American S. R. Co. v. Swisshelm Etc. Co.

160 P.2d 757, 63 Ariz. 204, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 125
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1945
DocketCivil No. 4708.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 160 P.2d 757 (American S. R. Co. v. Swisshelm Etc. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American S. R. Co. v. Swisshelm Etc. Co., 160 P.2d 757, 63 Ariz. 204, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 125 (Ark. 1945).

Opinion

LaPBADE, J.

Appellee brought this action against appellant American Smelting and Befining Company to recover the sum of $1,904.27, the alleged value of four carloads of ore purchased by the smelting company at its El Paso plant from one Cyrus Farwell, who, the appellee alleged, had wrongfully removed the ore from its mining claims in Cochise County. The appellant in its answer set up numerous defenses. Among others, it alleged that the plaintiff below had received full payment for its ore from one Cyrus Farwell, and was estopped from making the claim as set forth by virtue of a certain judgment of the Superior Court of Cochise County. The pleadings in the case at bar and the rulings thereon are somewhat involved and confusing and our disposition of the case makes it unnecessary to recite them. The correct disposition to be made of the defense of payment and the effect of the Cochise County judgment will, in our opinion, dispose of this appeal.

The record of the Cochise County case discloses that Farwell was employed as watchman by Swiss-helm upon nine unpatented mining claims in Cochise County. Farwell, after obtaining legal advice, determined that the Swisshelm claims were open for relocation because of the failure to perform the an *206 imal assessment work, whereupon he attempted to relocate four of the claims. Subsequently, he shipped from these claims the four carloads of ore in question. Farwell then brought suit to quiet title to these four claims, naming as defendant Ben Heney, who was then or had been president of the Swisshelm Corporation. Swisshelm then intervened in this quiet-title action and filed an answer and cross-complaint. In its answer it denied that the plaintiff Farwell had discovered mineral in place; denied that said lands were open to mineral location and unoccupied. It alleged that it was the owner of the claims; that at the time of the pretended location by Farwell he was employed as watchman on the claims; that his employment was attributable to its assessment work; and, that as a consequence said mineral lands were not open to relocation. It further alleged that the attempted relocations by Farwell were wrongful and unlawful; that his possession as a pretended locator was unlawful; and, that he “did wrongfully and unlawfully remove from said premises a three-thousand-dollar compressor, hoist cable, tools, and other mining equipment” belonging to the cross-complainant. The prayer for relief was (1) for immediate possession, (2) that it be adjudged the lawful owner, and (3) for a restraining order, and for return of the machinery, tools, etc.

By way of answer and cross-complaint, plaintiff Farwell admitted that he had taken its compressor and was holding the same as security for payment of back wages which he claimed Swisshelm owed Mm. He denied the allegations with reference to taking any other property. In his counterclaim, he alleged that he had been employed by Swisshelm as caretaker, and “that said defendants Ben Heney and/or Swisshelm Grold Silver Company, a corporation, have paid plaintiff the sum of $6,445.50 and no more for his services; that there is now due and ow *207 ing to the plaintiff Cyrus Farwell from the defendant Ben Heney and the intervener Swisshelm Gold Silver Mining Company, a corporation, the sum of $3,755.25, which is now due, owing, and unpaid.” Judgment was prayed for in this last-named sum. By way of reply to this counterclaim, the intervener (Swisshelm) filed the following denial:

“Deny that the defendants Ben Heney and/or Swisshelm Gold Silver Mining Co., a corporation, have paid plaintiff the sum of $6,445 and no more for his services, and that there is now due and owing the plaintiff Cyrus Farwell from the defendant Ben Heney and the intervener Swisshelm Gold Silver Mining Company, a corporation, the sum of $3,755.25.”

It is to be observed that this attempted reply is a pure negative pregnant, and raised no issue. A negative pregnant is a denial pregnant with an admission of a substantial fact which is apparently controverted, or one which, though in form of a traverse, really admits the important fact contained in the allegation. Electrical Accessories Co. v. Mittenthal, 194 N. Y. 473, 87 N. E. 684, 685; Tierney v. Dietsch, 110 Neb. 462, 194 N. W. 475; McIntosh Livestock Co. v. Buffington, 108 Or. 358, 217 Pac. 635, 636. Nevertheless, the case went to trial as if issue had been joined on the claim for salary.

On the trial Swisshelm admitted that it owed Far-well $951.50, and proved, as a set-off to his claim for wages, that he had received from the smelter $1,904.27 from the sale of the four carloads of ore in question. Strange to say, the intervener did not plead the set-off. Proof thereof was admitted apparently upon the theory that it was admissible under the attempted denial of the reply. The court held that a watchman’s salary counted for assessment work; that Swisshelm’s claims were not subject to relocation; quieted title in Swisshelm, and dismissed plaintiff’s claim for wages.

*208 In its findings of fact, the Cochise County court found, among other things:

1. That Swisshelm had paid Farwell $6,788.50 for work and labor,
“leaving a balance owing plaintiff on said work and labor. That while said balance was unpaid, plaintiff shipped and sold ores and minerals from said property which were owned by and belonged to intervener and plaintiff received therefrom more than sufficient money to cover said balance due him.”
2. That Farwell had “allowed and permitted certain valuable property to be taken from said mining claims, to-wit: An Air compressor, air receiver, a cable and much other valuable property;”.
3. “That the plaintiff included in this action and as a part thereof his cross complaint against the intervener asking judgment against intervener for the sum of $3,755.25 for a balance due him as watchman and for labor performed on and in connection with said mining claims. The court finds that the said sum of $3,755.25 is much more than the actual and true amount of the balance for said services and that the true balance has been fully paid, settled and satisfied from the proceeds of ores and minerals, belonging to intervener, shipped and sold from said mining claims by plaintiff.”

The written judgment that was entered did not specifically follow these findings of fact. The only reference in the judgment thereto appears as follows :

“Third: That plaintiff has been fully paid for all and any work or labor performed for intervener as watchman and laborer on said mining claims or in connection therewith and it is hereby Ordered, Adjudged and Decreed that plaintiff’s cross-complaint be and the same is hereby dismissed, and plaintiff shall take nothing thereby.
“Fourth: It is further hereby Ordered and Decreed that intervener, Swisshelm G-old-Silver Company, a corporation, is now, and was at all times set out in the pleadings in this action the owner and entitled to *209

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Bluebook (online)
160 P.2d 757, 63 Ariz. 204, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-s-r-co-v-swisshelm-etc-co-ariz-1945.