Stapleton v. Pease
Stapleton v. Pease
Opinion of the Court
This is an action by tbe appellants to recover tbe possession of a certain quartz lode in tbe Bryant district, Beaver-bead county, known as tbe Pboenix .lode. Tbe respondent claims tbe same property under tbe name of tbe Mark Antony lode.
Tbe statute concerning tbe location and recording of mining claims on veins or lodes, provides tbat “ any person or persons wbo shall hereafter discover any mining claim upon any vein or lode, bearing gold, silver, cinnabar, lead, tin, copper, or other valuable deposits, shall, within twenty days thereafter, make and file for record in tbe office of tbe recorder of tbe county in which said discovery is made, a declaratory statement thereof in writing, on oath, .before some person authorized by law to administer oaths, describing such claim in tbe manner provided by tbe laws of tbe United States.” Sts. Ex. Sess. 83, § 1. The person asserting title under this statute must produce in evidence tbe original declaratory statement, duly signed and sworn to, or, in case tbe same be lost or not within bis power, tbe record thereof, or a transcript of such record duly authenticated.
Tbe appellants, to establish their title to tbe property in question, introduced in evidence, without objection, a paper purporting to be an original declaratory statement, which was signed by tbe discoverer and sworn to before William Peck, county recorder. They further proved tbe discovery of a vein of silver with well-defined wall rocks, their possession and ouster by tbe respondent, and rested. Tbe respondent introduced testimony tending to establish bis title to tbe property, and called William Peck,-as a witness, wbo testified tbat bis signature to tbe jurat to tbe declaratory statement was not genuine. It was in evidence tbat William Peck was tbe recorder of Beaverhead county at tbe date -of tbe statement. Tbe appellants then proved tbat they bad sent tbe original declaratory statement of tbe Pboenix lode to tbe land office at Helena, Montana) tbat'they bad a correct copy thereof duly certified by tbe county recorder, and then offered tbe same in evidence; and that they were taken by surprise by the testimony of Peck. It is stated in tbe bill of exceptions tbat tbe respondent did not prove tbat William Peck, wbo testified, was tbe William Peck wbo was tbe county recorder at tbe time tbe statement was made.
The following facts are conclusively shown: That the declare tory statement, introduced in evidence by the appellants and on which they rest their case, was not an original document; that the original was not lost, and that it was under the control of the appellants. Under this state of facts, no copy, record or transcript thereof, could be received in evidence. The appellants contend that, as the respondent offered no evidence tending to show that the William Peck who testified as to his signature was William Peck, the county recorder, there was no proof that William Peck, the recorder, did not sign the jurat to the declaratory statement. No such proof was necessary. Identity of names is prima facie evidence of the identity of persons. 2 Phil. Ev. 606, notes c, h, e; 1 Greenl. Ev., § 575; Thompson v. Manrow, 1 Cal. 428 ; Mott v. Smith, 16 id. 535; Carleton v. Townsend, 28 id. 219 ; Garwood v. Garwood, 29 id. 514; Douglas v. Dakin, 46 id. 49 ; Hatcher v. Rocheleau, 18 N. Y. 86 ; People v. Smith, 45 id. 772. The burden of proof was upon the appellants, if they disputed the identity of William Peck, the witness, and William Peck, the recorder, to establish the fact. But after showing, by their own proof, that the original paper was at the land office, and there by their own act, and there being nothing to show then’ inability to produce it in evidence at any time when required, we cannot see much force in the objection that William Peek, the recorder, was not properly identified.
The purpose for which the original declaratory statement was sent to the land office is not disclosed. No attempt was made to show that it had passed beyond the reach of tfye appellants, and, for all that appears in the record, it remained there under their absolute control. If the paper was required to remain in the land office for the purpose of procuring a patent, or any other lawful object, and the appellants were unable to produce it, an authenticated transcript of the record from the proper officers of the land office would have been admissible in evidence. No attempt was made to lay this foundation for the introduction of secondary evidence, and the certified transcript of the record was properly excluded.
Judgment affirmed.
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