Riverside Sand & Cement Manufacturing Co. v. Hardwick

OPINION OF THE COURT.

PARKER, J.

The Riverside Sand and Cement Manufacturing Company, appellee, brought an action of ejectment to recover the possession of a placer mining claim called the Chieftain No. 1, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the possession of only a portion of the same. The appellants, Eugene F. Harwich and others, the defendants below, took an appeal to this court. The plaintiff below and appellee hero also sued out a cross-appeal from the judgment. Both of these appeals will be considered together.

1 2 1. The first five assignments of error by appellant cannot be considered by this court. They relate to the verdict and findings of the jury which were reached upon conflicting evidence. Under such circumstances they present no question for review by this court. Melini & Eakin v. Friege & Bro., 15 N. M. 455. The sixth assignment is not argued in the briefs and will, therefore, not he considered.

3 2. The seventh assignment is directed to the refusal of the court to admit in evidence the location notice of the Chieftain No. 2, another placer claim adjoining the' Chieftain No. 1. This was offered by appellant for the avowed purpose of showing abandonment by the locators of the Chieftain No. 1, that location being prior in point of lime to the Chieftain No. 2. The argument seems to he based upon the assumption that a person or association of persons can locate only one placer claim and that the location of a second claim works a forfeiture of the first. We are unable to follow the argument. There was no conflict in area of the two claims. Counsel cite no authority in support of their position, except Brown v. Gurney, 201 U. S.-184, which, it will ho seen from an examination of the case, has no application. The mere location of a second placer claim bears no such relation to the* first location, under the facts in this case, as to be relevant to the question of abandonment. .Besides, there is no limit io the number of claims which may he located by one person or association of persons. I Bindley on Minos, sec. 450. The location notice was, therefore, properly excluded.

4 3. The eighth assignment is directed to the action of the court in permitting reply to he filed to the answer during the progress of the trial. The complaint pleaded a location of the Chieftain No. ,1 placer claim. The answer denied the validity of the Chieftain No. 1 location and pleaded a valid location of the Excel Placer Claim, under which appellants claimed. The proof tendered by appellants went into detail upon both points and shows that appellants either assumed that the allegations in the answer were put in issue without reply, or, at least, appellants were in no way surprised by the filing of the reply. No reliance by appellants was put upon the manner of replying and the consequent admission of the allegations of the answer. The reply simply denied rightful possession and ownership in the appellants, as alleged in the answer. No claim of surprise was made to the court and no application for continuance was presented. Under such circumstances we cannot understand how appellants were prejudiced or can complain of the action of the court.

5 4. Complaint is made in the ninth assignment of the court’s fifth charge to the jury in which he instructed them that monuments found upon the ground at the corners of a placer claim may he adopted by the locator as bis own' and will meet the requirements of marking on the ground by substantial monuments. Appellants complain of the instruction on two grounds. They first say that it contains an erroneous assumption of facts as to the existence of such monuments. The instruction, however, contains no assumption of fact whatever and is an-abstract statement of the law without any specific application to the facts in the case on trial. That the instruction was applicable to tho case is perfectly apparent from an inspection of the testimony in which the existence of such monuments is mentioned. Further objection is made to the instruction because of tho principle announced that monuments found on the ground may he adopted by the locator. No authority is cited in support of the contention and the same is so contrary to the uniform current of authority- as to require no discussion.

6 5. In the tenth assignment it is urged that because when the Chieftain No. 1 was located a portion of the ground was being worked by other persons, the location was therefore unwarranted. The principle that no valid location can he made of land in the actual adverse possession of another is invoked and the principle is not disputed by counsel for appellee. Tt does not appear, however, that the entry was hy’way of intrusion upon the actual possession of another. Who and what these persons were who were working the ground, whether they made any claim to the same or had any rights therein, does not appear. The location of appellants bears no relation to-them or other persons on the ground, so far as appears. Under such circumstances the principle invoked can have no application.

7 6. A sufficient answer to the twelfth assignment to the effect that the court erred in refusing to give requested instruction No. 5 requiring the jury to find that all the formalities of law had been complied with in regard to the organization of the appellee corporation, is to say that even if proof of the corporate existence was necessary after plea to the merits, the articles of incorporation were introduced in evidence and the pleadings in no way put in issue the question of subsequent publication of the articles and return of proof to the Secretary of the Territory. This disposes of all of the contentions-of appellants.

8 7. Appellee, upon its cross-appeal, complains of the rulings and instructions of the court which permitted appellants to submit to” the jury the question as to whether two of the locators of the Chieftain No. 1 placer claim, under which appellee claims, were not mere accommodation locators having no interest in the location and conveying without .consideration to the appellee. The objection is based upon two grounds. First, it is urged that such an issue is not within the pleadings and, second, that the fact, if true, of the use of two persons as “dummies” in the location of the Chieftain No. 1 is not available to appellants and is a matter in which the government alone is interested and of which it alone can take advantage. . Appellants seek to justify the action of the court in submitting the question to the'jury upon the authority of Durant v. Corbin, 94 Fed. 382; Gird v. Cal. Oil Co., 60 Fed. 531; and Mitchel v. Cline, 24 Pac. 164. In the first two cases there was an application for patent and the actions were in support of adverse claims. This fact, doubtless, was overlooked by the trial court and the distinction fetween that class of cases and ordinary contests between individuals was overlooked. Tlie case of Mitchell v. Cline, supra, was a case where, after patent, a suit for partition was instituted and it was sought to charge one of the cntrymen as trustee for the benefit of the others as to a portion of the title. The court held that as all of the ontrvmen. had perpetrated'a fraud upon the government by the use of "dummies” in making the location, a court of equity would refuse relief and would leave the parties where it found them, all in accordance with a well recognized equitable principle. This case, as well as the ease of Gird v. Cal. Oil Co., supra, and many other cases, point out that the fraud of locating by means of "dummies” is a fraud upon the government and not upon the citizen who might wish to locate. The fraud, being a fraud upon the government, it would seem clear that the government alone can complain. 1 Lindley on Mines, sec. 450. The question as to how advantage can be taken of. the disqualification of a locator has often arisen in connection with locations by aliens. Some earlier cases admitted the relevancy of the question of citizenship, but the law lias been finally settled that the government alone is concerned and the same is not relevant in a contest between individuals except in adverse proceedings wherein the government is a silent party. I Lindley on Mines, sec. 234; McKinley Creek Mining Co. v. Alaska U. S. Co., 183 U. S. 563; Formanses v. Melsing, 109 Fed. 710; Wilson v. Triumph Co., 75 Am. St. Rep. 718. It follows that the trial court was in error in submitting to the jury the question of the qualification of the locators of the Chieftain No. 1.

Appellee moved for judgment non obstante veridicto, which should have been granted. This court, however, has the power to enter judgment and the same will now be entered for the possession of all of the Chieftain No. 1 placer mining claim as described in the record. And it is so ordered.

Roberts, A. J., not having heard the argument did not participate.