Spokane & Vancouver Gold & Copper Co. v. Colfelt
Spokane & Vancouver Gold & Copper Co. v. Colfelt
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Respondent’s motion to strike the record has been heretofore disposed of.
This is an action brought by the respondent to recover of the appellants a mining claim. The appellants made location on the claim upon the theory that the respondent had not performed $100 worth of labor and development work for the year 1898, which was necessary to secure to it the possession of the claim; and whether or not the respondent performed that amount of labor on the claim in the year 1898 is the issue in this case, it being conceded that, if it did, its title to the claim is good, and, if it did not, the title of the appellants to the claim -is .good. The respondent claims to be the owner by virtue of an as
“The ruling of the court is in effect a holding that hearsay evidence becomes competent when the witness cannot be found. If the former evidence was competent, it could not matter whether the witness could be' found or not. If it was incompetent, its incompetency could not be cured by a showing that he could not be found.”
Objection was also made to the testimony of witnesses Kearney, Winan, Zigler, and Bruner, that they had worked on the mine on the 28th, 29th, and 30th of January, and the 1st of February, after the time for working had expired. This testimony could in no way aid the contention of the respondent that it had done the requisite amount of work on the claim, but we think the exception to it was not sufficiently definite.
It is insisted by the appellants that, even conceding the admission of the testimony to be erroneous, inasmuch as the case was tried by a competent court and' jury, and inasmuch as the instructions are not before this court for review, this court will presume, in aid of the presumption that the judgment of the lower court is right, that the court had delivered such instructions as fully covered the law of the case, and the presumption’will obtain that in
The judgment will be reversed, and a new trial granted.'
Keavis, O. J., and Eullebton, Andebs and Mount, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Spokane and Vancouver Gold and Copper Company v. J. A. Colfelt
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- 1 case
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- Syllabus
- EVIDENCE-HEARSAY-ADMISSIBILITY AS EES GESTAE. In an action to recover a mining claim, in which the issue was as to whether plaintiff and its assignors had performed the necessary amount of development work for the year 1898, the testimony of a witness that one of the original owners had pointed out to him the work done on the claim in 1898 is hearsay evidence, and is not admissible, even on the ground of being part of the res gestae surrounding the negotiations for the purchase of the claim, since the matter in contention was whether the requisite amount of work had been done, and the negotiations for the purchase of the claim were not in dispute. SAME. The admission of testimony hy the witness who had given hearsay testimony as to the development work of 1898 having been pointed out to him by the person who claimed to have done the work, that he had made efforts to procure the attendance of such person at the trial, but was unable to secure him as a witness, was erroneous, since the incompetency of hearsay evidence cannot be cured by showing that a witness who will testify to the fact cannot be found. SAME-PRESUMPTIONS IN AID OF JUDGMENT. It will be presumed in aid of a judgment, where the instructions are not before the appellate court for review, that errors of the trial court in the admission of testimony were corrected by withdrawing the objectionable testimony from the jury, since the presumption naturally attaches, where the record shows that the trial court acted affirmatively in the commission of error, that it maintained the same view of the law to the end of the case.