Bowen v. Sil-Flo Corporation

451 P.2d 626, 9 Ariz. App. 268, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 416
CourtCourt of Appeals of Arizona
DecidedMarch 10, 1969
Docket1 CA-CIV 744
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 451 P.2d 626 (Bowen v. Sil-Flo Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bowen v. Sil-Flo Corporation, 451 P.2d 626, 9 Ariz. App. 268, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 416 (Ark. Ct. App. 1969).

Opinion

MOLLOY, Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment rendered in a declaratory judgment and quiet title action as to unpatented mining claims. The action is, in part, a suit to determine an adverse claim filed in a patent application proceeding as to two placer mining claims. See 30 U.S.C.A. §§ 29-32 inclusive.

This case has previously been before our Supreme Court on the question of whether the Maricopa County Superior Court had jurisdiction of the action, to which an affirmative answer was given. Sil-Flo Corporation v. Bowen, 98 Ariz. 77, 402 P.2d 22 (1965).

The entire area in dispute is covered by an application for patent now pending before the Secretary of the Interior of the United States, No. AR-030706, to which application, the plaintiff, Sil-Flo Corporation, filed an adverse claim within the 60-day-limit set by Title 30 U.S.C.A. § 29. 1 The judgment of the trial court was in favor of the plaintiff Sil-Flo. The trial court rendered detailed findings of fact and conclusions of law. We state the critical facts from these findings, which we find to be amply supported by the evidence, occasionally supplementing them from the evidence admitted at this extended trial. In so doing, conflicting evidence has been resolved in favor of supporting the judgment of the trial court.

The lands over which this controversy rages are mineral lands, the fee title of which is in the United States of America. They are located in the Pioneer Mining District, Pinal County, Arizona, southwest of the City of Superior. These lands contain within their boundaries valuable deposits of ore of a substance known as per-lite, which is a volcanic rock or glass containing intercellular water in such physical combination that, when the ore is treated in certain ways, and heated, the ore ex *270 plodes into a fluffy white substance which has many industrial uses, the principal one of which is that of being used as a filtering medium.

In its natural state, this perlite is intermixed with quantities of rhyolite, a harder rock which is of the same chemical constituency as perlite but which is of a different physical composition and which does not have the valuable physical properties of perlite. This non-perlitic rock constitutes approximately ten per cent of the total earthy matter which is mined in these de-poisits of perlite and this waste must be separated from the perlite in order for the perlite to have valuable use. Perlite is a mineral substance and, in the manner in which it is distributed on the property in question, is commercially valuable.

In the area of the claims in question, the perlite ore is readily distinguishable in appearance and physical properties from the surrounding rock. The perlite in the area of the lode claims lies in one or more “blankets” or. “pancakes” in an almost horizontal -plane, with a dip of approximately 9° to the east.

The first mining claims in this area sufficiently supported by the required notices and monumenting were lode claims established in the Spring of 1944 by an F. Y. MacDonald. Among the claims so established are the two lode claims found by the court to be owned by the plaintiff, the “Elva F. No. 1” and “Sandy No. 1.” The plaintiff' acquired its “title” to these claims through conveyances from MacDonald to an Edward S. Adams and from Adams to the plaintiff. The defendant, Bowen, actually did the physical location work for these MacDonald claims, under an arrangement with MacDonald, and in the same year, 1944, laid out for himself the two lode claims (“David R. No. 1” and “Superior Perlite No. 1”) which the trial court found-were the property of the defendant, subject to certain possessory rights of the plaintiff by reason of two written contracts with Bowen. -If the ore body or bodies discovered on these claims is subject to the lode mining claim statute, 30 U.S.C.A. § 23, there is no question but what all these four lode claims were validly located and that all necessary assessment work was done to hold the claims throughout all of the period of time with which we are concerned in this action.

When the lode claims of MacDonald and Bowen were laid out, it was the custom in this mining district to locate perlite ore under the lode claim statute. However, by 1946, some of the locators were covering their lode claims with placer claims in order to have a double chance of satisfying the ambiguities of the pertinent federal acts. In 1950, Bowen, through an association of friends and relatives, laid out a 160-acre placer claim which he called Superior Per-lite No. 1. The total approximate area of the four lode claims with which we are concerned is 80 acres. The new placer claim covered Bowen’s two previously located lode mining claims, Sil-Flo’s Elva F. No. 1, and a substantial area around these claims. . Similarly, in 1954, Bowen laid out the- Superior Perlite No. 2, which encompassed the area of the plaintiff’s Sandy No. 1. These two placer claims are the ones that Bowen contends, in this litigation, have swallowed up all of Sil-Flo’s rights in this area.

Since the Fall of 1953, the plaintiff has been actively mining the Elva F. No. 1 and the Sandy No.' 1 lode claims, with most of the ore being removed from the Elva F. No. 1. Until 1957, this mining was performed under a lease option agreement with Adams, which resulted in the plaintiff acquiring ownership of Adams’ claims in 1957.

In March of 1954, Bowen entered into an “Agreement” with Sil-Flo as to the Superior Perlite No. 1 and David R. No. 1 lode claims, by which Bowen was paid $350 cash in hand and by which he was to receive a minimum of $100 per month. In this agreement, there is a provision that Bowen and his heirs and assigns “ * * * do hereby grant unto party of the second’ part [Sil-Flo] and its assigns the right to mine, re *271 move and sell Perlite Ore from the above described property [the two lode mining claims].” In addition to the minimum payment of $100 per month, Sil-Flo was required to pay certain royalties on ore removed, to do assessment work, and to pay taxes. This agreement has no termination date and the only provision for cancellation contained within the contract is one that permits Bowen to terminate the contract if Sil-Flo “ * * * fails, neglects or refuses to perform conditions required of it under the terms of this agreement, including the payments required of it to be paid ****’’

Prior to this agreement, Bowen made no mention to Sil-Flo of his overlying placer claim, Superior Perlite No. 1 (the only such claim of Bowen’s then existing), and the agreement itself contains no mention of this claim. In the agreement, Bowen covenanted :

* * that he is the lawful owner of the said property [the two lode claims] and he does hereby warrant that the same is free and clear of all claims, liens, mortgages, and encumbrances whatsoever, and that he will defend the right of the second party to the peaceful use of said property under the terms of this agreement against the claims of all persons.”

Sil-Flo was ignorant of the existence of Bowen’s placer claim at the time it entered this 1954 agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
451 P.2d 626, 9 Ariz. App. 268, 1969 Ariz. App. LEXIS 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowen-v-sil-flo-corporation-arizctapp-1969.