Leet v. John Dare Silver Mining Co.
Leet v. John Dare Silver Mining Co.
Opinion of the Court
By the Court,
The record here shows that there is a controversy between the above-named parties respecting the right of possession to certain described mining ground in the White Pine District in this State. At the trial had in the Court below, plaintiff obtained judgment, and a new trial being denied, upon application of defendant this appeal is brought from both the judgment and the order denying a new trial.
Each party claims under the mining rules and regulations of said district, subordinate necessarily to the Federal laws applicable thereto ; and the facts, so far as we consider them material or necessary in determining the question raised on this appeal as agreed to, may be stated thus: The White Pine mining district was organized bn the 10th of October, 1866, at which time the miners of said district adopted certain rules and regulations respecting the location and holding of mining claims therein. On the twentieth of July, 1867, amendments were made to these rules and regulations in certain particulars. It should furthermore be stated that in this appeal no question is raised as to the regularity of proceeding in adopting the amendments referred to.
Passing other points made on the hearing of the appeal, we rest our decision on one question in the case which we regard as decisive : Do these mining laws require two days work for each two hundred feet, or two days work for the entire mining claim, irrespective of the number of locators or feet ? The rulings and instructions of the Court below, properly brought before us by the exceptions, hold in effect, that the earlier locators — the interest represented by “ The John Dare Co.” — had forfeited their rights and rendered the mining ground in controversy subject to re-location under the mining laws of the district at the date of the latter location, (February 18th, 1869) for the reason that they had not done two days work for each two hundred feet of the ground they claimed by the “ Bulwark mine ” location in June, 1868. If the two days work was sufficient to hold the Bulwark mine — twelve hundred feet — the plaintiff had no right to re-locate any portion of the ground of defendants, and consequently the judgment should be reversed.
It will be seen that section third of the mining laws uses the words “ locate,” “ locations ” in the sense as the aggregate of the ground claimed by the parties, and not as the interest in common of a single shareholder. The proper steps being taken, the co-locators have no separate interests, but a common interest, which in itself is not susceptible of division or representation, except under proper judicial proceeding or section eleventh of the mining rules.
Section third of these mining laws thus construed harmonizes with other parts of the same laws, as will be seen from the quotar tions already given, especially section fourth. The entire mining law must be taken and construed together, if need be, and if possible, made to harmonize. (32 Cal. 95; 31 Cal. 240.)
On a full examination of the record in this case, we conclude that in view ,of the facts shown by defendants in respect to the amount of work done on the location of June 8th, 1868, by their predecessors, that it was sufficient under the mining laws of the district, and consequently the plaintiffs had no right upon that question alone to relocate any portion of the ground claimed by defendants: wherefore the judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- LEMUEL LEET v. THE JOHN DARE SILVER MINING COMPANY
- Status
- Published