Du Prat v. James
Du Prat v. James
Opinion of the Court
This is an action to recover possession of a mining claim in Tuolumne County. The action was commenced in April, 1881, by J. J. Du Prat as plaintiff; he having died after the judgment in the court below, his executrix was substituted. For convenience, the deceased is herein spoken of as plaintiff.
The judgment was in favor of defendants. On this appedi, on behalf of plaintiff, points are made as follows: —
First—Defendants having entered on an actual possession of plaintiff, their entry can give them no right as against him.
The facts in this regard, as found by the court, are substantially as follows: The plaintiff and his predecessors in interest had, from 1863 down, worked the mine, and had expended, in
It has been held by the Supreme Court of the United States, and by this court, that a person cannot enter upon the actual possession of another for the purpose of laying foundation for a pre-emption claim to public lands of the United States; and it is claimed by the appellant that the same principle operated upon the
Second—Plaintiff insists that he performed, the work required, and therefore did not forfeit his right to hold the ground.
The court found that he performed, in the year 1880, three days’ labor, of the value of three dollars per day, and no more. The plaintiff claims that the court erred in excluding from its conclusion as to labor performed on the claim, his time and expenses spent and incurred, as follows: In October, 1879,' plaintiff leased a mill located about a quarter of a mile from his claim, and from that time until December 25th made unsuccessful efforts to obtain water to operate the mill; about the latter part of December, 1879, or the first of January, 1880, the company owning a ditch let sufficient water run to the mill for the use of plaintiff, but he did not use or attempt to use the same, nor crush or attempt to crush rock or ore; plaintiff went from Groveland to Sonora in said county twice, from Groveland to San Francisco once, and from Oakland to San Francisco five or six times, to see the agent of the water company, for the purpose of getting water to operate the mill; his personal expenses incurred, and the value of his time on those occasions, were from one hundred and fifty to four hundred dollars. We think that in no sense can these expenditures and values be said to be labor performed on the mine.
Third—Plaintiff asserts that the locations of the defendants were invalid.
The court found that notices were posted by the defendants on their respective locations (copies of the notices are given in the findings), and that stakes were driven firmly in the ground at the corners, and stone monuments placed around the same, and that the stakes were marked as corner stakes; the court also found that the defendants distinctly marked the locations on the ground, so that the boundaries could be readily traced, and that the stakes placed at each of the four corners were firmly planted in the ground, and that the stakes and stone mounds built around the same were prominent and permanent monuments, by which, and the descriptions in the notices, the claims could be identified.
The fourth point relates to alleged variations in" the descriptions of the ground located, as between the answer and the testimony. We do not see any substantial variation. Whatever appears is more apparent than real.
Judgment and order affirmed.
Thornton, J., and Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- MARY ANN DU PRAT, etc. v. J. P. JAMES
- Cited By
- 14 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- MmN9 Claim—Re-looation—Pebfobhance op Labob.—The failure of a locator of a mining claim to perform the amount of labor required by the laws of the United States, subjects the claim to re-location, and a peaceable entry in good faith may be made for that purpose, although the claim is occupied by the original locator. Id. — The right of the original locator to perform the required amount of work after such failure, and retain the benefit of his location, is dependent upon the performance of the labor before the re-location. Id.—Personal expenses incurred, and the value of the locator’s time in endeavoring to procure water to operate a mill to crush ore from the mine, cannot be considered as work done on the claim. Id.—Location—Maekmo on the Gbound.—The court found that stakes and mounds were placed at each of the four corners of the claim, and were prominent and permanent monuments, by which, together with the descriptions in the notices, the claim could be identified, and found also that the location was distinctly marked on the ground so that the boundaries could be readily traced. Held, that the location was valid, and that whether or not the boundaries could be readily traced from the objects placed at the corners, was a question of fact for the trial court to determine.