In a suit brought in the district court to determine
extralateral rights between patented mining claims, the complaint
averred that the construction and application of §§
2322-2332 of the Revised Statutes were involved, set up the
discovery, location, and patent of plaintiffs' claim, and, to meet
a defect of the location notice under the state law, averred
actual, open, exclusive, and uninterrupted possession and working
of the plaintiffs' claim for more than five
Page 249 U. S. 13
years from the date of discovery, the limitation period provided
by § 2332.
Held that the latter allegations were part
of plaintiffs' case, and involved a construction and application of
§ 2332, and hence the judgment of the circuit court of appeals
was reviewable in this Court by appeal. Pp.
249 U. S.
20-23.
In determining extralateral rights between adjoining patented
mining claims, a failure of the earlier location notice to comply
with the state law is immaterial if the junior locator, at the time
of locating, knew that the earlier locator was in possession of and
working his claim. The purpose of a location notice is but to give
warning of the prior appropriation. P.
249 U. S.
26.
The unequivocal possession of a mining claim gives constructive
notice of the possessor's rights thereunder.
Id.
As between two patented mining claims, priority of right to the
vein of the one where it dips beneath, and unites with the vein of
the other is not determined by the dates of entries and patents but
by priority of discovery and location. P.
249 U. S.
27.
In the absence from the record of an adverse suit, there is no
presumption that anything was considered and determined by the Land
Department in patenting a mining claim except the question of the
right to the surface.
Id.
An application to patent a lode mining claim invites only such
contests as affect the surface, and where no surface conflict
involves the apex, a prior locator of an adjacent unpatented claim
is not obliged to adverse in order to protect his right to follow
his vein extralaterally on the dip. P.
249 U. S.
28.
Findings of fact made by the district court concerning the
apexes, courses, and dips of mineral veins in dispute, and affirmed
by the circuit court of appeals, must be accepted by this Court
unless clearly wrong. P.
249 U. S.
30.
A release and quitclaim of an undivided interest in a designated
mining claim, though with expressed intent to convey all the
grantor's right, title, and interest in the property, together with
all earth, rock, ores, etc., found therein,
held to pass
only rights and interests appertaining to that claim under its
location and patent, and not to affect the extralateral rights
appertaining to an adjoining claim owned by the grantor. P.
249 U. S. 30.
Montana Mining Co. v. St. Louis Mining Co., 204 U.
S. 204, distinguished.
In a suit to establish extralateral rights and for an accounting
for ores, where the plaintiffs were awarded relief as to their
principal vein, the court also found that a branch or strand of it
apexed in plaintiffs' claim and dipped beyond the side line into
defendant's
Page 249 U. S. 14
territory, uniting there with the main vein again, but the place
where the apex crossed the line could not be fixed.
Held
proper, while decreeing plaintiffs the owner of the strand vein and
entitled to its possession throughout its depth a far as it apex
extended within their claim, to reserve the question of such extent
and the measurement of plaintiffs' rights thereunder for
determination in future supplemental proceedings in the light of
further mining development. P.
249 U. S.
32.
248 F. 609 affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
Page 249 U. S. 20
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
A contest between mining claims as to the right to the ores that
may be not only inside the surface lines of the claims but outside
their vertical side lines -- dip or extralateral rights. It was
commenced in the United States District Court for the District of
Montana by a bill filed therein by the appellees Clark-Montana
Realty Company and Elm Orlu Mining Company against appellant Butte
& Superior Copper Company, Limited, under a statute of Montana
authorizing an action to be brought by any person against another
who claims an estate or interest in real property adverse to him,
for the purpose of determining such adverse claim.
The appellees (plaintiffs in the suit) obtained a decree in the
district court quieting their title and decreeing an accounting.
Clark-Montana Realty Co. v. Butte & Superior Copper
Co., 233 F. 547. The decree was affirmed by the circuit court
of appeals, 248 F. 609. To review the latter action, this appeal is
prosecuted.
We are confronted with a motion to dismiss on the ground that
the decree of the circuit court of appeals was final, the
jurisdiction of the district court having been, in legal effect,
rested, it is asserted, upon diversity of citizenship. To judge of
the motion requires a consideration of appellees' statement of
their grounds of suit. An outline of them is only necessary.
At the outset, we may say there is a diversity of citizenship,
the parties being respectively corporations of Washington and
Arizona, and it was so averred.
