The appellants, who were the plaintiffs in the district court, brought this action to quiet title to a mining claim in the Warren mining district, called the “Bangor mine.” The defendant claimed the same mining location by virtue of a subsequent location thereof upon the assertion that the claim, as located by the plaintiffs, had become forfeited by reason of plaintiffs not having performed the annual assessment work thereon for the year 1902; there being no resumption of labor on said claim prior to the date of their location of the claim on the first day of May, 1903. The issue before the court was whether the annual assessment work for 1902 had been done prior to May 1, 1903. The defendant introduced several witnesses to show that the annual expenditure had not been done, and the plaintiffs introduced evidence in rebuttal to show that the annual expenditure, on said claim had been done by the owners thereof in November and December, 1902, and in January, 1903, and that full and sufficient annual expenditure had been made thereon before the first day oE May, 1903. As a part of the evidence of the plaintiffs, the witnesses Turner and Matko, who participated in the making of such annual expenditure and the doing of *178such work, testified that two men, Chris Brain and Dan Seffer, also helped them do work upon said mine in December, 1902. Thereupon the defendant offered in evidence certain entries from the records of the Copper Queen Mining Company, tending to showr that said Chris Brain and Dan Seffer, in December, 1902, were working for the Copper Queen Mining Company, and could not therefore have performed the work on the claim. The evidence was admitted over the objection of the plaintiffs, and the correctness of the ruling of the trial court in that respect is the principal question presented for our consideration upon this appeal.
It is apparent that, if this evidence was improperly admitted it was prejudicial to the plaintiffs. The plaintiffs, in attempting to prove the amount of the assessment work done by them and the time of such performance, had put on the stand two witnesses, who testified that Brain and Seffer did a certain amount of such work in December. Brain and Seffer were not present at the trial, and their evidence was not given. Their absence was not accounted for. The defendant, however, to offset this testimony as to the whereabouts of Brain and Seffer at the time in question, introduced in evidence certain entries from the records of the Copper Queen Mining Company, — to wit, the receipts on the pay-rolls of the company for the month of December, — purporting to be signed by the men, Brain and Seffer, in December, showing that they had worked for that company twenty-six and thirteen days respectively in that month. No other evidence to show that the men were working for the Copper Queen Mining Company was introduced. The jury might well assume, however, that if the pay-rolls were correct, the work on the mine could not have been done by these men as testified to by the plaintiffs’ witnesses, and the evidence of the pay-rolls doubtless had weight in influencing the jury' in finding their-verdict.
We think the evidence was improperly admitted. The paymaster of the Copper Queen Mining Company testified, in substance, that the records were the records of the company; that it was the custom of the company for the men to sign the pay-rolls before they could get their money, and that it was necessary for them to do so; that these pay-rolls were the pay-rolls for December; that they were signed by men *179who had worked for that month; that he was not present when they were signed; that he could not testify that the signatures were the signatures of Brain or Seffer, only that the signatures purported to be their signatures; that the writing in the body of the pay-rolls was in the handwriting of the former paymaster of the company; that precautions were always taken by the company to see that the person who signed the pay-roll was the person to whom the money was due. We do not think that sufficient proof that the signatures were in fact the signatures of these men was offered to warrant the receipt of these documents in evidence. Furthermore, the evidence at best was but hearsay and inadmissible. No testimoney other than the pay-roll containing the signatures was offered to show that the men were in fact employed by the company in December. Brain and Seffer had not given their testimony, and the evidence could not be introduced to contradict or impeach statements made by them, for they had made none. It was sought by the introduction of receipts signed by Brain and Seffer, and contained in the private books of a third person, to contradict the testimony of Turner and Matko, that Brain and Seffer were working on the mine at that time. The evidence was inadmissible for such purpose. An affidavit of Brain that he had worked for the company during the time in question could not have been received, nor could the paymaster or other person have testified that Brain had stated to him that he had so worked for the company. A receipt by Brain was of no greater force than testimony of a statement made by him. It was clearly hearsay evidence, not within any of the exceptions to the rule excluding such evidence, and was improperly admitted.
Although the point does not seem to have been raised by counsel in the court below, or in this court, in view of the fact that the case must go back for a new trial, we deem it proper to point out that, under the allegations in the defendant’s cross-complaint with respect to the relocation by the defendant of the claim as a forfeited claim, the location notice of the defendant would seem to be void, in failing to state that the claim was located as forfeited or abandoned property, as required by the statute, and would seem to afford the defendant no ground for the relief claimed. Cunningham v. Pirrung, 9 Ariz. 288, 80 Pac. 329.
*180The judgment of the district court is reversed, and the ease remanded for a new trial.
SLOAN, J., CAMPBELL, J., and NAYE, J., concur.