Strasburger v. Beecher

49 P. 740, 20 Mont. 143, 1897 Mont. LEXIS 105
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 26, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 49 P. 740 (Strasburger v. Beecher) 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
Strasburger v. Beecher, 49 P. 740, 20 Mont. 143, 1897 Mont. LEXIS 105 (Mo. 1897).

Opinion

Hunt, J.

We will first consider the assignment of error-that the evidence is insufficient to justify the findings and decision of the court. The respondent argues that this question is not before this court for review, because the appellants’ specifications consist of averments and conclusions of counsel as to what the evidence shows, and that such conclusions are-mere statements opposed to the findings of the court, and that, therefore, section 1173 of the Code of Civil Procedure has not. been complied with. But we are of the opinion that there is • a sufficient assignment or specification of the particulars in-which the evidence is insufficient to justify the finding and decision of the court to the effect that the plaintiffs did not perform the requisite amount of labor upon the Lake Superior-mining claim from the time of the location thereof, in the year • 1882, to the time of the commencement of this suit.

The plaintiffs’ specification in this respect was as follows :: “The evidence was insufficient to prove, and the defendant. [145]*145did not allege nor prove in any manner, that less than $100 worth of labor had been performed and improvements made during each and every year upon said Lake Superior mining claim, from the time of the location thereof, in the year 1882, to the time of the commencement of this action by the plaintiff's, their grantors and predecessors in interest, or any of them; and the evidence was insufficient to prove, and the defendant did not allege nor show, any failure on the part of the plaintiffs, or any of them, or their grantors or predecessors in interest, or either of them, to comply with the conditions that one hundred dollars’ worth of labor should be performed and improvements made during each year upon said Lake Superior claim ; and the testimony was insufficient to prove, and the defendant did not allege nor prove, that in the year 1884 the plaintiffs or their grantors or predecessors in interest did not perform one hundred dollars’ worth of labor, and make one hundred dollars’ worth of improvements, on said Lake Superior quartz lode mining claim; and the evidence was insufficient to prove, and the defendant did not prove in any manner, that said Lake Superior quartz lode mining claim, or any part thereof, or any of the surface ground thereof, was open or subject to relocation or to any location on the 1st day of January, 1885, or at any other date or time since June 23, 1882; and the evidence was insufficient to prove that said Jay cox and Davis, the alleged locators of said Silver Queen claim, or either of them, did ever locate or relocate said claim, or any part thereof, in any manner. ’ ’

The case of First National Bank v. Roberts, 9 Mont. 323, 23 Pac. 718, disapproved of specifications which declared that the evidence showed certain enumerated facts or conclusions which were contrary to what the jury found. The court held that a specification should point out the variance between the facts found by the jury and the evidence, and that there should be a specification that a iact found by the jury is not sustained by. the evidence, with the particulars in which the evidence is insufficient to justify the finding. We have no hesitation in affirming what the court there said. Furthermore, much that [146]*146was laid down is applicable to several specifications, other than the one quoted, in the case at bar; for in them it is declared that the evidence proved that on, etc., which declaration is followed by a resume of the conclusions of counsel as to what was proved on the trial of the case. All such specifications are to be condemned, because, as was held in First National Bank v. Roberts, supra, this simply puts the appellate court upon an inquiry, as between the conclusions of the judge and the opinion of appellant, as to what the evidence shows. But, in the specification quoted above, the appellants do designate a particular material fact in relation to labor performed upon the Lake Superior mining claim, and do aver that the finding of the court that a requisite amount of labor had not been performed upon the said mining claim was not justified by the evidence in the case, because the defendant did not show any failure on the part of the plaintiffs to comply with the conditions required to be performed. If there is a designation of a material fact at issue, and a specification that there was a failure to prove that designated fact in any manner by the party whose duty it is to prove it, we believe it is sufficient to enable the court to examine whether the finding complained of is sustained by the evidence.

Believing, therefore, that the particular specification was sufficient, we shall consider the evidence bearing upon that point in the case.

The great weight of the evidence is that one Edward Hayes made a valid discovery and location of the Lake Superior claim on June 23, 1882, and filed notice of location in the office of the County Becorder of Gallatin county on August 31, 1882. Experienced miners testified that Hayes discovered mineral, galena and pyrites of copper, where he put his discovery stake, on the westerly part of the Lake Superior, near the center; that, in their opinion, the mineral rock was in place; that Hayes was working on the claim in June, 1882, in a cut 10 or 12 feet long, and extracted some two or three hundred pounds of ore about that time, which was from rock in in place. It also appears that Hayes sufficiently and properly [147]*147marked and located his claim, and that the notice of location was good and valid. • By conveyances and decrees of court, dated in 1882, 1883, and 1886, the plaintiffs proved record title in themselves. We shall therefore pass at once to the question of the alleged forfeiture for non-representation in the years 1883 and 1884.

The plaintiffs introduced an original affidavit of Elias Sperling one of the plaintiffs herein, sworn to on September 22, 1884, and tiled on September 27, 1884, with the recorder of the New World mining district, to the effect that at least §100 wortn of work had been performed on the Lake Superior lode claim between August 1 and September 1, 1884, and that said expenditure was made by Elias Sperling and others in interest. Plaintiffs also read in evidence another affidavit of Elias Sperling, sworn to on September 22, 1884, to the effect that §100 worth of work had been performed on the Lake Superior and a like amount on other claims in 1884. These affidavits were admitted without objection. Plaintiffs also read a deposition of Elias Sperling, one of the plaintiffs in this suit. Sperling testified that he had known the Lake Superior claim since 1882, and that at that time he saw improvements made on the ground by an open, deep cut, about 20 feet long, near the south end of the claim, and that he did the representation work on the claim in the years 1883, 1884 and 1885; that in 1883 he did §125 worth of work on it on the north end of the claim, in tunneling; that in 1884 he tunneled near the south end of the claim to the value of §225, and in 1885 also tunneled near the south end.

Plaintiffs also offered in evidence the deposition of one Z. H. Daniels, who testified that he was very familiar with the Lake Superior mining claim, and had been since 1883, and that in September, 1884, he had found digging done on different places in that claim that was not done in 1883, when he saw the claim.

James Sweeney, a witness for plaintiffs, testified that he did the assessment work on the Lake Superior claim in 1885 for Elias Sperling; that such work was done in an open cut, and [148]

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Bluebook (online)
49 P. 740, 20 Mont. 143, 1897 Mont. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/strasburger-v-beecher-mont-1897.