delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to obtain a decree declaring the defendants trustees of the legal title, for the use and benefit of the plaintiff, to an undivided one-fourth interest in the Comanche *218lode claim (patented), situate in Silver Bow county, and directing them' to execute and deliver to tbe plaintiff a conveyance thereof. Tbe plaintiff sues as tbe grantee, by a mesne conveyance, of one David N. Dpton, wbo, it is alleged, located tbe claim in connection with one N. L. Turner in 1879; thus be1coming tbe owner of an undivided one-balf interest therein. He alleges in bis complaint that the said Upton never at any time subsequent to tbe location conveyed any interest therein to any other person than tbe plaintiff, except that on February 28, 1889, be conveyed an undivided one-fourth interest to defendant Tong; that, though it appeared of record in tbe office of tbe clerk of Silver Bow county that Upton was the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest, the said Tong, bis grantee of a one-fourth interest, and tbe defendants Largey, Warren, Zenoi and Bielenberg, as grantees of tbe interest of said Turner, bad on January 1, 1892, applied hr tbe land department of tbe United States for, and by fraudulent representations concerning their ownership, and concealment of tbe fact that Upton was still tbe owner of an interest therein, succeeded in procuring for themselves a patent for tbe entire claim, to the exclusion of said Upton, thus defrauding him of his rights; that on January 15, 1894, tbe said Upton bad conveyed bis remaining one-fourth interest to one IT. L. Frank, wbo thereafter, and on March 21, 1894, bad conveyed tbe same to' plaintiff; that subsequent to the issuance of patent to them tbe defendants Largey, Warren, Ze-nor, Bielenberg and Tong bad conveyed tbe claim to tbe defendant tbe Comanche Mining Company, and that the claim now stands upon tbe records of Silver Bow county in tbe name of said company; and that tbe other defendants have some claim or interest therein. In an amendment to this complaint it is alleged that on September 22, 1890, tbe defendants Largey, Warren, Zenor, Bielenberg and Tong organized the defendant tbe Comanche Mining Company; that they became tbe officers, trustees and stockholders thereof; that they knew that Upton ■was tbe owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in tbe claim; that tbe said company, through its said officers, knew actually *219and constructively of Upton’s interest; and that with such knowledge it purchased the claim from the said defendants.
The defendant the Comanche Mining Company made a separate defense. In its amended answer, after denying the allegations of fraud contained in the complaint, it interposed as affirmative defenses: (1) That the plaintiff has no interest in the Comanche claim, under the patent or otherwise, for the reason that in 1880, a short time after the location was made, and long prior to the issuance of the patent, Upton conveyed the interest now.claimed by plaintiff to one John N. Collins, who on or about August 6, 18S4, conveyed to the defendant Largey, and therefore that the grant to plaintiff through Frank conveyed no interest whatever. (2) That on or about August 6, 1884, Upton represented to Largey that Collins owned the interest in controversy; that he induced Largey to purchase the same, and take a deed therefor, with other property, from Collins, for a large sum of money, and that thereafter Largey, with Upton’s knowledge, expended large sums of money in protecting the title to the claim and in developing it for mining purposes; and that by his conduct in this regard the said Upton had estopped himself and the plaintiff, his grantee, forever, from making a claim to the said interest. And (3) that the said Comanche claim v^as also1 known and designated by Upton as the “Grand Prize Lode Claim;” that on November 23, 1885, he had conveyed to Largey a one-half interest therein, to the defendant Zenor a one-fourth interest, and subsequently to the defendant Tong a one-fourth interest; and that by these conveyances the said Upton had parted with all interest he ever had in the ground covered by the Comanche claim, and therefore that the plaintiff acquired no interest by his conveyance from Upton through Frank. There are also other affirmative matters set forth in the answer, but it is not necessary to give them special notice.
