Richmond Mining Co. v. Rose

114 U.S. 576, 5 S. Ct. 1055, 29 L. Ed. 273, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1797
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 4, 1885
Docket248
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 114 U.S. 576 (Richmond Mining Co. v. Rose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richmond Mining Co. v. Rose, 114 U.S. 576, 5 S. Ct. 1055, 29 L. Ed. 273, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1797 (1885).

Opinion

Me. Justice Millee

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of Nevada.

The case presents a conflict of mining claims.

The contest began in the State District Court for the County if Eureka, Nevada, by defendants in error filing in that court, as plaintiffs, a petition against the Richmond Mining Company. To save repetition and confusion, the parties will be mentioned in this opinion as they are throughout the record, and as they actually were in the State courts, namely, Rose and others as plaintiffs, and the Richmond Mining Company as defendant.

This petition or complaint was filed October 21, 1873. A demurrer was filed to it by the defendants November 1, and an answer, November 26.

The complaint alleged that plaintiffs were, and ever since January 20, 1872, had been, the owners of the Uncle Sam mining claim, ledge, lode and deposit of mineral-bearing rock in the Eureka Mining District, County of Eureka, and State of Nevada, on the western slope of “Ruby Hill.” A minute description of the claim is then given, with courses and distances with reference to the shaft.

It is then alleged that the defendant, unjustly and adversely to plaintiffs, claims an estate in fee in said premises, and has filed in the United States land office an application for a patent thereto, under the name of the St. George Ledge and Mine. Plaintiffs, therefore, pray judgment that defendant be barred from all estate or interest in the premises, or any part thereof, or any right 6f possession.

The answer of defendant, filed November 26, 1873, denies any claim to plaintiffs’ location, except as it is covered by their claim, the St. George, which does cover a small part of it.

As to so much of plaintiffs’ claim as is covered by the St. George it asserts a superior right.

*579 The next pleading is an amended answer of the defendant, which sets out the fact, that since the commencement of the suit defendant has acquired title by patent from the United States, to all that portion of the mining ground in controversy; covered by the application for the patent for the St. George claim. This amended answer was filed April 20, 1881, which is seven years and a half after the first or original answer.

In September, 1881, the case was tried before the court without a jury and a judgment was rendered, from which plaintiffs appealed to the Supreme Court. That court modified the judgment of the court below materially in favor of plaintiffs, and to that judgment the Richmond Mining Company, the defendant below, prosecutes this writ of error.

' The judge of the District Court of the State made a full finding of the facts in the case on which he rendered judgment, and on those facts- the case was heard and decided in the Supreme Court of the State, and so it must be here.

According to this finding, the plaintiffs sunk their shaft on a mineral lode, staked and marked out their claim, gave due notice of it, and did the necessary work on it to perfect their right to the mine. In all this they were prior in point of time to the operations of defendant on their St. George claim. It may, therefore, be assumed that unless some of the objections to the claim of plaintiffs set up by defendant are valid, the judgment of the State Court must stand.

Ve shall examine these objections in such order as seems convenient.

1. The one' much, if not chiefly, relied on is that the claim covers eight hundred lineal feet of the lode; when, there being only three locators, both' by the act of Congress -and the local law's of that mining district, only two hundred feet could be appropriated to each locator, and, therefore, this excess of two hundred feet over the six hundred, which these three could locate, renders the whole claim void. The law, however, allowed to each locator, who was the discoverer of the vein on Avhich the location was made, two hundred feet additional for his merit as discoverer.

We hardly think it needs discussion to decide that the inclu *580 sion of a larger number of linéal feet than two hundred, renders a location, otherwise valid, totally void. This may occur, and often must occur, by accident of the surveyor, or other innocent mistake, where there exists no intention to claim more than the two, hundred feet. Must the whole claim be made void by .this mistake, which may injure no one, and was without design tp violate the law ?

We can see no reason, in justice or in the nature of the transaction, why the excess may not be rejected, and the claim be held good for the remainder, unless it interferes with rights previously acquired. It appears by the facts found that one hundred and forty |oet of the east end of plaintiffs’ location is lost to them by the superior right of the Tip Top claim, leaving only sixty feet of excess ; and this, if it were necessary, might be excluded by the government at the other or western end of the claim when it comes to issue the patent; which would leave plaintiffs only the six hundred feet in one body, in regular form. This also would interfere with no prior rights, and would give plaintiffs the benefit of their claim to the extent of two hundred feet for each locator.

But, if it were necessary, we should agree with,the Supreme Court of Nevada,.that Rose, one of the plaintiffs, was entitled to an additional two hundred feet, as discoverer of, the vein on which the claim is located. At the time this location was made there were many claims asserted, for veins discovered in Ruby Hill, and most of the claimants believed that they were m each instance the discoverer óf a new vein or lode. Rose entertained the same belief when he made his claim and therefore asserted his right to two hundred additional feet along this vein as discoverer.

It was supposed some five or six years after this, and after Rose and his companions had spent their money and labor in developing their mine, that the whole Ruby Hill deposit was one zone or lode of great width, and it has been held in the Eureka ease, 4 Sawyer, 302, that, though there were many small, detached fissures or veins, distinct from each other, composing this zone, it is within the' meaning of the act of Congress concerning locations to be treated as one lode or vein.

*581 But Bose, or his vendor, Phillips, was the discoverer of this vein within the lode, and as such .asserted in good faith his right to an additional two hundred feet.

We do not see any reason, within the spirit of the law, where the claim as discoverer injures no one at the time it is made, and it has been made in good faith, in the reliance on the actual discovery of one of these constituent veins, and acted on for-five years before knowledge of any. mistake, it should not justify the claim for the two hundred feet as discoverer.

2. The next objection to be noticed is that the court should have held that the patent obtained by defendant from the United States, which covered all that defendant claimed, should prevail, as it conveyed the legal title.

This proposition goes to the merits of the case, and, if sound, covers the field of controversy.

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Bluebook (online)
114 U.S. 576, 5 S. Ct. 1055, 29 L. Ed. 273, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-mining-co-v-rose-scotus-1885.