Anthony Fargo v. McAlester Fuel Company, a Corporation

532 F.2d 149
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 1976
Docket74-2270
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 532 F.2d 149 (Anthony Fargo v. McAlester Fuel Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anthony Fargo v. McAlester Fuel Company, a Corporation, 532 F.2d 149 (9th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

OPINION

Before DUNIWAY and KENNEDY, Circuit Judges, and RENFREW, * District Judge.

*151 RENFREW, District Judge:

This- is an appeal from the judgment of the District Court granting appellee’s motion for summary judgment. The action below was in effect a suit to quiet title to two unpatented mining claims in which appellants claim an undivided one-fourth interest. 1 Appellee contends that appellants own no interest in the claims. This Court’s jurisdiction is based on 28 U.S.C. § 1291.

The mining claims on which this litigation centers are known as Victor Copper and Victory Copper No. 1, which for convenience the parties have referred to as the Victorys. 2 The Victorys were located on January 16, 1945, by C. H. Barnes, George Fryer and Charles H. Brown. Each locator originally owned an undivided one-third interest in the claims; however, by a series of conveyances ending on August 28, 1952, Charles H. Brown acquired the interests of the other two locators. On April 4, 1966, Charles H. Brown and his wife, Julia E. Brown, contracted to sell their interest in the Victorys — stated in the contract of sale to be 65 per cent — and in ten other mining claims to appellee. They conveyed these interests to appellee on December 21,1966. 3

Appellants’ adverse claim is based upon a duly recorded quit claim deed, dated June 10, 1964, from Charles J. Brown, son of Charles H. and Julia E. Brown, to appellants, which appellants contend conveyed to them a one-fourth interest in the Victorys. This quit claim deed concerned the Victorys as well as eleven other mining claims. Charles J. Brown had been an original locator of eight of those thirteen claims. However, he had not located any of the other five claims, of which the Victorys were two. Furthermore, the record discloses no recorded conveyance from Charles H. Brown to Charles J. Brown of an interest in the Vic-torys. Appellants argue, however, that Charles H. Brown had originally located the Victorys for his own benefit and for the benefit of his sons, Howard L. and Charles J., and had held his sons’ interests in the claims in trust; therefore, appellants contend, Charles J. Brown acquired an equitable interest — consisting of an undivided one-fourth — in the Victorys which he had a *152 right to convey, and did in fact convey by the June 10, 1964 quit claim deed, to appellants.

In response, appellee maintains, in essence, that as a bona fide purchaser for value of Charles H. Brown’s legal interest in the Victorys without notice of either Charles J. Brown’s purported equitable interest or of the conveyance from Charles J. Brown to appellants, its title to the claims is secure. Appellants counter this argument as follows. Even though the record before the Court contains no evidence directly indicating that Charles H. Brown had located the Victorys on behalf of his sons as well as on his own behalf, there are documents duly recorded in the County Recorder’s office suggesting that Charles H., Julia E. and Howard L. Brown, and others, acknowledged in Charles J. Brown an interest in the Victorys. 4 Appellants argue further that these documents would have been discovered by anyone searching title to the Victorys, since all of them contain the name of Charles H. Brown who, as an original locator of the claims, was in the regular chain of recorded title; that appellee is thus charged with knowledge of their contents, specifically, that Charles J. Brown owned an interest in the Victorys; and that a diligent search of title by means of the grantor/grantee index in the County Recorder office under the name of Charles J. Brown would have disclosed the existence of the June 10, 1964 quit claim deed from Charles J. Brown to appellants.

Appellee takes issue with this argument on several grounds. First, appellee argues that the documents outlined in footnote 4 herein would not, as a matter of law, excite the interest of one searching title to the Victorys in the purported interest of Charles J. Brown in those claims; second, that even if appellee is charged with the knowledge of the June 10, 1964, quit claim deed from Charles J. Brown to appellants, it was entitled to give that conveyance no weight, since Charles J. Brown appears as a mere interloper in the chain of legal title to the Victorys, that is, there is no recorded conveyance from one of the original locators to Charles J. Brown; and third, that *153 even assuming the validity of that conveyance, appellants forfeited any interest they might have acquired in the Victorys as a result of the notice published by Charles H. Brown pursuant to 30 U.S.C. § 28. 5

Appellants’ final point is that no forfeiture occurred, since the published notice was technically deficient in several respects. Appellee disagrees.

The issues before this Court, then, are whether the District Court erred in finding that there existed no genuine issue of material fact as to (1) whether appellee was an innocent purchaser for value without notice of Charles J. Brown’s purported equitable interest in the Victorys and his conveyance of any such interest to appellants; if not, (2) whether appellants acquired an interest in the claims which is valid against appel-lee, an owner in the recorded chain of title; and if so, (3) whether appellants’ interest was forfeited by the notice published pursuant to 30 U.S.C. § 28.

With respect to the first issue, it is unclear under Arizona law whether appel-lee was a bona fide purchaser for value without notice. Under Arizona law

“a person who fails to exercise due diligence to avail himself of information which is within his reach is not a bona fide purchaser. [Citation] Thus a purchaser who has brought to his attention circumstances which should have put him on inquiry which if pursued with due diligence would have led to knowledge of an adverse interest in the property, is not a bona fide purchaser.” Davis v. Kleindienst, 64 Ariz. 251, 169 P.2d 78, 83 (1946).

Applying this standard to the undisputed facts of record, we believe that the many references contained in the documents described in footnote 4 to Charles J. Brown as one of several owners of the Victory Group of claims would have put a reasonably prudent person on notice of Charles J. Brown’s possible adverse claim in the Victorys. To be sure, those documents are ambiguous in that they do not indicate in which of the twelve Victory Group claims Charles J. Brown may have had an interest. However, one searching title to two of those *154 twelve mining claims cannot simply assume that Charles J.

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Bluebook (online)
532 F.2d 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anthony-fargo-v-mcalester-fuel-company-a-corporation-ca9-1976.