Frank Richardson v. Homestake Mining Company, a California Corporation

322 F.2d 329, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4288
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 3, 1963
Docket7244
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 322 F.2d 329 (Frank Richardson v. Homestake Mining Company, a California Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frank Richardson v. Homestake Mining Company, a California Corporation, 322 F.2d 329, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4288 (10th Cir. 1963).

Opinion

BRATTON, Circuit Judge.

Frank R. Richardson and others instituted this action against Homestake Mining Company, a corporation, and the determinative issue between the parties was the basis upon which the defendant was obligated to pay royalty to the plaintiffs under a lease covering certain unpatented mining claims located in San Juan County, Utah. The lease provided for payment of a royalty of fifteen per cent of the gross value of the ores, minerals and metals extracted from the land. And it defined gross value to mean the net returns derived from the sales of ores, minerals, and metals extracted and *330 removed from the claims, excluding development and haulage allowances, but including premiums and bonuses other than development and haulage allowances. The substance of the asserted grievance of plaintiffs was that during the period in controversy, the defendant before calculating the royalty deducted from gross returns charges for processing by mill treatment raw ore into uranium concentrate and also deducted development allowances. Judgment for an accounting and recovery in money was sought. The defendant admitted making the deductions but asserted that they were proper. And by counterclaim, the defendant sought a declaratory judgment determining the meaning of the lease in respect to calculating the royalty. After certain discovery procedures, many of the facts were stipulated. The court made findings of fact and conclusions of law. By its judgment, the court denied plaintiffs recovery in any amount. It also determined in substance that in respect to raw ore sold prior to March 31, 1962, the royalty should be calculated at the prices, premiums, bonuses and allowances established by Circular 5, promulgated by the Atomic Energy Commission of the United States, revised, less a development allowance in the amount of fifty cents per pound for ore of a specified grade, and haulage allowance in the amount of six cents per wet ton mile. And it also determined that in respect to concentrate produced from raw ore and sold prior to March 31, 1962, the royalty should be calculated upon the proceeds derived therefor by the defendant, less milling charges, the development allowance, and the haulage allowance.

These were the basic facts in which the litigation had its source. Circular 5 was in effect from March 1, 1951, through March 31, 1962. It established prices, premiums, and allowances, including a development allowance of fifty cents per pound for ore of a specified uranium content, a haulage allowance, and the other bonuses and premiums in respect to raw uranium bearing ores taken from the Colorado Plateau area. The land covered by the lease was within that area. The Circular also provided that persons accepting the development allowance were deemed to agree to spend such funds for the development and exploration of their properties. And it further provided that persons delivering in excess of 1,000 short tons per calendar year would be required under the terms of their contracts to submit proof satisfactory to the Commission that funds equivalent to the amount received as development allowance had been spent for development. In 1956, the Circular was amended to eliminate therefrom the requirement for the submission of proof that the funds received as development allowance had been expended for such purpose.

The lease was entered into in 1954. Homestake, at its cost and expense, commenced an exploration and development program; and about June, 1957, it commenced mining ore from the claims. In 1955, Uranium Production Company entered into a contract with the Commission by which it received authority to construct a uranium mill, to mill and treat uranium ore, and to purchase from mine operators concentrate produced therefrom. The contract provided among other things that ore purchased from mine operators should be purchased and acquired at prices, premiums, and allowances, upon terms and conditions, and subject to specifications not less favorable to the seller than the provisions of Circular 5. And it further provided that Uranium Reduction should obtain from each ore producer an understanding in writing obligating the producer to account directly to the Commission for the expenditure of the development allowance paid by Uranium Reduction to the producer. In October, 1956, Uranium Reduction completed its mill at Moab, Utah. Prior to the completion of the mill, no means existed whereby Home-stake could obtain custom milling of raw ore extracted from the land covered by the lease.

As of July 1, 1957, Homestake and Uranium Reduction entered into two con *331 tracts. One was a custom milling agreement and the other was a concentrate purchase agreement. Both were renegotiated but the changes have no present material bearing. None of the plaintiffs were parties to the contracts. Under the milling agreement, Uranium Reduction was obligated to process ore delivered to it by Homestake and Homestake was to pay the cost of the processing. In the concentrate purchase agreement, Uranium Reduction was obligated to purchase the finished product. And in calculating the price to be paid, the parties followed the prices, bonuses, premiums, and allowances, including development allowance, prescribed by Circular 5. One purpose of Homestake in entering into the contracts was to assure a market for the sale of ores extracted from the lands covered by the lease beyond the termination of the buying program of the Commission under Circular 5, on March 31, 1962. Another purpose on the part of Homestake in entering into the arrangement was a hope to gain taxwise, but the hope failed to materialize.

Reversal of the judgment is sought on the ground that the lease did not contain a provision authorizing a deduction from gross revenue of an amount for processing the raw ore before calculating the royalty. The lease did not contain a provision expressly authorizing the deduction. One explanation for the absence of such a provision which seems to suggest itself is that at the time of the execution of the lease there were no custom mills engaged in the business of processing raw ore at the cost of the producer. Mills of that kind entered the uranium field later. In any event, the cold language contained in a written agreement, standing alone, is not always absolute and unyielding. It is a general rule of wide acceptance that rights and obligations of parties under a written agreement sometimes exist even though not expressed therein. Sometimes such rights and obligations find their genesis in facts and circumstances which intervened after the execution of the writing, and sometimes they rest upon other footing. But it must appear with reasonable certainty that rights or obligations of that kind are necessary to carry into effect the intention of the contracting parties. Nevada Half Moon-Mining Co. v. Combined Metals Reduction Co., 10 Cir., 176 F.2d 73, certiorari denied, 338 U.S. 943, 70 S.Ct. 429, 94 L.Ed. 581. It was within the intention and contemplation of the parties to the lease that Homestake would develop the property and market the uranium derived therefrom in the manner which would best serve the interest of the lessors and Homestake. As previously stated, one purpose on the part of Home-stake in entering into the arrangement with Uranium Reduction was to assure a market for the sale of the ore extracted from the land covered by the lease after the termination of the buying program of the Commission under Circular 5, on March 31, 1962.

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322 F.2d 329, 1963 U.S. App. LEXIS 4288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frank-richardson-v-homestake-mining-company-a-california-corporation-ca10-1963.