The predecessors of appellees (so run the allegations), on April
18, 1875, discovered a vein or lode of mineral-bearing
Page 249 U. S. 21
rock in the ground described as the Elm Orlu. Discovery was
followed by location of the claim and other acts of its
appropriation prescribed by the mining laws, proof of which was
duly made, and such steps were taken that, on December 30, 1882,
application for patent was made and patent issued for the claim
January 31, 1884. The locators and their successors in interest
held, worked, possessed, and actually occupied the claim
continuously from the date of discovery for more than five years
thereafter, and during all that time were in the open, notorious,
exclusive, and uninterrupted possession of it.
The Clark-Montana Realty Company became the owner of the claim,
and entitled to its possession and of all veins, lodes, or ledges
having their tops or apices therein throughout their entire depth
between the end lines of said claim extended northerly in their own
direction. That company leased the claim to appellee, Elm Orlu
Mining Company, which is occupying it by virtue of the lease.
The appellant is the owner of the Black Rock, Jersey Blue,
Admiral Deway and Silver Lodge Mining Claims which adjoin the Elm
Orlu claim on its north side. Their locations progressed to
patent.
In the Elm Orlu claim, there is a vein or lode known as the
Rainbow lode, which crosses the west end line of the Elm Orlu claim
and proceeds in an easterly direction through it. It was upon this
lode that the discovery of the claim was made. Its downward course
through the side line of the claim drawn vertically is northerly,
and it extends downward and passes below the surface of appellant's
claims.
Appellant claims an estate or interest adverse to appellees' in
the Rainbow lode, the exact nature of which claim is unknown to
appellees, but it is false and groundless.
The value of the Elm Orlu claim is given, and it is averred that
appellant has, by means of secret underground works in its
possession, willfully penetrated the
Page 249 U. S. 22
Rainbow lode, and has extracted and is extracting large amounts
of ore therefrom, the exact amount being unknown, but exceeding in
value the sum of $50,000.
It is prayed that appellant declare its title, and, when
declared, that it be adjudged without merit; that appellees' title
be established and appellant enjoined from further assertion of
rights adverse to appellees, and for an accounting.
There is an averment, however, that requires notice. It is as
follows:
"That the jurisdiction of the United States District Court for
the District of Montana over this suit is invoked and depends upon
two grounds, to-wit:"
"1. Upon the ground that the construction and application of
§§ 2322, 2324, 2325, and 2332 of the Revised Statutes of
the United States are involved, and the amount in controversy
exceeds in value the sum of three thousand ($3,000) dollars,
exclusive of interest and costs, all of which will appear from the
facts hereinafter set forth."
"2. . . ."
The averment is explicit, and, we may assume, had a purpose, but
appellees do not wish to be taken at their word. The confidence
they thought and expressed when invoking the powers of the court in
the first instance -- and providing, we may assume, for review in
case of an adverse decision -- they now recant and urge that it
should not be used to question or disturb their success or become
an avenue of relief to their antagonist. This is not unusual, and
counsel has cited prior examples and the action of the court
therein.
The principle of decision which the court then announced is
familiar. It is that the ground of jurisdiction in the district
court and ultimately in this Court on appeal from the circuit court
of appeals is the statement of the suing party of his cause of
suit. And there must
Page 249 U. S. 23
be substance in it, not mere verbal assertion or the
anticipation of defenses.
Taylor v. Anderson, 234 U. S.
74;
Hull v. Burr, 234 U.
S. 712,
234 U. S.
720.
Has appellees' statement these defects? As we have seen, there
is a confident assertion that the construction and application of
the designated sections of the Revised Statutes are involved, and,
turning to them, we find that they are the foundation of the rights
to mining claims and express the conditions of their acquisition
and extent, and, it would seem, are often the basis of
controversies as to them and the solution of the controversies. And
realizing this, we may suppose, appellees were at pains to set out
the conditions and steps they observed, and lest there might be
omission, and in remedy of it if there should be, they availed
themselves by appropriate allegations of § 2332, Rev.Stats. --
that is, they alleged that they were in the actual, open,
exclusive, and uninterrupted possession of the Elm Orlu, working
the same for more than five years (the period of limitation under
§ 2332) continuously from the date of discovery. And counsel
admitted, upon a question from the bench at the oral argument, that
the allegation had jurisdictional purpose and that resort was had
to the federal court that appellees might avail themselves of the
provisions of § 2332 and of
Clipper Mining Co. v. Eli
Mining Co., 194 U. S. 220,
194 U. S. 226,
the Supreme Court of Montana having decided [
Footnote 1] that a notice of location which failed
to comply, as appellees' did, with a statute of Montana was
defective. The allegation therefore was part of appellees' case --
fortified the other allegations as grounds of suit and recovery --
and made the suit one involving the construction and application of
that section. The motion to dismiss is therefore denied.