The plaintiff, by replication, joined issues upon the first two defenses, and pleaded, in avoidance to the last, that the Grand Prize location ivas made by Upton in order to hold the ground *220covered by tbe Comanche claim in case it should be adjudged in an adverse suit then pending’ between the claimants under that location and their adversaries, who claimed under another location, known as the “Smelter Claim,” that the- Comanche location was.invalid, and that, the latter having been held to be valid, the Grand Prize location had been abandoned by all parties in interest, including the defendants, the grantors of the Comianche Mining Company. A detailed statement of the claims of the parties and the issues between them may be found by reference to the opinion of this court in Wetzstein v. Boston & Montana Consol. C. & S. Mining Co., 26 Mont.193, 66 Pac. 943.
The foregoing summary is sufficient to make clear how the questions to be decided herein arose. A trial in the district court was had to a jury, which made special findings of fact, and also returned a general verdict for the defendants. Upon motion of the defendants, all the special findings, save one, were adopted; and upon them, with others made by the court, a judgment was rendered and entered in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed from the judgment and an order denying him a new trial.
The record in this case is voluminous. The assignments of error are very numerous, and the briefs filed by counsel cover a wide range of discussion. To discuss all the questions raised and submitted would be a bootless task. We have examined them all with that degree of care and patience which the interests at stake and the earnestness and- ability displayed by counsel in presenting them deserve. We have not been able, however, to find that the plaintiff has suffered prejudice by any decision or ruling made by the trial court during the progress of the case.
1. It is argued by counsel for the plaintiff that tire instructions submitted to tire jury are conflicting, and that, taken together, they reveal the fact that the trial court entertained an erroneous view of the principles of law applicable. The result is, counsel say, that the rights of the parties have been adjudged upon a wrong theory, and therefore that the plaintiff has suf*221fered prejudice. We shall not indulge in speculation as to what influence the instructions, if erroneous, exerted upon the minds of the jury. This is a suit in equity. The findings of the jury in such cases are advisory only. Ultimately the findings and the decree based thereon must be regarded as emanating from the judge, and the correctness of the result must be determined by a review of the action of the judge, without regard to the findings of the jury. This court has so held in many cases. (Lawlor v. Kemper, 20 Mont. 13, 49 Pac. 398; Power v. Lenair, 22 Mont. 169, 56 Pac. 106, and cases cited.) Even if the contention of the plaintiff were maintainable in a suit in which it was made apparent that the findings of the jury were adopted and judgment entered thereon without careful consideration by the judge, it cannot be maintained in this case, for the reason that it appears that, after the findings were returned, the judge did not adopt them as a whole, without consideration, but set one of them aside, and made others after argument by counsel; thus indicating a careful examination of the evidence submitted, and the principles of law applicable. The findings are therefore, in' fact, the findings of the judge. The submission of the case to the jury for a general verdict, if erroneous (and we do not decide that it was), was, in view of what has already been said, error without prejudice, because the court disregarded it entirely.
2. The contention is made that the evidence is insufficient to sustain the findings. Under the view we entertain of the case, it will not be necessary to examine the evidence further than so far as it is pertinent to the first defense alleged. As was said in considering the effect of the judgment heiein in Wetzstein v. B. & M. C. C. & S. Mining Co., supra, if either one of the first two defenses shall be found to be sustained by the evidence, this will be conclusive of the rights of the parties without reference to the character and effect of the Grand P'rize deed to Largey. If Upton conveyed the interest in controversy herein to Collins, who thereafter conveyed it to Largey, the defendant corporation, under the subsequent conveyances to it by Largey and his asso-*222ciatos, became vested with an indefeasible title. There is no controversy but that the corporation is the lawful owner of an undivided three-fourths interest in the claim. Its title to a half interest came through Turner by conveyances executed by him to Largey and Zenor. The interests conveyed by Warren and Bielenberg were obtained by mesne conveyances from Zenor. The T'ong interest is not questioned. The other defendants, except Mantle and the defendant corporation, were never vested with any interest except such as they obtained as stockholders in the corporation. The only interest Mantle ever had was by virtue of the deed from Collins to Largey purporting to convey the disputed interest. Mantle paid one-half of the purchase price to Collins, but the title was taken by Largey, who thereafter held for himself and in trust for Mantle until the whole property was conveyed to the corporation. It is not controverted that Collins made a conveyance to Largey in 1884. The plaintiff bases his claim upon a quitclaim deed from Upton to Frank, and a like conveyance from Frank to himself. The controversy upon this branch of the case then turns upon the question whether Upton made the conveyance to Collins in 1880, and thus devested himself of title, so that the plaintiff obtained no interest through the conveyance from Upton to Frank.
