Haynie v. Taylor

213 P.2d 684, 69 Ariz. 339, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 265
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1950
Docket5084
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 213 P.2d 684 (Haynie v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haynie v. Taylor, 213 P.2d 684, 69 Ariz. 339, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 265 (Ark. 1950).

Opinion

PHELPS, Justice.

In the year 1939 Dan H. Taylor and Ralph Schupbach, hereinafter called by their surnames, were ¡the owners as tenants in common of Chance Claims Nos. 1, 2, 3 and 4 in the Swisshelm mining district, Cochise County, Arizona. Ether Haynie, one of the plaintiffs herein, who will hereinafter be called Haynie, was the lessee of the Scribner group of mining claims adjoining the Chance Claims on the west. There were no usable shafts on the Scribner Claims but there were two shafts on the Chance Claims known as the old or lower shaft and the new or upper shaft in sufficient proximity to the Scribner Claims to enable Haynie to work such claims through one of these shafts by digging a tunnel of about 300 feet over to the side line of the Chance Claims and to a point on the Scribner Claims known as the well drill hole. Haynie had previously bored the well drill hole on the Scribner Claims and had encountered a body of ore which he 'believed ¡to be of commercial value.

*341 On the 19th day of December, 1939, Haynie entered into a written contract of lease with Taylor for the lease of the Chance Claims. In this lease Haynie agreed to sink what was known as “the old shaft” 40 feet deeper and to run a tunnel from the bottom of said shaft over to the Scribner Claims for which Taylor agreed to convey by sufficient deed, a one-third interest in the Chance Claims. Taylor testified that he had purchased Schupbach’s interest in the Chance Claims and on the date of the lease was the sole owner thereof. Schupbach denied this on the witness stand and said that he was then the owner of an undivided one-half interest therein. We consider this question immaterial however.

Haynie entered upon the claims and began to sink the old shaft deeper but encountered so much water and the shaft was so dangerous that he could not successfully carry out the terms of his written lease agreement. He and Taylor, during the month of March, 1940, orally agreed, however, that Haynie might run the drift or tunnel from the 116-foot level in the old shaft over to the well drill hole on the Scribner Claims and to sink the upper shaft 40 feet deeper instead of continuing to work on the lower shaft. The tunnel was necessary to Haynie’s operation of the Scribner Claims in order to enable him to convey his ore from the Scribner Claims to the old shaft on the Chance Claims and there to bring it to the surface. The new upper shaft had approximately a 30 feet higher elevation at the collar than the lower shaft and was about 240 feet north of the old shaft. There is a sharp conflict in the evidence as to whether the work agreed to be done under the oral agreement was in lieu of that provided to be done under the written lease agreement or was in addition thereto as will be hereinafter more fully pointed out.

Haynie ran the drift from the 116-foot level in the lower shaft over to the Scribner Claims and took out large quantities of ore from those claims as was anticipated. The drift or tunnel and development work definitely developed the fact that the body of ore on the Scribner Claims dipped to the east under the Chance Claims which greatly enhanced the value of the Chance Claims. Haynie dug the upper shaft about S3 feet deeper than it originally was when he entered upon the performance of the written lease agreement of December, 1939. Under direction of the State Mine Inspector he also extended the drift to the upper shaft, thus connecting the two shafts with the tunnel.

In September, 1943, the owner of the Scribner Claims terminated Haynie’s lease and he moved such equipment as he had in use and which was loose, away from the Chance Claims leaving only certain other heavy personal property which was fastened to the ground or not easily moved away.

He discontinued work on the Chance properties at that time and he together with *342 ihis employees left the premises and according to Haynie’s testimony at the trial he has not returned to the property since that time. He did not notify Taylor he had completed 'his contract nor did he demand conveyance of his one-third interest in the Chance Claims.

In 1944 Taylor and Schupbach leased the Chance Claims to one R. L. Brown to enable him to further develop and extract ore from the Scribner Claims and early in T945 defendants J. F. Rydbom, E. E. Rydbom and E. R. Bryant hereinafter called lessees, entered into a sublease agreement with Brown. During the same year they entered into a lease agreement with Taylor and Schupbach for the Chance Claims and immediately began work developing and extracting ore therefrom. Prior to the filing of this cause of action by Haynie the lessees expended more than $50,000 in operating and developing the Chance Claims and extracted many carloads of commercial ore therefrpm which they sold to the American Smelting and Refining Company of El Paso.

Haynie knew of these operations hut did nothing to assert his rights and said nothing about it to Taylor or Schupbach or to the lessees. In April, 1947, however, he brought this action against Taylor and Schupbach, owners, the Rydboms and Bryant as lessees, and the El Paso Smelting and Refining Company to whom the ore from the claims had been shipped, seeking various kinds of relief under four separate causes of action. On appeal to this court, however, Haynie abandoned all of his claims against defendants except his claim for an accounting against the lessees or damages for trespass and conversion as the facts might warrant and for specific performance of his contract with Taylor for an undivided one-third interest in the Chance Claims. It is the claim of Haynie that Taylor was acting as the agent of Schupbach in executing the written lease agreement of December, 1939, and in making the subsequent oral agreement of March, 1940, here in question. Defendants in their pleadings denied generally the allegations on which Haynie’s claims are based and plead the Statute of Frauds, A.C.A. 1939, § 58-101 et seq., the Statute of Limitations and an equitable estoppel as a bar to recovery.

A jury was demanded and the cause proceeded to trial. The court at the beginning of the trial granted a motion to dismiss as against the American Smelting and Refining Company. At the close of plaintiff’s case, defendants presented to the court a number of propositions of law in support of their claim that the case in its entirety should be withdrawn from the jury. The court referred to this argument as “a Motion for a directed verdict in all counts,”' and by its ruling took the case away from the jury and entered judgment for defendants.

From the judgment and from the order denying the motion for a new trial Haynie appeals to this court.

*343 He presents six separate assignments of error for our consideration which when boiled down resolve themselves into only two propositions of law:

1. That the court erred in denying Haynie specific performance of his oral contract with Taylor and in basing said denial upon the ground that the contract (a) violated the Statute of Frauds, (b) was barred by the Statute of Limitations, (c) Haynie had an adequate remedy at law through monetary compensation for the work he performed.

2. The court erred in denying plaintiffs a judgment against lessees either for damages based upon the trespass and conversion or for an accounting as cotenants.

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Bluebook (online)
213 P.2d 684, 69 Ariz. 339, 1950 Ariz. LEXIS 265, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haynie-v-taylor-ariz-1950.