On the merits, the case is not of novelty. It is the usual
Page 249 U. S. 24
one of priority of rights in a mineral-bearing vein. The
averments of appellees we have given. They are met by appellant by
denials, counter-averments of location and rights, not only by
grounds of defense but of affirmative relief; prayers for
recompense for trespasses upon its rights and that its title be
quieted against the assertion of appellees.
In summary description of the controversies in the case, we may
say they center in the Rainbow lode, so-called, in regard to which
the parties are in absolute antagonism both in averment and
contention, and incidentally in other lodes.
Upon the issues thus joined, the district court made certain
findings which were affirmed by the circuit court of appeals. We
take them up in their order, as we shall thereby be able to
separate the questions of law from the questions of fact.
1. The court found that the Elm Orlu was located before the
Black Rock. Of this finding there can be no doubt if the procedure
of the law was observed in the location of the Elm Orlu. The steps
in that procedure and their order are well established. The first
of them is the discovery of mineral-bearing rock within the claim,
and it must precede location. The subsequent steps -- marking the
boundaries, posting notice, recording -- are the declaration of
title; the patent is the final evidence of it. Such steps being
observed, the right is acquired under the Revised Statutes to the
vein on its course and dip to the extent that its top or apex is
within the surface boundaries of the claim or within vertical
planes drawn downward through them.
Lawson v. United States
Mining Co., 207 U. S. 1;
Stewart Mining Co. v. Ontario Mining Co., 237 U.
S. 350.
It is, however, provided by § 2322 Rev.Stats. that there
must be not only compliance with the laws of the United States, but
with "state, territorial, and local
Page 249 U. S. 25
regulations," and appellant asserts that the location of
appellees' predecessors did not comply with the territorial statute
of Montana, and that therefore, though the location preceded that
of appellant, it was destitute of legal sufficiency.
And it is contended that the Supreme Court of Montana has
decided in several cases [
Footnote
2] that the requirements of the state statute are imperative,
and that one of these cases (
Baker v. Butte City Water
Co.) was affirmed by this Court.
Butte City Water Co. v.
Baker, 196 U. S. 119.
It is further contended that,
"from the day when final entry of the Black Rock was made,
certainly from the day when patent therefor issued, the patentee's
title not only to the surface of the claim, but to every vein or
lode the top or apex of which was found within the boundaries
thereof became unassailable."
The following is the relevant chronology: the location of the
Elm Orlu, following discovery of mineral, was made April 18, 1875,
the declaratory statement thereof recorded on the 22nd of that
month; the location of the Black Rock was made November 6, 1875,
the declaratory statement recorded the 13th of the same month. The
entry for patent of the Black Rock was made November 24, 1880, and
patent issued February 15, 1882; the Elm Orlu made final entry
December 30, 1882, and patent issued January 31, 1884.
Such being the order of procedure of the parties, which acquired
the title? Or, to express the issue in conformity to the
contentions of appellant, was there defect in the location of
appellees by reason of the Montana statute, and did the prior issue
of patent to appellant give impregnability to its title and right
to the veins in controversy? The district court, and the circuit
court of appeals affirming it, decided both issues against
appellant on the
Page 249 U. S. 26
grounds: (1) that the Montana cases did not furnish the rule of
decision for the federal courts, the better reasoning being (for
which cases were cited) that, as the Montana statute did not impose
a forfeiture, hence none resulted from defects in the declaratory
statement of the Elm Orlu; (2) that the Elm Orlu people were in
possession of their claim, working the same -- of which the Black
Rock people had knowledge -- and that hence the latter could not
avail themselves of the defects in the location of the Elm Orlu.
Yosemite Mining Co. v. Emerson, 208 U. S.
25, was adduced. In the latter ground we concur, and we
need not express opinion of the other, although it has impressive
strength, and was conceded to have in
Yosemite Mining Co. v.
