Esmeralda Water Co. v. MacKley

208 P.2d 821, 66 Nev. 261, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 65
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 25, 1949
Docket3569
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 208 P.2d 821 (Esmeralda Water Co. v. MacKley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Esmeralda Water Co. v. MacKley, 208 P.2d 821, 66 Nev. 261, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 65 (Neb. 1949).

Opinions

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

This appeal presents for our chief consideration the question of the ownership of tailings deposited by a mining and milling company, from its own and custom ores, or from custom ores alone, upon open and unappropriated public domain and there impounded in a tailings pond by a dam or retaining yrall, as against a subsequent placer locator of ground including the tailings pond. Lest this seem over simple in view of the well-recognized rule sustaining the title to and possession of such tailings (unless abandoned) as ag’ainst a subsequent location, we must add that the trial court limited this protection to the operator of the mill, “Who also supplied the ore from the mine owned by him,” in the absence of allegation and proof of a “custom” in the district that title to the tailings should vest in the mill. The trial court’s application of this limitation resulted in a judgment for the subsequent locators, the defendants below, which we are called upon to review. Other questions of importance are presented, but they are all incidental to such main question.

Appellant Esmeralda Water Company filed its complaint in the court below, alleging that about 1870 its predecessors in interest engaged in the mining and *263 extraction of ores from certain lode mining claims owned and possessed by them, and milled and reduced the same in a quartz reduction mill owned by them situate adjacent to its mining claims; that the tailings from said operations, at the price and under conditions then existing, were not of sufficient value to warrant further treatment, but to keep and conserve them for future treatment under more favorable conditions the tailings were deposited upon open and unoccupied mineral land of the United States in a tailings pond in Columbus mining district in what was then Esmeralda county; that its predecessors built a stone wall or embankment around the same and that at the close of its mining and milling operations the pond contained about 7,000 tons of said tailings; that the plaintiff and its predecessors had thereafter maintained continuous peaceful possession of the tailings pond, repairing the stone wall from time to time to keep the tailings from being washed down the canyon and lost, and that for many years prior to 1947 plaintiff and its predecessors continually kept a watchman on the mine, mill and tailings premises to guard and conserve the same, and paid all taxes levied and assessed thereon; that about 1929 plaintiff acquired title and ownership of the said tailings and of the Dorris and Lake placer claims located by its predecessors in 1896, which placer claims embraced the tailings pond; that the land is valuable only for the tailings, alleged to be of a gross value of about $15 a ton and of a net value of from $2.50 to $3; that on January 23, 1947 the defendants wrongfully entered upon the tailings reservoir, locating certain placer claims named the Victory and the Victory Fraction over the same for the sole purpose of appropriating the tailings, and removed and marketed about 1,000 tons and threatened to remove the remainder. Plaintiff prayed for an injunction and that its title be quieted to the tailings and reservoir premises, for the value of the tailings removed and for costs and further relief.

*264 The defendants answered and denied the material allegations of the complaint and alleged that if plaintiff had any title to the ground it had forfeited the same for failure to perform assessment work or to file notice of its desire to hold its claims under the acts of congress relieving the owner from such assessment work. Defendants then alleged their location of the ground as the Victory and Victory Fraction placers, and prayed that plaintiff take nothing, that the temporary restraining order theretofore issued be set aside, and for costs and further relief.

Plaintiff replied and denied the forfeiture, denied the relocations asserted by defendants, and as new matter alleged that for a period of seventy-five years prior to 1946 “the custom existed with ore reduction mills, operating in the State of Nevada and more particularly in what is now Mineral county, and including the adjoining round-about area, of the custom mill crushing or otherwise reducing ores delivered to it by divers persons, deducting its charges, and the tailings and slimes being carried out by the custom mill operator, and the ownership thereof vested in such custom mill operator;” and that the title to the tailings became vested in plaintiff’s predecessors and later in plaintiff. The trial court sustained a demurrer to such new matter saying: “The two basic facts which must appear in such a pleading are the existence of a custom and the facts which would entitle the pleader to claim under such a custom so as to vest in that person certain property or other rights. These, I think, have not been alleged and I hold, therefore, that the reply is not good as against the demurrer filed by the defendants.” The learned trial judge further explained that the reply received no aid from the complaint because the theory of the complaint was that plaintiff’s predecessors treated in the mill the ores produced from their own mines, resulting in the tailings in question, while the reply was concerned “with the idea of ores being delivered to plaintiff’s predecessor in interest as a custom mill.”

*265 Appellant claims that the record is devoid of any testimony to the effect that the tailings resulted from any ores mined by third persons and reduced by the mill as custom ores. Respondents, on the other hand, claim that advertisements in local papers published at the time and admitted in evidence in the case show clearly that the mill owner at the time was operating a custom mill and advertising for ores to be treated. The sustaining of the demurrer to‘the reply is one of the errors assigned by the appellant.

Respondents insist that the tailings lost their character of personalty and become part of the real estate occupied by the tailings pond; that the-public domain upon which the tailings pond was situate was subject to placer location after appellant had forfeited the ground by failing to perform its assessment work or to file notices of desire to hold; that the relocations of the defendants were lawfully made and entitled them to the tailings, as well as the ground embraced within the exterior boundaries of their relocations; that in any event plaintiff had failed to prove that the tailings were deposited as a result of the treatment of ores mined and owned by plaintiff’s predecessors; that such tailings were the property of the original person who mined the ore; that they were milled by plaintiff’s predecessors (although the deraignment of title to plaintiff is denied) as custom ores; that in the absence of proper pleading and proof of a custom that title to tailings from custom ores vested in the mill, such title remained in the original mine owners.

The trial court found (X) the plaintiff’s corporate status since X929; (2) that commencing about X870 sundry persons were engaged - in mining in the district ; “that a custom milling process was located upon the above-described premises, and custom ores from several mining properties were milled in said custom mill and the tailings therefrom were by the mine operators

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
208 P.2d 821, 66 Nev. 261, 1949 Nev. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/esmeralda-water-co-v-mackley-nev-1949.