Slothower v. Hunter

88 P. 36, 15 Wyo. 189, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 14
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 18, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 88 P. 36 (Slothower v. Hunter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slothower v. Hunter, 88 P. 36, 15 Wyo. 189, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 14 (Wyo. 1906).

Opinion

Scott, Justice.

The plaintiff in error made application at the United States Land Office for a patent to the Big Divide lode mining-claim. The defendants in error filed an adverse to such application, setting up that the mineral survey of the Big Divide lode took in certain portions of the Little Joe, Adelaide and Little Wonder lode claims, of which they claimed to be the owners, and within the time prescribed by statute brought this suit in support of their adverse claim in the District Court of Carbon County. To prove his record title, the plaintiff in error introduced in evidence a certificate of location of the Great Divide lode mining claim dated August 5, 1897, and recorded November 3, 1897; an amended certificate of location by himself and E. A. Rust of the same claim dated November 1, 1899, and recorded November 6 of the sarnie year; a certificate of location by L. S. Neice, F. A. Neice and Guy Neice of the Big Divide lode, which is said to be a re-location of the Great Divide, dated January 1, 1903, and recorded February 18, 1903. The rights acquired under the location by the Neices were acquired by purchase as appears from the deeds introduced in evidence conveying their interests to plaintiff in error. To prove record title in them the defendants in error introduced in [195]*195evidence the original location certificates respectively of the Little Joe, Adelaide and Little Wonder. For convenience, reference is here made to the plat, defendants in error’s exhibit “D,” which was admitted in evidence .and is a part of the record.

[196]*196'i. It is urged and assigned as error that the judgment is contrary to law. It is claimed by plaintiff in error that the corners designated H, G, E and A were originally located at the points 1, 2, 3 and 4, respectively, and marked the boundary of the Great Divide as originally located.

Assuming that the original and amended location certificates of the Great Divide were in accordance with the requirements of the statute, the application is to patent the Big Divide, a claim which had no existence until January 1, 1903, the date of its location. The certificate of location of the Big Divide by the Neices recites, “Beginning at corner No. 1, the ‘Big Divide’ claim is a re-location of the Great Divide claim (abandoned), said Big Divide lode claim using and appropriating stakes and original survey of the Great Divide lode claim (abandoned).” It appears that this location is of an abandoned claim and not an amendatory certificate to correct imperfections in the record title of a claim already in existence. Indeed, the Neices, so far as the record shows, were prior to their location of the Big Divide strangers to the title to the ground embraced within the limits of the Great Divide. By electing to patent the Big Divide, Slothower adopted its location certificate as the basis of and as the inception of his title. The introduction in evidence of the location certificates of the Great Divide was competent as showing the boundaries of the Big Divide by reference, but could not establish title to the ground in controversy antedating the location of the latter. The possessory title initiated by the Neices by their location of the Big Divide was what they conveyed to Slothower, and the title so conveyed was antagonistic to and destructive of any former title which was held by the latter. The recital in their certificate of location to the effect that it “is a re-location of the Great Divide (abandoned)” was an admission that the latter claim had once a legal existence, for there could be no abandonment when there was nothing to abandon. (Blain v. Wills, 20 Pac. Rep., 798.) The purchase of the outstanding title of the Neices [197]*197would quiet the title, if any, which Slothower had in and to the Great Divide upon proceedings to patent the latter and the only theory upon which the Neices’ re-location can be valid for any other purpose is that Slothower and his joint re-locator, Rust, had abandoned the Great Divide. It cannot be contended upon the record that the Neices could upon application for a patent for the Big Divide have claimed any rights, antedating their re-locatión, based upon a title which they had destroyed by such re-location. (Cheeseman v. Shrieve, 40 Fed., 789.) And Slothower, their grantee, having applied to patent the claim, title to which he has acquired from them by purchase, and not the Great Divide, which he claims to have originally located and thereafter re-located jointly with Rust, and which has been abandoned as appears by the location certificate of the Big Divide, stands in no better position. It follows that the date of his right to possession to the Big Divide in his proceedings for patent is by relation the date of its location by his grantors, viz.: January 1, 1903. Evidence was also introduced by the plaintiff in error tending to show that he had fully complied with the requirements of the law with reference to this location so as to entitle him to a patent of the ground included within its boundaries. The trial court by its decree and judgment did not pass upon his rights in this respect. The distinction in this class of cases and those in ejectment under the statutes and in trespass is clear. In the latter cases the right of possession and its unlawful violation and damages therefor, if any, as between the parties are the only questions to be determined, while in the former the right of possession as between the parties and also the sufficiency of the showing by the party adversed to entitle him to a patent is in issue. This action is brought under the provisions of Section 2326, Revised Statutes of the United States, and it was incumbent upon each party to show affirmatively his or their title. (Jackson v. Roby, 109 U. S., 440; Rosenthal v. Ives, 2 Ida., 244; Iba v. Central Ass’n., 5 Wyo., 355.) Under this section, “upon filing of [198]*198the adverse claim all proceedings in the land office are suspended until the determination of a court of competent jurisdiction is reached, or until it is shown that the adverse claimant has not brought suit upon his adverse claim within the time fixed by law.” (Iba v. Central Ass’n., supra.) In the same case this court further said, Groesbeck, C. J., delivering the opinion: “The judgment of the court must be filed in the land office, and until that is done, or a showing is made that the adverse claimant has not brought his suit within the time limited by. statute, or has not prosecuted the same with diligence, all proceedings are stayed in the land office. * * * The ordinary rule in such actions that ihe plaintiff must recover upon the strength of his own title, and that otherwise the defendant is entitled to judgment, does not govern in these actions when application for patent to mining claims has been made, an adverse claim has been filed thereto, and the matter has been transferred to a court of competent jurisdiction for determination where not only the title of the parties to the controversy is to be settled; but the rights of the government as against either or both the parties is to be determined, that is, that the plaintiff has the title, or that the defendant has it, or that neither of them has it.” We are of the opinion that the court erred in failing to find upon the issue of possession and the right to patent so much of the ground included within the boundaries of the Big Divide as shown by the plat, excluding that part the possession to which was decreed to the defendants in error.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P. 36, 15 Wyo. 189, 1906 Wyo. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slothower-v-hunter-wyo-1906.