Grants Pass Trust Co. v. Enterprise Mining Co.
This text of 113 P. 859 (Grants Pass Trust Co. v. Enterprise Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
“Any person who shall furnish any provisions, materials or supplies for the working or development of any * * mine * * shall have a lien upon such mine * * to secure him the payment for the * * material furnished, which lien shall attach in every case to such mine.” Section 7444, L. O. L. “The liens provided for in this act are preferred liens.” Section 7447, L. O. L.
To uphold the decree rendered, electricity, when furnished at a mine for illumination or for power, must be construed to be a “supply,” thereby bringing It within the designation of the enactment quoted. As applied to material objects, a supply is understood, in its restricted sense, to mean any substance that is consumed with its use. A supply, in its more general signification, is anything required or furnished to meet a need. 8 Words & Phrases, 6802. As used in the statute under consideration, “supplies” undoubtedly comprise any substance the [177]*177use of which might reasonably tend to the working or contribute to the development of a mine. Electricity, when employed to illumine a mine, enables laborers to work therein with almost the same success as in the daylight, thus materially contributing to the search for and the development of a mineral vein. The object of all mining operations is to secure valuable metals freed as much as practicable from all other substances. In quartz mining the crushing of rock containing mineral reduces the bulk by eliminating much of the superfluous matter, making it possible profitably to carry the resulting auriferous and argentiferous ores to market. By the use of suspended copper wires electricity can be transmitted from the place where it is generated to the mouth of a mine in almost inaccessible mountains and ravines, and there successfully used to operate quartz mills. Mines which a few years ago were almost worthless have, by the employment of electricity, become very valuable, affording profitable employment to laborers and yielding rich returns to the owners. Electricity is capable of propelling machinery and of illuminating mine and mill by continuous operation, and as this modern agent is consumed by its use, so far as susceptible of discernment, and supplies a very urgent need tending to the proper working and development of a mine, it is believed that such force is a supply within the scope of that term and for the use of which a lien may fairly be implied from the statute.
Other errors are assigned, but, deeming them unimportant, the decree is affirmed. Affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
113 P. 859, 58 Or. 174, 1911 Ore. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grants-pass-trust-co-v-enterprise-mining-co-or-1911.