Smart v. Staunton

239 P. 514, 29 Ariz. 1
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 16, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2296.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 239 P. 514 (Smart v. Staunton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smart v. Staunton, 239 P. 514, 29 Ariz. 1 (Ark. 1925).

Opinions

This action was brought by appellant, plaintiff below, to quiet his title to two unpatented mining claims, named the Great Divide No. 1 and Great Divide No. 2, against the adverse claims of the appellees, defendants below, who answered, denying plaintiff's title, and setting up their ownership of two unpatented mining claims covering the same ground, and known as Sans Gene No. 1 amended and Sans Gene No. 2 amended, and praying that their title be quieted as against the plaintiff's adverse claims. The case was tried without a jury, and the court found the facts upon which judgment went quieting defendants' title, from which plaintiff brings this appeal.

There were a number of technical matters that appellees so much stressed in their briefs and at the oral argument that we will notice them.

It is argued that the appeal should be dismissed because there is found in the record no formal authentication by the clerk of the lower court. It is not claimed that any part of the record is spurious. The appeal should not be dismissed for such reason. The procedure outlined in paragraph 1258 of the Civil Code of 1913 was followed, and that suffices.

It is next contended that the court should not consider the findings of fact because the appellant did not preserve the evidence by transcript or its substitute. But the appellant directed the clerk of the superior court to send up such findings, and they are a part of the record before us. Paragraph 1258, C.C. It is our duty to consider them.

Another point raised is that the appellant did not specify in his motion for a new trial that the findings *Page 4 are insufficient, and may not therefore make the point here. The statute, however, grants such right. Paragraph 1231, C.C. 1913.

The assignments are also attacked at some length. We have already denied the objections filed thereto. Counsel's difficulty in understanding them was not shared by us. If any criticism is to be made, we would say that they are too long and detailed. They are certainly clear enough.

Appellant did not preserve the evidence, and may, of course, not attack the findings as unsupported thereby.

The facts found are as follows:

On December 2, 1916, T.L. McLeod duly located Sans Gene No. 1 and Sans Gene No. 2, lode mining claims, in Yavapai county. Prior to September 30, 1920, appellees succeeded to McLeod's interest, and on that day recorded amended location notices of the two claims. Within 90 days thereafter they remonumented the ground and "posted the amended location notices upon said claims as remonumented in monuments which they erected on said ground.

"That the original location monument of the Sans Gene No. 1 mining claim, the point of discovery of mineral on said claim, and the location work provided for by the Revised Statutes of Arizona, 1913, were situated about the center of the Sans Gene No. 1 claim as originally located and monumented. That the amended location notice of said Sans Gene No. 1 mining claim was posted in a monument about six hundred (600) feet to the south of the original location monument, and the same distance from the discovery and location work, and entirely outside the boundaries of the original Sans Gene No. 1 mining claim, but within the boundaries of such claim as amended, and within the boundaries of the Sans Gene No. 2 lode mining claim. That neither the original location notice or monument, nor the amended location notice or monument, contained anything whereby persons going upon the ground and examining one location monument *Page 5 could determine where the other was located. That the said Staunton and Hopkins never at any time abandoned their original point of discovery on the Sans Gene No. 1 mining claim, nor did any other work which they claimed or intended to claim as discovery or location work on said claim, either as originally located or as amended, save and except the original discovery and location work situated as aforesaid, and never at any time claimed any new discovery or any new location work at or contiguous to the amended location monument, but did intend to abandon all ground outside of the said claim as amended.

"That the original location notice of the Sans Gene No. 2 mining claim, the point of discovery of mineral on said claim, and the location work required by the Revised Statutes of the state of Arizona, 1913, were situated about the center of the said mining claim as originally located and monumented. That after said amended location notice was filed the said claim was swung and the boundaries remonumented in accordance with said amended location, so that the original point of discovery and location work of said Sans Gene No. 2 mining claim were entirely outside the boundaries of said claim as amended. That the amended location of said Sans Gene No. 2 mining claim was duly posted within a monument within the boundaries of said claim as amended, but that no discovery of mineral on which to base a mining location was ever claimed, by said Staunton and Hopkins, to have been made within the boundaries of the said Sans Gene No. 2 mining claim as amended, nor was any location work as required by the Revised Statutes of Arizona, 1913, ever done or claimed to have been done by the said Staunton and Hopkins within the boundaries of said mining claim as amended.

"That thereafter, and during the month of November, 1920, the said Hopkins and Staunton caused to be performed upon each of said Sans Gene mining claims, as amended, work for the development thereof in the value of One Hundred Dollars ($100) each. That said work consisted of an open cut on each of said claims approximately one hundred (100) feet *Page 6 in length each, and ranging to not more than three and one-half feet in depth or three feet in width. That each of said open cuts was reasonably worth the sum of One Hundred Dollars ($100). That the said cut, made as assessment work on the Sans Gene No. 1, was located within the boundaries of said claim as amended, but entirely outside of the boundaries of said claim as it was located originally. That the said work made as assessment work on the Sans Gene No. 2 was entirely within the boundaries of said claim, both as originally located and as amended.

"That on the 1st day of July, 1921, and immediately after midnight, one Thomas Smart, the plaintiff herein, believing that the defendants had failed to perform the annual assessment work required by law upon said Sans Gene claims, and each of them, entered upon the same and posted location notices on them, claiming two mining claims called the Loise and Loraine respectively, and covering substantially the same ground as said Sans Gene claims, but that said location notices were never recorded as required by law.

"That thereafter, and some time between the 16th day of July, 1921, and the 29th day of July, 1921 — the exact date whereof does not appear from the evidence — the said Thomas Smart, having been advised that his location notices of the Loise and Loraine mining claims aforesaid were premature in point of law, abandoned said claims and posted notices of the location of two mining claims called the Great Divide and the Great Divide No. 2 upon the ground covered by the said Sans Gene claims, and thereafter recorded said notices in Book 112 of Mines, pages 641 and 642, Records of Yavapai county, Arizona, and within ninety (90) days from said 16th day of July, 1921, did and performed all the acts required by the laws of the United States and of the state of Arizona to perfect valid lode mining claims for each of said claims.

"That upon the 16th day of July, 1921, the said W.F. Staunton and C.V. Hopkins entered upon the ground covered by the aforesaid Sans Gene mining claims Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
239 P. 514, 29 Ariz. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smart-v-staunton-ariz-1925.