Emerson. Indeed, there was a revulsion in the state against
the ruling of the cases, and a law was enacted making the issue of
a patent for a mining claim conclusive evidence of compliance with
the requirements of the laws of the state and making valid all
locations under them theretofore made
"that in any respect had failed to comply with the requirements
of such laws, except as against one who has located the same ground
in good faith and without notice."
Yosemite Mining Co. v. Emerson was concerned with a
regulation of the State of California which prescribed the manner
of the location of a claim. The regulation had not been conformed
to, and the validity of the location was attacked on that ground by
a subsequent locator who had had notice of the claim, he contending
that there was forfeiture of it. The contention was rejected, and
we said that to yield to it would work great injustice and subvert
the very purpose for which the posting of notices was required,
which was, we further said, "to make known the purpose of the
discoverer to claim title to the" claim "to the extent described
and to warn others of the prior appropriation." The comment is
obviously applicable to the asserted defects in the declaratory
statement of
Page 249 U. S. 27
appellees. It, like the California requirement, had no other
purpose than "to warn others of the prior appropriation" of the
claim, and such is the principle of constructive notice. It --
constructive notice -- is the law's substitute for actual notice,
and to say that it and actual notice are equivalents would seem to
carry the self-evidence of an axiom. Besides, in this case, there
was unequivocal possession of the Elm Orlu, and it is elementary
that such possession is notice to all the world of the possessor's
rights thereunder.
Simmons Creek Coal Co. v. Doran,
142 U. S. 417.
The other contention of appellant is, as we have said, that the
title not only to the surface of its claim but to every vein whose
top or apex was found within it became impregnable by the issue of
patent to it. We need not follow the details of counsel's argument
to sustain the contention -- its reliance is on the dates on which
entries for the patents were made, the Black Rock entry preceding
that of the Elm Orlu. It is, however, admitted that, by the issue
of the patent to the Elm Orlu, "it was thereby conclusively
adjudicated or determined that at the time of final entry the
applicants were entitled to a patent to that claim." But the
admission is combined with the declaration that
"to authorize the courts to give effect to a mining patent as of
a date anterior to the final entry, it must be made to appear that,
prior to that date, there was
a valid location [italics
counsel's] upon which the patent issued."
And to establish that appellees' was not a valid location,
appellant relies upon the asserted defect in the declaratory
statement. With that defect we have dealt, and have decided that it
had not the consequences ascribed to it. We may say, however, that
priority of right is not determined by dates of entries or patents
of the respective claims, but by priority of discovery and
location, which may be shown by testimony other than the entries
and patents. In the absence from the record of an adverse
Page 249 U. S. 28
suit, there is no presumption that anything was considered or
determined except the question of the right to the surface.
Lawson v. United States Mining Co., supra.
The relevancy of that case is resisted. Appellant urges that, by
the application of the Black Rock for patent, appellees were
"confronted with the necessity of either adversing or suffering the
consequence of a failure to do so," and the consequence is said to
be that the Elm Orlu was made subordinate in time and right to the
Black Rock. We cannot assent. The application of the Black Rock for
patent did not show a surface conflict and the doctrine of the
Lawson case is that, on an application for a patent, only
surface rights are determined, and Lindley is quoted for the
proposition that
"an application for a patent invites only such contests as
affect the surface area. . . . Prospective underground conflicts
are not the subject of adverse claims."
It is true, as we have seen, there was some overlapping of the
lines of the claims. If, however, a conflict was thus indicated,
the Black Rock secured the advantage. The ground within the
overlapping lines was included within the Black Rock patent and
expressly excepted from the application of the Elm Orlu for its
patent. And no part of the decree was determined by it.
2. The district court found from the testimony that the Elm Orlu
was of prior location and right and in this was confirmed by the
circuit court of appeals. The inevitable consequence is that
appellees have title to the veins or lodes whose tops or apices are
within the Elm Orlu. This consequence appellant admits at the very
beginning of its argument, and says that one of the vital questions
in the case is the priority of the claims, and that, if the Elm
Orlu had priority over the Black Rock, the appellees would be
entitled to all the Rainbow lode between the planes designated by
the court, and would be also entitled
Page 249 U. S. 29
"to all ores within the intersection spaces of that vein with
the Jersey Blue vein and the Creden vein."
