Court Opinion

ID: 6638361
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:43:16.449634+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:08.736857
License: Public Domain

Pemberton, C. J.
On the twenty-third day of September, 1890, plaintiffs (being seven in number) and Thomas Joyes located the Landlock placer mining claim, a tract of ground in Jefferson county, which they estimated at the time contained 160 acres, but which afterwards, by a survey, was found to contain about 76 acres. Plaintiffs made but one discovery on the entire tract. They marked the boundaries by blazing a tree at each corner of the entire tract of ground, and designated each of said corners of (he claim by writing with a pencil, on the respective blazed trees, the name of the claim, and the *91corner each tree represented. They also marked a tree at the discovery shaft, and posted a notice on the claim. The notice contained the names of all the locators, and a description of the ground claimed. The tract of land so located was not in any way subdivided into 20 acre claims, and no other discoveries were made, or marking done on the ground, than as stated above. During the year 1891 plaintiffs did work and made improvements on the entire tract of laud to the amount of about $150. The complaint, which was filed November 21,1891, charged that in the month of December, 1890, and at divers times between that .date and the commencement of this suit, the defendant knowingly, willfully, and maliciously entered upon said land without the consent of plaintiffs, and cut down aud carried away a large amount of trees and timber growing thereon, etc., claiming actual damages in the sum of $3,000, and asking judgment for treble damages under section 363 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The answer denies the title of plaintiffs, and all the material allegations of the complaint. The case was tried by the court with a jury. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $549.63, as actual damages, which they trebled, making the sum of $1,648.49, for which sum judgment was rendered. Defendant moved for new trial. This motion was overruled. The defendant appealed from the judgment, and the order refusing a new trial.
The appellant contends that the location of the mining claim in the manner as above described is a nullity, and conferred upon plaintiffs no right or title to the Laudlock placer mining claim, or to the right of possession thereof. The appellant claims that, under the law, the plaintiffs should have made a discovery on each 20 acre tract contained in the land sought to be located; that each 20 acre tract therein contained should have been marked upon the surface thereof, so that the boundaries thereof could have been readily traced; that a separate location of each 20 acre tract was necessary under the law; and that work or improvements of the value of $100 should have been done on each 20 acre tract contained therein, for the year 1891. Section 2330 of the Revised Statutes of the United States, among other things, provides: “But no location of a placer claim made after the ninth day of July, 1870, *92shall exceed 160 acres for any one person or association of persons.” This statute, it seems to us, confers the right upon an association of not less than eight persons to locate not to exceed 160 acres in one claim. This has been the holding and ruling of the United States land department uniformly, as far as we have been able to discover; and patents have uniformly issued in such cases, when there was a showing of an expenditure of $500 in work or improvements upon any part of the 160 acre claim. (See Good Return Min. Co., 4 Dec. Dep. Int., 221; also, Morrison’s Mining Rights, 7th ed., 134.) In St. Louis Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636, Mr. Justice Field, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “ The last position of the court below—that the owner of contiguous locations, who seeks a patent, must present a separate application for each, and obtain a separate survey, and prove that upon each the required work has been performed—is as untenable as the rulings already considered ”; and in the same case it is said: “ It would be absurd to require a shaft to be sunk on each location in a consolidated claim, when one shaft would suffice for all the locations.” In this case just cited, Mr. Justice Field is speaking of the things necessary to be done by an applicant to obtain a patent to placer mining ground. In no case, nor in any ruling or decision of the United States land department, that we have been able to find, is it held to be necessary that a separate discovery, separate marking of the boundaries, separate recording, and separate work should be made and performed upon each 20 acres contained in a 160 acre placer claim authorized to be located under one location by an association of persons. If the plaintiffs in this suit had made such a discovery on the ground in controversy, and had made such a location thereof) and were performing such work, and making such improvements thereon, as would entitle them to a patent therefor under the mining laws of the United States, then they had such title and right to possession as would entitle them,to prosecute this action for damages for the trespass complained of.
