Wall v. United States Mining Co.

239 F. 90, 152 C.C.A. 140, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 1, 1916
DocketNo. 4675
StatusPublished

This text of 239 F. 90 (Wall v. United States Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wall v. United States Mining Co., 239 F. 90, 152 C.C.A. 140, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558 (8th Cir. 1916).

Opinion

SMITH, Circuit Judge.

The appellant, Enos A. Wall, is now the owner of what is known as the Ashland No. 2 mining claim, and the appellee, the United States Mining Company, is the owner of the Mountain Gem extension, the Fanny Bemis, and the First South extension of the Galena mining claims,' all in the West Mountain mining district, in Salt Lake county, Utah. These .all extend from the northeast to the southwest, but the side lines are not exactly parallel. In 1874 Senator George Hearst became the owner of the Ashland No. 2, either alone or in company with R. C. Chambers and J. B. Haggin. About April, 1875, they commenced the excavation of a tunnel to work the Ashland No. 2 claim and to drain it. This tunnel started on the First South extension of the Galena, and ran, generally speaking, northwest, through the claim on which it started, and through the Fanny Bemis and the Mountain Gem extension, and through and beyond the Ash-land No. 2. Two other tunnels had previously been excavated on and to the Ashland mine. The new tunnel was lower than the others, and, as already stated, was for the purpose of working the Ashland mine, and to draw off any water there struck. The exact sum spent in the construction of the tunnel does not appear. Substantially all the parties to the transactions of those early days are now dead, but R. C. Chambers was the manager of the property at that time, and his books of account are in evidence. It appears therefrom that $21,000 was spent in 1874, but this was before any work was done on the tunnel in question. They show that the disbursements in 1875 were $26,813.07; that these fell off in 1876 to $13,783.29, in 1877 to $5,-884.13, in 1878 to $1,473.75, in 1879 to $50, and in 1880 to $51.37. The receipts fell off, though not in the same ratio. The total receipts from 1875 to 1880, inclusive, were $13,710.13, and the total expenses during those years were $48,055.61. Thus there was a net loss during these years of over $34,000. This same report shows that about 1881 or 1882 negotiations were being carried on to lease or sell this tunnel to the owners of the Last Chance, which lies northwest of the Ashland No. 2, and it was contemplated to sell or lease it to the owners of some other claims lying north of the Ashland. This may explain why the tunnel was excavated about 160 feet beyond the lines of the Ash-land. For aught that appears, the tunnel was completed, and work on the Ashland through it ceased, not later than December, 1880, though work on and through it may have ceased at a much earlier date.

There is no evidence as to what right, if any, Hearst and his associates had to start this tunnel on the First South extension of the Galena, or to penetrate the Fanny Bemis or what is now the Mountain Gem extension. We may say in parsing that the record seems to show the latter claim was government land at the. time the tunnel was put through it. It was not located until September 27, 1892. Attention has not been called to any authority Hearst and his associates had to run the tunnel through unlocated government land. The tunnel as constructed had a small flume down the center to carry the water off. There was a wooden railroad track along it. At and prior to the construction' of the tunnel a number of people had taken up their abode [92]*92near where the mouth of the tunnel was located. Soon after the Hearst interests ceased work on the tunnel, some one at least in the interest of these settlers put a door in the mouth of the tunnel and placed a barrel in the dump, into which the water from the tunnel was conducted, and used the water from this source for domestic purposes. In 1884 the predecessors of the defendant took at least a partial possession of the tunnel and the water. Some time in 1887-the predecessors of the defendant, the door having rotted down, closed the mouth of the tunnel by nailing plank up across the first of the timbering in the tunnel. Numerous witnesses so testify, and no one but E-manual Beck contradicts them, if he may be said tó do so. He testifies the door was there in 1897. It is -claimed this was a mistake upon the part of the witness, and it is true that the last thing in the condensed statement of the evidence in the cross-examination of this witness is:

“In 1887 tbe door was so rotten be could not use it any more, and put boards on it.”

We think the witness meant 1887 when he said 1897; but, whether he did or not, the overwhelming weight of the testimony is that in 1887 the end of the tunnel was closed by plank nailed on. The mouth of the tunnel has thus been kept planked up, so that no one could enter the tunnel without removing the plank, ever since, and never after 1887 was there any access to the tunnel, except by tearing these planks loose. The defendant and its predecessors put from time to time new timbers in the tunnel, replaced the flume, put an embankment in the tunnel, which in-effect established a reservoir, and placed a pipe from the mouth of the tunnel to the works of the defendant. The complainant claims' title to the tunnel and the dumping, ground at its portal as appurtenant to its ownership of the Ashland claim. The prayer is that the court “decree it is declared and adjudged that the complainant is the owner of said premises, and that the defendant has not any estate or interest whatsoever in and to said tunnel and the space occupied for dumping purposes, and also that said defendant be forever debarred from asserting any claim thereto, or to any part thereof, adverse to the complainant,” and for general equitable relief.

Upon the argument the complainant urges that his predecessors acquired the right to construct the tunnel in such a way as to imply a license-from the original owners of the soil, that the digging of the tunnel without objection operates to estop the owners to assert that the predecessors of plaintiff did not have a license to construct it, and this his predecessors acquired an easement to construct and maintain the tunnel by prescription. Uet it be conceded that the predecessors of plaintiff acquired a license or easement, or that there was an estoppel upon tlqe predecessors of the defendant in some of the ways suggested. Having made this concession, there was nothing to prevent the defendant or its predecessors from reacquiring the property by any method that it could be acquired by the plaintiff and its predecessors. In its answer the defendant says:

“That for more than 29 years last past it and its predecessors in interest bave been, and this defendant now is, in tbe open, notorious, peaceful, exclusive, and adverse possession of tbe said tunnel and tbe whole thereof, includ[93]*93ing tlie portal thereof and the dump at and néar the said portal, lying and being in or beneath the surface of the said First South extension of Galena lode mining claim, U. S. lot 364.

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Bluebook (online)
239 F. 90, 152 C.C.A. 140, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2558, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-united-states-mining-co-ca8-1916.