Alameda Mining Co. v. Success Mining Co.

161 P. 862, 29 Idaho 618, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 113
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 161 P. 862 (Alameda Mining Co. v. Success Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alameda Mining Co. v. Success Mining Co., 161 P. 862, 29 Idaho 618, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 113 (Idaho 1916).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This action was brought by the Alameda Mining Company, respondent, against the Success Min[623]*623ing Company, appellant, praying for a perpetual injunction enjoining the Success Mining Company from entering upon or into or excavating and removing ore from the Cardiff mining claim owned by the plaintiff, and for $30,000 damages alleged to be the value of ores removed from the said Cardiff claim, and to quiet the title of plaintiff in said Cardiff claim.

The Success company answered, denying the allegations of the complaint, and filed a cross-complaint, alleging the ownership of the Granite mine and of the vein, lode or ledge thereunder, and that the Granite vein apexes within the exterior boundaries of the Granite claim, and that the said vein crosses the east end-line of said Granite claim and that in pursuing said vein on its dip and downward course between vertical planes extending downward through its parallel end-lines, the said vein passes under and beneath the south sideline of said Granite claim into and beneath the surface of the •said Cardiff lode claim, and based such claim or right upon the provisions of sec. 2322, U. S. Rev. Stats. (U. S. Comp. Stats. (1916), sec. 4618, 5 Fed. Stats. Ann., p. 13). This ease involves the question of extralateral rights.

Upon the issues made by the pleadings, the case was tried by the court without a jury. By permission of the court the question of extralateral rights was tried first, and it was understood and agreed that if that question were decided in favor of the plaintiff, then the question of accounting should thereafter be tried. After trying the question of extralateral rights, the court made its finding of facts and conclusions of law and entered judgment denying the Success company the right to pursue said vein under and beneath the surface of the Cardiff claim, and denying the Success company any ex-tralateral rights whatever underneath the Cardiff claim.

The question of the value of the ore extracted from the Cardiff claim had not been tried and determined at the time this appeal was taken.

The appeal is from the judgment quieting the title to the Cardiff lode claim in the plaintiff and perpetually enjoining the defendant from asserting any right, title or interest in [624]*624and to any extralateral rights under said Cardiff lode claim or the ores and minerals therein adverse to the plaintiff.

In limine, respondent has made a motion to dismiss this appeal on two grounds: First, that the appeal is from an interlocutory judgment and not from a final judgment; second, that said appeal is from a decision that is not appealable and is premature.

There is nothing whatever in either of the grounds above stated. The judgment entered is a final judgment, so far as the rights of the Success Mining Company are concerned, in extracting any ore from beneath the surface of said Cardiff claim, and the only matter remaining for determination is the value of the ore which the Success company has extracted therefrom. The judgment decreed that “the defendant be forever enjoined from asserting any right, title or interest in or to the said Cardiff lode claim or the ores and minerals' therein, adverse to the plaintiff,” thus holding that the Success Mining Company had no extralateral rights within the boundaries of the Cardiff mining claim. The judgment of the court in part is as follows:

“It is now ordered, adjudged and decreed that the title to the Cardiff lode claim be and the same hereby is quieted and confirmed in the Alameda Mining Company against the Success Mining Company, and the defendant be forever enjoined from asserting any right, title or interest of, in or to the said Cardiff lode claim, or the ores or minerals therein, adverse to the plaintiff.
“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed that the plaintiff do have and recover of and from the defendant the value of the ores and minerals heretofore mined by the defendant from beneath the said Cardiff lode claim as the same shall be hereafter, by a further judgment, fixed and determined, and said matter is continued until the next term of court, and that such further proceedings shall thereupon be taken thereon as are customary in equity and judgment be entered therefor.”

. That is a final judgment so far as the principal issue involved in this action is concerned. Again: Under the pro[625]*625visions of sec. 4807, Rev. Codes, as amended by the laws of 1915, p. 193, an appeal may be taken to the supreme court from the district court “from an order granting or dissolving an injunction.”

Here a perpetual injunction was granted against the Success company, whereby that company was forever enjoined from asserting any right, title or interest in or to said Cardiff lode claim or the ores and minerals therein adverse to the plaintiff.

The question of an accounting for the ores extracted by the Success company from said Cardiff lode claim is the only question that was left in the case for trial, and regardless of how that accounting may result, it can in no manner affect in any way the judgment already entered in said case. The motion is denied.

Counsel first discusses errors numbers 2 to 15, inclusive, and states that said assignments involve questions so intimately related that the discussion of one will naturally blend in the others, and proceeds to discuss said assignments under two general propositions. First, that the findings of fact in this case, when reduced to their final analysis, do not support the conclusions of law and judgment in the case; and, second, that if it . should be held that those findings of fact are sufficient to support the conclusions of law and judgment, then they are clearly contrary to all the substantial evidence in the case.

It is contended that the essential and important paragraphs of the findings of fact bearing on the issues presented by the cross-complaint are 7, 11 and 13, which are as follows:

“VII.
“The court further finds that there is within the Granite mining claim and extending from the Granite claim into the Cardiff claim upon its onward course or strike, a lode containing lenses or lenticular bodies of ore or ore chutes; that the said ore chutes or lenses are irregular in form and of various sizes, representing replacement along shrinkage fissures or cracks. A number of said ore chutes or fissures have [626]*626an easterly and westerly direction and cut the bedding planes of the sedimentary rocks.
“That the foot-wall of the area so mineralized is represented by a hard foot-wall of quartzite, which is disclosed for its longest distance upon the 300 foot level of the Success property, and upon said level, as shown upon the defendant’s exhibits, has a course of approximately N. 10 degrees West, which represents the extreme easterly limit of the mineralization and fissures.
“That the area which is mineralized and which contains said ore-bearing fissures or lenses or chutes, terminates on its westerly side against granite or monzonite more irregular than the beds of quartzite representing the foot-wall quartzite.
“Within the said area are a large number of lenses or ore chutes variously called the ‘North’ vein or spur, the ‘Dorsey,’ the ‘ South ’ and the ‘ Peterson. ’

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Bluebook (online)
161 P. 862, 29 Idaho 618, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alameda-mining-co-v-success-mining-co-idaho-1916.