The appellant further contends that the evidence shows that the plaintiffs had forfeited any right or title they may have had to the ground in controversy, by failing to do the required *93amount of work thereon for the year 1891. The evidence in this case shows, that work of the value of about $150 was done for that year upon the entire claim. If, under the decisions of the land department, and the tendency of the adjudications of the courts, $500 in work and improvements on any part of a 160 acre claim, or any one of a number pf contiguous claims, is sufficient to entitle applicants to a patent for the whole of such ground or claims, then, by parity of reason, it would seem that $100 in work or improvements expended or made upon such 160 acre claim in any one year would save it from forfeiture. Such seems to be the view taken by the laud offices, and is in accordance with the customs, rules, and regu-» lations of miners in this jurisdiction. But in this case a forfeiture was not pleaded by appellant in its answer, although the court below permitted evidence of the amount of work done on said claim for the year 1891. There is no evidence of a re-entry or relocation by any one on account of failure to to do the required work by plaintiffs on said ground; nor does the defendant connect itself with any outstanding title adverse to plaintiff or plead any license or warrant to enter upon the ground in controversy. We do not find any thing in the record to support the plea of forfeiture.
The appellant contends that in this case, if it were liable for actual damages, the court below erred in rendering judgment for treble damages. This suit was instituted for damages for willful and malicious trespass; but respondents contend that, notwithstanding the complaint charges willful and malicious trespass, they are nevertheless entitled to treble damages, under section 363, Code of Civil Procedure. The respondents contend that it was not necessary, under said section, to allege or prove malice, wantonness, or evil design, etc.
In Endlich on the Interpretation of Statutes, section 129, the author, commenting on similar statutes, says; “Similarly, statutes giving punitive, double, or treble damages against one cutting and converting to his own use timber growing on the land of another, without the latter’s consent, are held confined to cases where some element of willfulness, wantonness, carelessness, or evil design enters into the act.”
In Cohn v. Neeves, 40 Wis. 393, the court, in a case involv*94ing the construction of a statute similar to the one under consideration here, says: “The important question arising upon the various exceptions taken by defendants is: Does the statute give the treble damages when the conversion is merely a technical conversion in law, as in the case before us, or was it only intended to apply to cases where some ingredient of willfulness, wantonness, or evil design enters into the act? According to the view of the circuit judge, the statute applies to every case of the conversion of logs, timber, or lumber floating in any of the waters of this state, or lying on the banks or shores of such waters, or on any island where the same may have drifted, and gives treble damages as the measure of recovery., It seems to us that this is an unreasonable and unsound construction of the provision. True, the language used is general, and, if literally interpreted, would include any conversion. But, says an acknowledged authority on this subject, in interpreting a statute it is not always a safe rule, or a true line of construction, to decide according to the strict letter of the act, but courts will rather consider what is its fair meaning, and will expound it differently from the letier, in order to preserve the intent. Qui hard, in litera, hard in cortice. (Broom’s Legal Maxims, page 536.) Observing this rule of interpretation, looking at the object and purpose of the statute, we cannot think it was intended to apply to every conversion of this kind of property, situated or found as . described, without regard to the question whether the conversion was wanton and willful or not. It is needless to observe that the law is highly penal in its character. By way of punishment it subjects the wrongdoer, in certain cases, to an extraordinary liability for the property of another appropriated to his use. In some cases the conversion may be merely a technical one in law, arising from accident, mistake, or even carelessness, without any evil design, and where the damages recoverable at common law afford an adequate compensation to the party injured.” The same conclusion is arrived at, and the same construction placed upon a similar statute, in Wallace v. Finch, 24 Mich. 256.
In Kramer v. Goodlander, 98 Pa. St. 353, construing a statute almost identical with ours, the court say: “Its [the *95statute’s] object is the prevention of willful or careless cutting of another’s timber, by at once punishing the wrongdoer, and amply compensating the owner.”
In the case at bar the evidence shows that the land in controversy was located out in the wilderness, far away from human habitation. The plaintiffs had to cut a trail through the timber to get to it. The defendant, coming to the land from another direction, had to cut a trail also. The defendant found but little evidence that any of the land in the vicinity had ever been claimed by any person for any purpose, except the blazing of four or five trees, and a small discovery shaft on the ground in controversy, as the work of plaintiffs. There was nothing to indicate that anybody actually asserted ownership or dominion over any part of the country thereabout. The circumstances attending the trespass complained of here are vastly different from a case where a person cuts down a shade tree in front of another’s house or lot, or enters another’s close and damages trees or timber therein, when all the evidences of ownership in another are present. These are the acts and trespasses we think are intended to be denounced and punished by our statute. The evidence in the case does not.support the contention that there was any willfulness, wantonness, or maliciousness in the acts or conduct of the defendant. We therefore think that the evidence did not justify the rendering of judgment for treble damages against defendant in this case.
It is ordered that the judgment of the court below be modified, by rendering judgment in favor of plaintiffs against the defendant, for the amount of actual damages found by the jury, and in other respects the judgment is affirmed as modified.

Modified and affirmed.

Habwood, J., concurs.