Opinion
Appeal from the District Court, Fourteenth Judicial District, County of Placer.
The defendant, Schnabel, owned the Julian mine, and the defendant Cronise made a contract with him to purchase the same, and was allowed to enter into possession of and work the same. A large number of persons, with the knowledge of Schnabel, worked on the mine for Cronise, and their wages not being paid, they filed liens on the same. All the lienholders except the Lukes, Tompking, Henwood, and McCurdy, assigned their demands to the plaintiff, who brought this action to enforce the same, and made Schnabel and the other lienholders parties defendant.
The defendant Schnabel answered, but Cronise made default. The Court found that a portion of the labor was performed in cutting cordwood to be used at the mine, and in clearing the ground for a mill site, not on the Julian mine, but that the mill belonged to the mine.
The Court below enforced the lien for the full amount claimed, and the defendant Schnabel appealed.
COUNSEL:
Jo Hamilton, for Appellant.
Norton & Bullock, for Respondents.
OPINION By the Court:
This is an action to enforce a lien on a mining claim for wages alleged to be due to laborers on the claim, and is founded on the Act of March 30, 1868, " for securing liens of mechanics and others:" Stats. 1867-8, p. 589. The complaint alleges that the labor was performed on the mining claim, and this averment is not denied in the answer. It is true, there is a denial " that the plaintiff and his several assignors did work and labor for said W. H. V. Cronise, and that the said Cronise is indebted to them for the same the several sums of money averred in the complaint; " and there is also a denial that the plaintiff has any lien on the mine, which is only a conclusion of law, and not the denial of a fact. The first amounts to nothing more than a denial that the work was done for Cronise, or that he is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum claimed. But by no reasonable intendment can it be held to be a denial that the labor was performed on the mining claim, as averred in the complaint. The averment that the labor was performed on the mining claim, must therefore be deemed to have been admitted by the pleadings, and it was not possible for the defendant to controvert that fact at the trial. If the Court found the fact contrary to the admissions of the pleadings, the findings must be disregarded. The defendant cannot, therefore, on the appeal, raise the question whether a portion of the labor was performed elsewhere than on the mining claim.
The complaint avers that it was well understood between the laborers and Cronise that the wages were to be paid in gold coin, which was denied by the answer. But the Court finds that Cronise expressly promised to pay in gold coin, which brings the case clearly within the provisions of section two hundred of the Practice Act, as amended in 1870: Stats. 1869-70, p. 295.
We see no error in the judgment, which is therefore affirmed. So ordered.