We state the admission not in estoppel of appellant, but only in
concentration of attention upon the question for decision. In its
solution there are in dispute many elements of importance. Among
these necessarily is the question: in which of the claims do the
veins apex, course and dip? In the question there is complexity and
grounds for diversity of judgment, and the district court felt and
expressed them after hearing and estimating the testimony and the
admission of the parties.
The court (Judge Bourquin) said that the chief contesting
claims, the Elm Orlu and the Black Rock, "have a common side line
for 850 feet of the Elm Orlu east and of the Black Rock west end."
And further said:
"It is now admitted that the Rainbow vein at the apex crosses
the Elm Orlu west end line, courses easterly, crosses the common
side line, and branches in the Black Rock, one strand crossing the
Black Rock north side line, and one coursing easterly a disputed
distance; that the Pyle strand of the Rainbow at some depth in the
Elm Orlu diverges from the south side of the said vein and coursing
easterly unites with the Rainbow at the Black Rock 1,100 level;
that the Jersey Blue vein at the apex crosses the Black Rock west
end line and courses easterly a disputed distance, it and the
Rainbow converging on strike and dip to union or crossing; that the
Creden vein at some depth in the Elm Orlu near the Black Rock west
end diverges from the north side of the Rainbow, courses
northwesterly under both claims, and unites with or is cut off by
the Jersey Blue. Very large ore bodies are in the Rainbow under
both claims at places bisected on strike by the common side line,
and both parties have mined them under both claims. From various
names, of the veins those herein are chosen to avoid
confusion."
And to all other elements of decision, presented in a trial
Page 249 U. S. 30
which occupied 16 days, the court gave a painstaking
consideration, and in estimate of them found the issues in favor of
appellees, and carefully adjudged the rights of the contestants
according to the lines of their respective properties and the
relation of the mineral veins to them.
The circuit court of appeals affirmed the findings, saying, by
Circuit Judge Gilbert:
"The appellant does not assert that the findings of fact are
unsupported by competent evidence, but contends that they are
contrary to the weight of the evidence. The trial court made its
findings after an evidently careful and painstaking investigation
of the testimony and the exhibits, and after a personal inspection
of the mining properties. We have examined the record sufficiently
to see that the findings are all supported by the credible
testimony of reputable witnesses. Upon settled principles which
this Court has always recognized, findings so made upon conflicting
testimony are conclusive upon this appeal."
And we said in
Lawson v. United States Mining Co.,
supra, of the conclusion of the circuit court of appeals in
such case -- and the concession is as great as appellant is
entitled to
"that, if the testimony does not show that it [the conclusion of
the court] is correct, it fails to show that it is wrong, and,
under those circumstances, we are not justified in disturbing that
conclusion. It is our duty to accept a finding of fact unless
clearly and manifestly wrong."
The findings accepted, the conclusions of law must be pronounced
to be of necessary sequence.
One of the defenses of appellant is that, on October 29, 1906,
the Clark-Montana Realty Company, then being the owner of an
undivided one-fourth interest in the Black Rock claim, executed and
delivered to the predecessors in interest of appellant a deed of
release and quitclaim of all its
"right, title, interest, claim and demand . . . in and to that
certain portion, claim and mining right, title and property on
those certain ledges, veins, lodes or deposits
Page 249 U. S. 31
of quartz and other rock in place, containing precious metals of
gold, silver, and other metals. . . ."
And it was stated that it was
"the intention of the party of the first part to convey to the
party of the second part all of its right, title and interest in
and to the above-described property"
(referring to the claim, which was described), "together with
all the dips, spurs and angles, and also all the metals, ores,
gold, silver and metal bearing quartz, rock, and earth therein. . .
."
The deed is urged as an estoppel, and appellant insists that
it
"operates to grant the fractional interest in 'all earth, rock
and ores' found within the exterior limits of the Black Rock claim
extended downward vertically,"
citing therefor
Montana Mining Co. v. St. Louis Mining &
Milling Co., 204 U. S. 204, and
Bogart v. Amanda Consolidated Gold Mining Co., 32 Colo.
32.
