Chittim v. Belle Fourche Bentonite Products Co.

149 P.2d 142, 60 Wyo. 235, 1944 Wyo. LEXIS 11
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1944
Docket2274, 2278
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 142 (Chittim v. Belle Fourche Bentonite Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chittim v. Belle Fourche Bentonite Products Co., 149 P.2d 142, 60 Wyo. 235, 1944 Wyo. LEXIS 11 (Wyo. 1944).

Opinion

*242 OPINION

Riner, Justice

The plaintiffs, May Chittim, and her husband Charles B. Chittim, Virginia Z. Hejde, and her husband Francis Hejde, in this review proceeding No. 2274, appellants, brought suit in the District Court of Crook County, Wyoming, against the Belle Fourche Bentonite Products Company, as defendant and respondent here, to quiet their title to certain bentonite placer mining claims located in said county. The plaintiffs, who will usually be thus designated hereinafter, alleged that the' defendant, a South Dakota corporation, and subsequently referred to, for convenience, as the “Bentonite Company,” or as the “defendant,” *243 claimed an interest or estate in the premises included in the said mining claims and that the assertion of this interest was entirely without right.

The Bentonite Company’s answer to this suit was in the nature of a general denial and also allegations by way of counter-claim that its predecessors in interest had, prior to the location of the mining claims described in plaintiffs’ pleading, and when the lands involved were public mineral lands of the United States subject to entry, located according to law, all the premises thereafter embraced in plaintiffs’' alleged mining claims as certain other mining claims, and the defendant had done the necessary annual assessment work thereon after acquiring by purchase the right, title and interest of said prior locators; also that as a consequence at the time plaintiffs made their alleged placer mining locations the ground attempted to be included therein was not open to entry or location by said plaintiffs, and that their claims were wholly without any right whatsoever.

To this answer and counter-claim plaintiffs interposed the defense of a general denial; and additionally alleged that the locators of the placer mining claims, ownership of which is asserted by the defendant, were mere “dummies” employed by the defendant to enable it to obtain more placer mining ground than it was by law entitled to locate, and therefore the locations on which the defendant relied were invalid; that the Bentonite Company being a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of South Dakota, had never complied with the law of this state regarding foreign corporations so as to permit it to do business in Wyoming, yet it nevertheless had done business in this state regardless of its failure to obey such law, and that in consequence it had no right *244 to acquire the placer mining claims from its predecessors or to do annual assessment work thereon; that because of this failure to obey Wyoming law, it had no right to prosecute its counter-claim aforesaid or to do annual assessment work on the placer claims to which it asserts title; and that the defendant in fact failed to perform any assessment work in the legal amount of §100.00 worth of work upon each or any one of the five pretended mining claims of which it asserts it is now the owner during the year beginning July 1st, 1940, and ending June 30th, 1941, and hence the defendant forfeited all the rights it ever had in and to said lands.

The Bentonite Company replied to these alleged defenses by general and specific denials thereof, asserting affirmatively that it has done nothing in Wyoming except what a foreign corporation was legally entitled to do, and that it has never forfeited the premises claimed by it on account of failure to do the legally required annual assessment work.

The foregoing statement sets forth a brief outline of the substance of the pleadings of the parties and is deemed sufficient to present the principal contentions advanced by them in their briefs and upon oral argument.

The case was tried by the Court without a jury. The judgment rendered was in favor of plaintiffs concerning most of the claims whose title they sought to have quieted, but in favor of the defendant as to one of the placer claims to which it also asserted ownership. 1'n order that the scope and effect of this judgment may be readily and fully understood it is here reviewed somewhat in detail.

The Court found that on August 10, 1929, the defendant’s predecessors in interest made a discovery *245 of bentonite upon each of the following described placer mining claims, to-wit:

“Black Hills No. 10 and covering the Lots 12, 13, and 14 of Section 32 in Resurvey Township 56, North of Range 60 West of the 6th P. M., Wyoming;
Black Hills No. 11 and covering the Lot 8 of Section 5 in Resurvey Township 55 North of Range 60 West of the 6th P. M., Wyoming;
Black Hills No. 13 and covering the Lot 8 of Section 6 in Resurvey Township 55 North of Range 60 West of the 6th P. M., Wyoming;
Black Hills No. 14 and covering the Lots 12, 13, 18, and 19 of Section 31 in Resurvey Township 56 North of Range 60 West of the 6th P. M., Wyoming;
Black Hills No. 15 and covering the Lots 14, 15, 16, and 17 of Section 31 in Resurvey Township 56 North of Range 60 West of the 6th P. M., Wyoming;”
and that they located each of said claims and recorded a location certificate for each claim in the manner provided by law; that these locations were bona fide locations by and for the benefit of each locator and that each received the full benefit thereof and none of said locators were “dummies.”

After finding that the defendant was a foreign corporation created under South Dakota law, the Court also found that the Bentonite Company had never complied with the Constitution and laws of this state relative to foreign corporations transacting business in Wyoming; that several years prior to July 1, 1940, the locators of the claims described in the preceding paragraph conveyed their interest in said claims to the defendant, and that the defendant was not prohibited under Wyoming’s constitutional and statutory law from acquiring or holding unpatented placer mining claims in Wyoming, or from doing the annual assessment work thereon.

It was, however, found that the defendant, on and prior to June 30, 1941, had forfeited all its right to *246 the placer mining claims designated Black Hills Nos. 11, 13, 14, and 15, as above described in that it had wholly failed to perform the annual assessment work worth the amount of §100.00 upon and for the benefit of each or any one of these four claims during the year beginning July 1, 1940, to and including June 30, 1941, as required by law, and each of said claims "became subject to relocation”; that the defendant, during the year last mentioned, did do the assessment work on and for the benefit of the Black Hills placer mining claim No.

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Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 142, 60 Wyo. 235, 1944 Wyo. LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chittim-v-belle-fourche-bentonite-products-co-wyo-1944.