Sanders v. Noble

55 P. 1037, 22 Mont. 110, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 8
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 31, 1899
DocketNo. 1306
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 55 P. 1037 (Sanders v. Noble) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanders v. Noble, 55 P. 1037, 22 Mont. 110, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 8 (Mo. 1899).

Opinion

HUNT, J.

Plaintiffs, (appellants here) sued the defendants (who are the respondents) to enjoin certain trespasses upon the Never Sweat Lode Claim, and to enjoin them from asserting title to any portion of said claim, the ownership and possession of which plaintiffs allege to be in themselves. Defendants denied the ownership and possession of plaintiffs, and the validity of the Never Sweat location, set up their own title to the Yukon Lode Claim, and prayed that the same be quieted in themselves. The trial was had before a jury, and testimony was heard on both sides. At the conclusion of the plaintiff’s rebuttal testimony, the defendants moved the court to instruct the jury to find in defendants’ favor. The court granted the motion. Yerdict and judgment were rendered m defendants’ favor. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment and an order overruling a motion for a new trial!

The ground of the defendants’ motion to direct a verdict was that the plaintiffs had failed to make any proof of a compliance with the statute in respect to disclosing a well-defined crevice at the point of discovery of the Never Sweat claim for the depth of 10 feet. The court, however, did not sustain the motion upon the ground included therein, but held that defendants were entitled to a verdict because the plaintiffs were bound strictly by their location notice, and that, the plaintiffs having infringed upon the defendants’ claim, they must be held to the lines of their location notice, and could not “get off onto some adjoining claimant’s claim;” and that, if they made a mistake, the prejudice lies at their door, and not at the door of the other parties upon whose rights they have inrringed. To make the ruling of the court intelligible, and state the case on its merits, it is necessary to briefly recite what the evidence tended to show:

In August, 1897, W. H. Sanders, Henry Knight and J. W. Knight, three of the plaintiffs, were working and prospecting in the vicinity of the ground in controversy. They were co-[113]*113owners in the Copper Crown Lode Claim, which lies in a southwesterly direction, and adjacent to the Never Sweat. In a northeasterly direction from the Copper Crown there was an unappropriated triangular tract, approximately 600 by 900 feet. Plaintiffs, after endeavoring to trace float rock, finally succeeded, and followed the same up the hillside, where they commenced to dig, and found what appears to be the apex of the Never Sweat lode. On August 7th they made their discovery. They dug down about 2 feet, and on the surface cut a hole about 2|- by 3 feet, finding in the hole what one of the plaintiffs says was a ledge of quartz, in a northerly and southerly direction, as near as he could tell. This ledge was traced by the float on the surface, but there was no outcropping on either side of the hole. On August 7th, Sanders and Knight, for themselves and the other plaintiffs, posted a notice of location at the point of discovery. It was in the usual form of location notices. It named the quartz claim as the “Never Sweat,” and continued as follows: “Extending along said vein or lode five hundred feet in a southerly direction and one thousand feet in a northerly direction, from the center of the discovery shaft (at which shaft this notice and statement is posted), and three hundred feet on each side from the middle or center of said lode vein at the surface; comprising in all fifteen hundred feet in length along said vein or lode, and six hundred feet in width. ’ ’ Plaintiffs testified that, when they made this discovery, they intended to take the fraction above referred to, and supposed that their claim was running pretty near north and south. After putting up this notice of location of the Never Sweat, plaintiffs left that vicinity entirely, to fulfill a contract elsewhere, and were gone about 30 days. During their absence, the defendants, in August, went upon the ground involved in this controversy, and located the Yukon Mining Claim. One of the locators testified that he found some rich float on August 28th; that they saw the notice which was posted at the Never Sweat, and read it. Desirous of avoiding the locating of any ground unless it was vacant, the defendants started from the location of the Never Sweat, and [114]*114went due north, determining where due north was by the shadow of the sun about noon of the day they made their location. After measuring due north about 350 feet, they measured 300 feet down the hill, and concluded that they had about reached the side line of the Never Sweat. Then they measured 50 feet more, to allow the Never Sweat locators room “to swing their claim a little; we thought 50 feet was enough.” Then they measured 150 feet from their discovery and located the Yukon claim easterly and westerly. Defendants ran a tunnel to the vein, disclosing the same at a depth of 10 feet or more. They explored and concluded their staking within a period of 30 days after the posting of the Yukon notice. They filed a declaratory statement with the county recorder of Madison county within 90 days, but the date of filing such statement was subsequent to the filing of the plaintiff’s declaratory statement. When the plaintiffs got back to the Never Sweat, the defendants had completed the work of locating the Yukon, and had gone. Plaintiffs sunk a 10-foot shaft, established corner monuments, and recorded their declaratory statement of their location of the Never Sweat, all within 90 days after the posting of their notice as aforesaid. When they staked their claim, they located parallel to the Copper Crown, and included the discovery cut of the Yukon, which was 700 feet from the discovery point of the Never Sweat. The plaintiffs and the defendants had some conversation in relation to the conflicts, but it never resulted in any agreement between them. Plaintiffs also commenced to run a tunnel some 27 feet north of the mouth of the defendants’ tunnel,' .and prosecuted this work until they tapped the vein claimed by defendants as the Yukon, about 12 feet at the head of the defendants’ workings. This work was done after they had staked their claim so as to include the point referred to. Then plaintiffs notified the defendants to keep off the ground; the defendants refused, and both plaintiffs and defendants continued to work until suit was brought. The accompanying diagram illustrates the ground in question.

[115]

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Bluebook (online)
55 P. 1037, 22 Mont. 110, 1899 Mont. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanders-v-noble-mont-1899.