of the lode mining locations alleged in the complaint. It is affirmatively alleged in the answer that on or about the 1st day of November, 1926, the defendant George Dull, after ascertaining that there had been no annual assessment work performed for the year ending July 1, 1926, upon the part of the public domain formerly embraced within the Independence lode mine, in good faith and with intent to locate the same, commenced to work and prospect upon that part of the public domain formerly embraced within the said Independence lode mine, and found valuable mineral in place thereon; that on or about the said 1st day of November, 1926, the defendant Dull prepared and posted upon that part of the public domain formerly embraced within the said Independence lode mine a notice of location thereof as a lode mining claim; that the defendant Dull, along with the defendants Harvey and Livesly, continued in good faith and continuously to work and prospect said ground and with reasonable diligence to perfect a location of the same under the mining laws of the United States and of the State of Nevada, in the name and for the use and benefit of the defendant Dull, but, befor.e any mining location's of such ground had been perfected and before the expiration of the time allowed by law within which to perform the various acts necessary to perfect such location, and while the defendants were actually and in good faith working upon, prospecting and mining said ground, the same being then and there a part of the public domain and open for location under the mining laws of the United States and the State of Nevada, the plaintiff, without notice to defendants, wrongfully procured from this court, and caused to be served upon said defendants, an order restraining and preventing them from “entering upon, occupying, exercising the rights of ownership, perfecting said location, and working and developing the same, and from mining, producing and hauling valuable mineral bearing gravel and concentrates therefrom, or from in any manner interfering *45 with the plaintiff’s use, possession and control of the lands occupied by them, to their great and irreparable damage, and unless said plaintiff is enjoined and restrained by the judgment and order of this court, said damage will continue indefinitely.”

It appears from Exhibit B, made a part of the answer, that the mining location claimed is unnamed; that it adjoins the Bonanza claim on the northeast, and embraces the old Mary McKinney mine.

The reply denies the validity of the mining claims alleged in the answer. The case was tried before the court and substantially the following judgment was rendered: “It is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff, subject to his future compliance with the mining laws of the United States and the State of Nevada regarding the performance of annual labor on and for the benefit of mining claims, is the owner and entitled to the possession of that portion of the South Extension No. 1 lode mining claim which is outside of any ground formerly embraced within the surface boundaries of the old Grand Placer placer mining claim, and, also, to so much of said South Extension No. 1 lode mining claim located over the surface of said Grand Placer placer claim as is included within the boundaries formed by end lines of said Grand Placer claim, and parallel lines drawn through said end lines and 25 feet distant from each side of the discovery monument of plaintiff’s South Extension No. 1 lode mining claim, including both lode and placer rights therein, thereon, or thereto.”

“That defendant, George Dull, subject to his completing and perfecting his location of his claim located by him within the surface boundaries of .the old Mary McKinney mining claim on the 1st day of November, 1926, and to his further compliance with the mining laws of the United States and the State of Nevada, is the owner and is entitled to the possession of the whole of the surface of the ground within the boundaries of the said unnamed mining location, so made by him, and of the whole of the mining rights therein, or thereto, save and except as to the surface of said unnamed *46 claim which is in conflict with said South Extension No. 1 lode mining claim, as the said last named claim is defined and determined herein, and the mining rights within or appurtenant to said area so in conflict, and save and except as to such extralateral rights in said unnamed mining claim, if any there be, vested in plaintiff by reason of his ownership of said South Extension No. 1 lode mining claim, the prior claim in time of location and superior title.”

Defendants have appealed frqm that portion of the judgment favorable to plaintiff. They insist that it is not supported by the findings. The findings in support of this part of the judgment are as follows: “That, on or about the 27th day of November, 1915, the plaintiff posted a notice of location of a lode mining claim in a monument constructed according to law upon a valid and existing placer mining claim known as and called the Grand Placer, located in Kochester mining district, Pershing County, Nevada, and bounded on the west by the Bonanza Placer mining claim and on the east by the Mary McKinney mine, in which notice of location the plaintiff set out the name of the locator, the name of the claim, the location of the claim, the number of feet claimed along the course of the lode, to wit, 750 feet in a northerly direction and 750 feet in a southerly direction from the discovery monument, together with 300 feet on each side of the middle of the vein, and all matters required by law to be stated therein, and thereafter, and within twenty days monumented said claim in accordance with law, and within ninety days after posting said notice of location, performed location or discovery work for said claim at a point 40 feet west of the discovery monument, consisting of a shaft four feet wide, six feet long and ten feet deep, but not exposing any lode, ledge, vein or mineral deposit in place’ but did make a discovery of mineral bearing rock or ledge in place within the surface boundaries of the old- Grand Placer, which said discovery was made by plaintiff prior to July 1, 1926. That said locator did not, within the time provided by law, or at all, file or record either in *47 the office of the district mining recorder of Rochester mining district or in the office of the county recorder of Humboldt County, Nevada, in which said county said mining claim was then located, any certificate of location thereof, but that said locator did on the 9th day of September, 1918, cause to be recorded in the office of the county recorder of said Humboldt County, a notice of location of said claim.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P. 41, 51 Nev. 40, 1928 Nev. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/puett-v-harvey-nev-1928.