Higgins v. California Petroleum & Asphalt Co.

81 P. 1070, 147 Cal. 363, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 404
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 29, 1905
DocketL.A. No. 1370.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 81 P. 1070 (Higgins v. California Petroleum & Asphalt Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins v. California Petroleum & Asphalt Co., 81 P. 1070, 147 Cal. 363, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 404 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

*364 McFARLAND, J.

Each oí the three defendants called the “California Petroleum and Asphalt Company,” the “Alcatraz Asphalt Company,” and the “Alcatraz Company,” is a corporation; and this action is brought by plaintiff, as one of the lessors in a certain lease of asphalt mines, to recover from said defendants certain rents, or royalties, reserved in the lease. The trial court rendered judgment for a certain sum of money which it found to be due as such royalties, and from the judgment the said defendants appeal, bringing up rulings and evidence in a bill of exceptions.

Most of the main questions in the case were settled on two former appeals arising out of this same, lease. In one of them •—namely, Higgins v. California, Petroleum and Asphalt Co., 109 Cal. 304, [41 Pac. 1087],—the present plaintiff, Higgins, was plaintiff, and the defendant herein first above named, the California Petroleum and Asphalt Company, was defendant; and in the other case,—namely, Higgins v. California Petroleum and Asphalt Co. and Alcatraz Asphalt Co., 122 Cal. 373, [55 Pac. 155],—Higgins was plaintiff, and the two corporations first named in the complaint herein—to wit, the California Petroleum and Asphalt Company and the Alcatraz Asphalt Company—were defendants. In those two cases many of the facts pertinent to the. present case are stated, and also the principles of law involved; and this present opinion will consist largely of references to those cases and quotations from the opinions therein.

On June 4, 1887, the plaintiff herein, Higgins, and Mary A. Ashley were each the owner in severalty of a tract of land, each tract lying alongside of and adjoining the other. Running horizontally and continuously through both of these tracts there was a deposit of bituminous rock. On said June 4, 1887, the plaintiff herein and said Ashley jointly executed a written lease to one Joseph Scheerer for the term of twenty years of all the bituminous rock lying in said two tracts of land; and the lessee covenanted, among other things, to pay to the lessors on the first day of every month during the term “the sum of fifty cents per ton for each and every gross ton of bituminous rock and liquid asphaltum which he may have mined,- taken or removed from said premises during the calendar month then next preceding.” In December, 1891, the defendant and appellant herein, the California Petroleum *365 and Asphaltum Company (hereinafter called, for brevity, the C. P. and A. Co.), became the sole owner of said lease by assignment; and in June, 1902, the said Mrs. Ashley conveyed to said C. P. and A. Co. all that part of the land described in the lease which she severally owned. For several months after said conveyance by Mrs. Ashley the C. P. and A. Co. paid to the plaintiff herein one half of the stipulated rent or royalty (twenty-five cents per ton), Mrs. Ashley treating her interest in the lease as extinguished or merged in the said deed of her land. But differences arose between plaintiff herein and the C. P. and A. Co., and the latter, after April 1, 1893, refused to make further payments of royalty or rent. Thereupon the plaintiff herein, Higgins, commenced the action of Higgins v. California Petroleum and Asphalt Co., which was reported in 109 Cal., as above stated. The object of that action was to recover one thousand dollars unpaid royalty on four thousand tons of rock at twenty-five cents per ton, alleged to have been mined from the deposit during the months of April, May, June, and July, 1893. The court found that the royalties of the defendant amounted to $671.25, and rendered judgment for plaintiff for that amount. The C. P. and A. Co. appealed, and the judgment and order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial were by this court affirmed. (109 Cal. 304, [41 Pac. 1087].) In that case this court declares that the lease, although made jointly by different owners of contiguous properties, was a valid lease. The court said, through its commissioner, as follows: “Had the lessors in this case been tenants in common of the demised premises, the effects of a conveyance by Ashley of her reversionary estate therein to the lessee would have been to merge her interest in the leasehold term in the reversion, and to extinguish pro tanto the covenant of the lessee to pay rent; yet, thereafter, Higgins would have been entitled to receive from the lessee, the same portion of rent as before such conveyance [citing authorities]; and I perceive no reason why the. effects of Ashley’s conveyance of her separate part of the demised premises, of which she was sole owner, should not be substantially the same as they would have been if the lessors had been tenants in common of every part of such premises; the only possible difference being in the mode of apportioning the rent. Had they been tenants in common, Higgins would still be entitled to a *366 part of the rent proportionate to his undivided portion of the demised premises, but as they are not tenants in common he is entitled, in the absence of an express or presumed agreement to the contrary, to a portion of the royalty proportionate to the comparative value of his distinct part of the demised premises; and in this case the terms of the lease warrant the presumption that each lessor was to receive one half of the royalty, and such presumption is in perfect accord with the practical construction of the lease by the parties thereto, up to April, 1893.

“The fact that, prior to the commencement of this action, the lessee had elected to mine only in that part of the ‘deposit’ lying within the Ashley tract detracts nothing from the right of Higgins to demand his proper share of the royalty, nor from the obligation of defendant to pay it. The royalty of fifty cents on each ton of rock mined was, by the terms of the lease, to be paid to the lessors, not to the individual lessor from whose land the rock may have been mined. The lease does not restrict the mining to any particular part of the deposit at any time. The lessee has had the right, at all times since the execution of the lease, to mine any part of the deposit, and will continue to have such right until the expiration of the term of twenty years, only about five years of which had elapsed when this action was commenced, and more, that one half of the term is still in the future, during which defendant is at liberty to mine exclusively in that part of the deposit lying within the Higgins tract, and may completely exhaust it. The royalty per ton of rock mined is but a mode of estimating the rent to be paid for the right to occupy exclusively the whole premises demised, and to mine any part or all parts thereof at any time during the term, at the election of the lessee.”

After the decision of the case last above referred to, the C. P. and A. Co. conveyed the land which had been conveyed to it by Mrs. Ashley to a new corporation, called the Alcatraz Asphalt Company, but did not assign to the latter the said lease. After this, rock was taken out of the. deposit as before, and apparently under the same management—the rock, however, being taken out only from that part of the leased land which had been owned by Mrs. Ashley and conveyed by her to the C. P. and A. Co. The. new corporation claimed that it *367

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cinderella Theatre Co. v. United Detroit Theatres Corp.
116 N.W.2d 825 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1962)
Estate of Arbuckle
220 P.2d 950 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Kohn v. Kohn
214 P.2d 71 (California Court of Appeal, 1950)
Anderson v. Abbott
321 U.S. 349 (Supreme Court, 1944)
Southern Cooperative Foundry Co. v. Warlick Furniture Co.
185 S.E. 773 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1936)
Caldwell v. Roach
12 P.2d 376 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1932)
Hoffman Wall Paper Co. v. City of Hartford
159 A. 346 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Loewenthal Securities Co. v. White Paving Co.
259 Ill. App. 612 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1931)
Boyle v. Gray
28 F.2d 7 (First Circuit, 1928)
People Ex Rel. Attorney General v. Michigan Bell Telephone Co.
224 N.W. 438 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1928)
San Francisco Protestant Orphan Asylum Society v. Fitzsimmons
206 P. 65 (California Supreme Court, 1922)
Stanford Hotel Co. v. M. Schwind Co.
181 P. 780 (California Supreme Court, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 1070, 147 Cal. 363, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-v-california-petroleum-asphalt-co-cal-1905.