Cadle v. Helfrich

286 P. 186, 36 Ariz. 390, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 194
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 24, 1930
DocketCivil No. 2854.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 286 P. 186 (Cadle v. Helfrich) 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
Cadle v. Helfrich, 286 P. 186, 36 Ariz. 390, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 194 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

The defendant, R. G. Cadle, was the owner of two mining claims in the Mineral Hill Mining District of Pinal county, Arizona, known as “January” and “New Year,” and some time during 1922 he and the plaintiff, E. E. Helfrich, entered into a written contract whereby the latter agreed to furnish the former a certain sum of money to do assessment and development work on them. In compliance therewith the plaintiff advanced the defendant $275 and received from him on September 2d, 1922, a deed conveying a one-third interest in them. The agreement was executed also by a third party, one B. P. Hardy, who undertook therein to aid defendant in working on the claims for which he also was to receive from the defendant title to a one-third interest therein, but he failed to live up to his agreement and was not given a deed.

, It appears that the assessment work on the claims for the year ending June 30th, 19.25, was not performed and that on July 2d following one William R. Jones located the ground in his name as the “Buckingham” and “Albemarle” but for the benefit of defendant, plaintiff and himself, the understanding being that *393 he with the aid of defendant wonld do the assessment work and that each of the three wonld have a one-third interest therein. Notices of these locations were filed in the office of the recorder of Pinal county on July 31st, 1925, but the testimony discloses that the location work was not done, and that some time thereafter, that is, in the latter part of that year, 1925, the defendant told the plaintiff that something had to be done. “If there isn’t, somebody is going to jump it; in fact, it is open now,” and according to defendant the plaintiff replied, “They will have to jump it as far as I am concerned. I am done.” So on July 1st, 1926, the defendant, claiming that plaintiff had theretofore abandoned any interest he had' in the January and New Tear, or the Buckingham and Albemarle, located in his own name the ground covered by them as Oriole No. 1 and Oriole No. 2, which on September 24th, 1927, were sold by him to one John H. Barncord for a consideration of $3,000 to be paid as follows: $250 upon execution of the contract and $250 the first of each January and July thereafter until paid. When this action was instituted $500 had been paid and at the time of trial this had grown to $1,000 but the defendant failed to pay the plaintiff any portion thereof and refused to recognize his interest therein.

The prayer of the plaintiff is that he have judgment for one-third of the $500 that had then been paid by Barncord on the purchase price of Oriole Nos. 1 and 2 and that he be declared the owner and entitled to one-third of the balance due under the contract. At the close of the evidence the court on motion of the plaintiff directed a verdict in his favor for $333.33, and it is from the judgment entered thereon that defendant appeals. '

The first assignment is based upon the ruling directing a verdict for $333.33 when the amount demanded in the complaint was only $166.66, the con *394 tention being that the judgment must conform to the pleadings and could not be rendered for a sum greater than that claimed in the complaint. As an abstract proposition of law this is undoubtedly correct but it is apparent that there was no violation of it in this instance. When the complaint was filed only $500 had been paid on the purchase price and, while the money demand was for one-third of this sum, the prayer in addition was that appellee be declared the owner and entitled to one-third of the balance due which, when upheld, carried with it the right to judgment for one-third of whatever the evidence disclosed had been paid up to that time as well as for what would be paid thereafter.

Appellant contends that he introduced competent testimony showing that appellee had abandoned his interest in the January and New Year claims and hence that it was error to direct a verdict in his favor. If, treating all competent testimony as true (as must be done in passing on a motion of this kind, Arizona Binghampton Copper Co. v. Dickson, 22 Ariz. 163, 44 A. L. R. 881, 195 Pac. 538), it may reasonably be deduced therefrom that it would have sustained a verdict for appellant it was error to deprive the jury of the right to arrive at and return its own verdict. The matter to be determined, therefore, is whether there was evidence in the record that would have supported a finding by the jury that appellee did abandon his interest in the January, and New Year claims.

If there was such an abandonment it occurred some time after the expiration of the ninety days Jones had to perform the location work on the Buckingham and Albemarle, for the testimony of appellant is that Jones initiated these locations with the understanding that he with appellant’s aid would do the work on them and that he, appellant and appellee would own them. This being true, it is clear that at least- from *395 October 1st, 1925, tbe date on whicb this ninety-day period ended, to ■ the day on which appellant posted location notices of the Oriole claims, July 1st, 1926, the January and New Year, notwithstanding the assessment on them had not been performed for several years, were valid, subsisting claims upon which he and appellee had the right to resume work, unless the latter had-in fact abandoned his interest in them, because the locations initiated by Jones under the name of Buckingham and Albemarle were never completed and hence were without effect so far as working a forfeiture was concerned, McKay v. McDougall, 25 Mont. 258, 87 Am. St. Rep. 395, 64 Pac. 669, and no other locations of the ground were made during this period. The failure to perform the annual labor constituted neither abandonment nor forfeiture of the claims but had the effect of rendering the ground subject to location by some third party, and unless this was done the interests of appellant and appellee in the January and New Year were not affected thereby. 2 Lindley on Mines, pars. 405, 645; Beals v. Cone, 27 Colo. 473, 83 Am. St. Rep. 92, 62 Pac. 948; McCarthy v. Speed, 11 S. D. 362, 50 L. R. A. 184, 77 N. W. 590. In Madison v. Octave Oil Co., 154 Cal. 768, 99 Pac. 176, 178, the court says:

“It is not provided that a mere failure to comply with the statutory requirement shall terminate the locator’s right; the sole effect of such failure is to throw the land open to location by others, and, in the absence of such other location, the original claimant’s right to resume work and to hold his claim remains.”

Under these circumstances it is clear that appellant, and appellee also provided he had not abandoned it, still held his interest in the claims on July 1st, 1926, and that the relocation of the ground by him as Oriole No. 1 and Oriole No. 2 was just as much for the benefit of appellee to the extent of his *396 one-tbird interest as it would have been had he. been named as one of the locators, or had appellant, instead . of making new locations, resumed work on the January and New Year and performed the assessment for the year ending June 30th, 1927.

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Bluebook (online)
286 P. 186, 36 Ariz. 390, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cadle-v-helfrich-ariz-1930.