The court found that this conveyance had been made, though it appeared that it had been lost. A summary of the evidence tending to support this finding is the following:' Collins, who now resides in Skowhegan, in the state of Maine, testified that he was engaged in mining in Montana from 1867 to 1883; that in November or December, 1880, he was in Butte, on the way to visit his home in Maine; that he there met Upton, who proposed to sell him an interest in certain mining property in Butte, including a one-fourth interest in the Comanche claim; and that after some conversation he took a deed, and paid Upton $600 in cash. He stated that he had searched among his papers for the deed, but could not find it, and concluded that it had been lost among his other deeds, all of which he had lost. Lar-gey testified that Upton came to him in the spring of 1884, and, after telling him about the interests owned in various properties *223by Collins, — the Comanche among them, — -urged him to buy them; that he authorized TJpton to open negotiations with Collins; that Upton did so, conducting them by letter; that this correspondence resulted in an agreement on the part of Largey to buy all the interests for $2,500, and the payment by Largey of Collins’ share of the expenses of the litigation then in progress over the title to the claim; that thereupon Upton procured a deed from Collins, which purported to- convey a one-fourth interest in the Comanche claim; that Collins placed the deed in a bank in Butte, to be delivered to Largey upon payment of the sum of $2,500 ; that this sum was paid by Largey and Mantle, and the deed put upon record; and that subsequently the share of Collins in the expenses of the litigation,— one-fourth,- — -amounting to several hundred dollars, was paid by Largey and Mantle. Part of the correspondence between Upton and Collins is found in the record. It shows clearly that the negotiations had reference to the Comanche claim. At the close of the transaction, Largey paid Upton $100 for his services in procuring the deed. There was evidence tending to show that Collins, by the assistance of Upton, represented the Comanche claim from 1880 to 1884; sometimes doing the work himself, and sometimes paying Upton for doing it for him. There was also evidence tending to show that though the litigation over the title began in 1882, and was very expensive, and continued on down to the beginning of-1892, Upton never paid any greater share of the necessary outlay than one-fourth, and, after he finally sold the other fourth interest to Tong, he did not assist in representing the claim, or pay any further attention to- the litigation; the whole of the outlay thereafter being paid by Lar-gey, Tong, Mantle, Warren, and Zenor, who were interested in the claim. Furthermore-, it is not disputed that, after the relocation of the claim was made under the name of “Grand Prize,” Upton conveyed to Largey and Zenor, his co-owners at that time, the same interests, relatively, which they owned in the Comanche claim, retaining a one-fourth interest only. When he came to execute a bond to Tong for a deed in the autumn of 1888, pursuant to the deed subsequently made on February 28, 1889, *224be described bis entire interest therein as an undivided one-fourth. So little attention did he give to the matter after-the date of this deed to T'ong’ in 1889, -that, though the litigation over the title was pending in the supreme court of the United States, he did not, upon his own oath, know of the decision of that court in his own favor until more than two- years after it was rendered.
These facts, with others which appear in the evidence, were amply sufficient to warrant the finding on this branch of the case. To be sure, there is a conflict in the evidence; but, the trial court having made the finding as it did, this court has no power to disturb it.
