De Grasse v. Verona Mining Co.

152 N.W. 242, 185 Mich. 514, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 988
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1915
DocketDocket No. 18
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 152 N.W. 242 (De Grasse v. Verona Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Grasse v. Verona Mining Co., 152 N.W. 242, 185 Mich. 514, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 988 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Per Curiam.

The opinion of the circuit judge is adopted as the opinion of this court, and the decree affirmed with costs to appellees.

“In 1884 Lorenzo A. De Grasse entered as a homestead and subsequently acquired from the United States the title in fee to the N. E. % of section 7, in township 42 north, of range 34 west, in the county of Iron, Mich.

“The Verona Mining Company is a corporation now, and for many years, engaged in the business of mining iron ore. On the 29th day of June, 1905, Mr. De Grasse gave the company an option for a mining lease on his land, to continue until July 1, 1906, on condition that the company would commence exploration thereof for iron ore on or before August 1, 1905, and keep not less than three men, or a diamond, or churn, drill, engaged therein on every working day thereafter, unless prevented by the weather, accident, or other reasonable cause, until it should abandon the option, or give written notice to Mr. De Grasse of its intention to take a lease. The option further provided that if the company suspended such exploratory work for 10 consecutive days without adequate cause, such suspension would operate to terminate the option without notice; that the company would have the right to renew the option for an additional period of six months, if, on July 1, 1906, ore sufficient, in the [518]*518opinion of the officers of the company, to warrant taking a lease had not been discovered; that in the event a lease was demanded it should run for a term of 50 years with right in the lessee to surrender at any time upon giving the lessor 60 days’ notice of its intention so to do; that such lease should provide for the payment of a royalty of 10 cents a ton on all ore mined and removed; for the payment in each year of a minimum royalty on 10;000 tons, whether that amount was mined and shipped or not, the amounts of minimum royalty so paid to be credited on ore subsequently shipped, and to provide for the occupancy by Mr. De Grasse of a certáin portion of the surface of the land for homestead purposes, while such occupancy did not interfere with mining operations.

“A form of mining lease was attached and made a part of the option, and it was agreed that the lease issued under the option should follow the form of lease attached, except ‘as. changed and modified’ by the option.

“Within the period and in the manner specified in the option the company commenced and proceeded with the exploration of the land for about nine months, when it demanded a lease, and thereafter, on June 12, 1906, the parties entered into the mining lease in question in this suit. It is not disputed but the lease which was. executed, in all its essential terms, covenants, and conditions, is an exact copy of the form of lease which was attached to the option, and contains all the provisions, which the option stipulated it should contain, except that the option was for a lease for mining and ‘removing’ iron ore, and the lease reads for ‘mining’ simply.

“It appears from certain deeds introduced by the complainants, that while the option and lease were signed by Louise De Grasse, she did not, at the time of their execution, have any inchoate or other interest in the land. By conveyances, executed in February, 1907, and in November, 1908, the title to the land passed from Lorenzo A. De Grasse and vested in Louise Moger, now Louise De Grasse, an undivided %; in William H. Jobe an undivided 3/32; in Michael H. Moriarty an undivided 3/32; in Herbert M. Pelham an undivided 1/16; in Annie M. Cook, an un[519]*519divided 1/16, and in Anna E. De Grasse, an undivided 3/16.

“On or about June 12, 1912, a notice in writing signed by Lorenzo A. De Grasse, Louise De Grasse, and William H. Jobe was served on the Verona Mining Company to the effect that the lease in question had been forfeited by the company for failure to mine the property as contemplated by the terms and conditions of the lease; that they would accept no further payments of royalty under the lease, and calling upon the company to execute and deliver to them an instrument effective to remove the cloud on their title occasioned by the record of what was termed in the notice the ‘forfeited’ lease.

“Shortly following the service of the notice of forfeiture, Mr. and Mrs. De Grasse, Mr. Moriarty, and Mr. Jobe filed the bill of complaint, by which this suit was commenced, against the Verona Mining Company, Herbert M. Pelham, Annie M. Cook, and Anna E. De Grasse. The Verona Company answered, and the case as to it was heard on the pleadings and proofs taken in open court. The bill of complaint was taken as confessed by the other defendants.

“The contentions of the complainants are: First, that the lease was fraudulently obtained, and should be set aside for that reason; second, that it was void under section 12, art. 18, of the Constitution, as it stood at the date of the lease; third, that if the lease was fairly obtained, and did not contravene the Constitution, nevertheless it was forfeited through the company’s failure to comply with and perform the covenants thereof, and a decree, declaring the lease void from the beginning, and, if not, terminated by forfeiture, is prayed for.

“In the vicinity of the De Grasse lands are a number of iron mines in active operation. Some of these mines were in operation years before the making of the option in question and have continued on the active list ever since. Among these are the Baltic, Caspian, and Zimmerman. The latter is located on lands adjoining on the west and has a working shaft within about 25 rods of the De Grasse property. At the date of the option the Verona Company was operating under mining leases the Baltic and the Caspian, as well as other mines and explorations, in the Iron [520]*520River and other iron districts of the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, and in Minnesota. Before and at the date of the option and lease, and for a number of years thereafter, Mr. Jobe was employed by the Verona Company as superintendent of its mining and exploratory operations in the Iron River district, with headquarters at Stambaugh, Mich. During the same period Mr. Charles E. Lawrence, with headquarters at Iron Mountain, Mich., was general superintendent, and Mr. C. H. Munger, with headquarters at Duluth, Minn., was general manager of the company.

“The explorations of the property conducted by the Verona Company, after the option was given and before the lease was demanded, consisted of four diamond drill holes. From the date of the lease until 1909 no further exploratory work was done on the property. In 1909 an exploring shaft was sunk to a depth of about 100 feet, and two drill holes were extended from the bottom of the shaft, one to the north a distance of about 425 feet, and the other to the south a distance of about 578 feet. Since the completion of the drill holes, which were projected from the bottom of the shaft, no further exploratory work has been done on the property. The exploratory work performed, both before and after the date of the lease, did not disclose the presence of a minable body of merchantable ore on, the land. The ore deposit on the Zimmerman property is said to dip towards the De Grasse property, and since the suspension of the drill work on the latter property, the Verona Company claim they have been awaiting the further development of the Zimmerman property, which, they further claim, will establish whether ore exists on the De Grasse property, and, if so, the location thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 N.W. 242, 185 Mich. 514, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 988, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-grasse-v-verona-mining-co-mich-1915.