The cited cases are distinguishable from that at bar. In
Montana Mining Co. v. St. Louis Mining & Milling Co.,
the land was conveyed "together with all the mineral therein
contained," and the words were distinguished from those conveying
extralateral rights and considered as a subject of the grant. In
the other case, the conveyance was of land in conflict between two
claims which were in litigation, and, in execution of the intention
of the parties, the deed was interpreted to convey
"not merely the surface ground in conflict, as
contradistinguished from the mineral wealth beneath, but with this
surface ground all underlying minerals"
except one vein which had been excluded.
In the case at bar, the conveyance was of an undivided
one-fourth interest in and to the "mining claim known as the "Black
Rock" quartz lode mining claim." It passed no rights or interest
that did not belong to that claim or would not appertain to it. Or,
to put it in another way, the deed passed the rights and interests
that were derived from the United States by the location of that
claim and conveyed by the patent to the locators. It was not
intended to convey
Page 249 U. S. 32
any of the rights of the Elm Orlu and denude it of the
extralateral rights that the law conferred upon it. In other words,
the contention of appellant would make the deed a conveyance of the
Elm Orlu as well as of the Black Rock.
We do not stop to specialize either the contests of or the
judgments on particular veins. Their relative locations and the
rights in them are disposed of by what we have said. But an earnest
and special contest is made on the finding of the court in regard
to a vein designated as the Pyle strand. The district court said,
as we have seen,
"that the Pyle strand of the Rainbow at some depth in the Elm
Orlu diverges from the south side of the said vein and, coursing
easterly, unites with the Rainbow at the Black Rock 1,100 level.
[
Footnote 3]"
And the court decreed the appellees to be the owners of and
entitled to the possession of it throughout its entire depth as far
as its apex was within the Elm Orlu, but expressly reserved the
question of the point where the apex passes out of the Elm Orlu. In
other words, in the language of the circuit court of appeals,
"the court left to future development the question of how far
the Pyle apex continued in the appellees' location, and to what
extent beneath the Black Rock it united with the Rainbow in such
position as to be controlled by the apex in the Elm Orlu."
This action of the district court is attacked by appellant. It
admits, however, that the Pyle strand in its downward course unites
with the Rainbow at or about a point which would be intersected by
a vertical plane passed through the easterly end line of the Elm
Orlu extended northerly in its own direction, but denies that the
apex or any portion of the apex is within the Elm Orlu and asserts
that where its apex is found is altogether conjectural, and that,
"for aught that appears from the evidence, it may
Page 249 U. S. 33
have its apex in the Black Rock and, indeed, this is probably
the case." And it is urged that a situation is presented not of the
weight of evidence, but of the absence of evidence, or, to quote
counsel, the decision is "one which finds no support whatever in
the testimony." But manifestly these are but assertions -- attacks
on the estimate of the testimony made by the district court and
circuit court of appeals and the conclusion it justifies.
It is further said that issue was made upon the title to the
Pyle strand, and that it was the duty of the court to definitely
pass upon it and to decide for appellant, but that,
"instead of entering such a decree, the court so framed, and
intentionally so framed, its decree that it would not be a bar to a
new suit which appellees might thereafter bring against this
appellant to quiet title to all of the vein below the plane of
union between it and the Pyle strand, if by further development
they discovered additional evidence in support of their contention
that the Pyle strand did apex in the Elm Orlu at the point of
alleged forking and at its apex continued thence easterly to and
across the east end line of the Elm Orlu."
It is true the apex of the Pyle strand was found to be within
the Elm Orlu, but all else as to the vein was reserved and, in the
circumstances, properly reserved. There was simply retention of the
case for supplementary proceedings, as the circuit court of appeals
observed, to carry out the decree and make it effective under
altered circumstances.
Joy v. St. Louis, 138 U. S.
1,
138 U. S. 47;
Union Pacific Ry. v. Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific Ry.
Co., 163 U. S. 564.
Decree affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
Hickey v. Anaconda Mining Co., 33 Mont. 46.
[
Footnote 2]
McBurney v. Berry, 5 Mont. 300;
O'Donnell v.
Glenn, 8 Mont. 248;
McGowan v. Maclay, 16 Mont. 234;
Hickey v. Anaconda Mining Co., 33 Mont. 46;
Baker v.
Butte City Water Co., 28 Mont. 222.
[
Footnote 3]
The formal finding of the district court is as follows:
"That the Pyle strand of the Rainbow vein diverges from the
south side of the latter vein in the Elm Orlu claim, and there and
for some indefinite distance easterly has its apex in the Elm Orlu
claim."