Nor do we find anything in the evidence to justify an inference that Largey and his associates fraudulently excluded Upton from the patent. It appears that in 1882 one James Larkin and others applied for a patent to- the Smelter claim. This claim conflicted with the Comanche claim. Upton, Largey and Zenor (the first then owning a fourth interest in the latter claim) brought an adverse suit in the district court of Silver Bow (then Deer Lodge) county. Collins was not a party to this suit. The history of the subsequent litigation will be found in the case of Upton v. Larkin, 5 Mont. 600, 6 Pac. 66; Id., 7 Mont. 449, 17 Pac. 728; and in Larkin v. Upton, 144 U. S. 24, 12 Sup. Ct. 614, 36 L. Ed. 330. In 1890, and during the pen-dency of this suit in the supreme court of the United States, the defendants Largey, Warren, Tong, Zenor and Bielenberg instituted proceedings for a patent. They obtained from the clerks of the district and supreme courts of Montana certificates that no suits were pending in these courts involving the title. They furnished these to the land office at Helena, with abstract of title, which showed an interest in themselves and -Upton, and were allowed to make entry. Subsequently, upon application of Larkin and the other defendants in the adverse proceedings, this entry was held for cancellation. Thereupon the applicants for the Comanche patent appealed to the department at Washington. • This appeal was pending when the final judgment was rendered in Upton v. Larkin, 144 U. S. 24, 12 Sup. Ct. 614, *22536 L. Ed. 330. Tlie applicants for tlie Comanche patent then presented a certified copy of the final judgment to the- department in Washington, and obtained their patent. It does not appear from! the record in this case how Upton’s name came to be omitted from the patent. Such, however, was the fact. What evidence of title in the applicants was presented with the judgment, other than the abstract which was used upon the original entry, does not appear. The presumption must be indulged either that sufficient other evidence was presented to warrant the omission of Upton’s name, or that the officers of the department omitted his name by mistake. But conceding either presumption to be correct, no harm was done to Upton, in view of the fact that he had theretofore parted with all interest in the claim. Whether the proceeding was fraudulent upon the original entry, or irregular upon final application to (.he department at Washington, was a question of no concern to him.
But counsel insist that the plaintiff purchased without notice of the claim on the part of the corporation, for a valuable consideration, and therefore, as against this defendant, which purchased with notice, his title is superior; it appearing that Upton’s deed to Collins was never put upon record. This position is untenable, for two reasons: In the first place, the evidence shows clearly that both Frank and Wetzstein prior to and at the dates of their respective conveyances had full notice that the corporation was in possession of the claim under its grant from the patentees, and asserting title under the Collins deed. In the second place, their conveyances are both mere quitclaim deeds, and purport.to convey only such rights as their respective grantors had at the time they executed them. Under such a deed the grantee- takes such title only as the grantor has. (McAdow v. Black, 6 Mont. 601, 13 Pac. 377; Butte Hardware Co. v. Frank, 25 Mont. 344, 65 Pac. 1; Devlin on Deeds, Sec. 671.) The plaintiff therefore stands upon no higher ground than would Upton himself, were he demanding the relief now sought by the plaintiff, his mesne grantee.
The findings of the trial court upon this branch of the case> express and implied, are consistent, are amply sustained by the *226evidence, and are sufficient to support the judgment. It is not necessary, therefore, to investigate the question whether the-findings on the other two^ branches of the case are conflicting or defective, or are insufficient.
3. There are many assignments of error upon the admission and exclusion of evidence. We shall notice only one of them. It is said that all the evidence touching the Grand Prize location, and the conveyances of the interests therein by Upton, shotdd have been excluded as incompetent and immaterial,— Upton having testified that this location was made merely for the purpose of protecting the interests of himself, Largey and Zenor, — and that after the final decision of the supreme court of the territory in Upton v. Larkin, 7 Mont. 449, 17 Pac. 728, confirming their title under the Comanche location, the Grand Prize was abandoned. Without pausing to consider the effect of the deeds made by Upton, this evidence was clearly competent and material, as tending to establish the disputed conveyance to Collins. Upton, according to his own testimony, had located the Grand Prize claim in order to protect his and his co-owners’ interests. The deeds to Largey and Zenor he executed and delivered to them without demand. Upon the theory that he had conveyed to Collins in 18 SO, these deeds conveyed away jiist such interests as should have been conveyed, and left him with all that he was entitled to retain. It was thought at that time that they had som;e value as evidence of title, for the location was made under the advice of counsel employed in the case of Upton v. Larkin to forestall a possible judgment declaring the invalidity of both the Comanche and Smelter locations. In the light of the other facts showing Upton’s behavior prior to and after the date of the last deed to C'ollins, this evidence cannot be explained upon any other theory than that he had executed and delivered that deed, unless it be upon the theory of a mistake, which was not an issue in the case.
The judgment and order denying a new trial are each affirmed at the cost of the appellant.
Affirmed.