Hoban v. Viley

99 F. Supp. 8, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1237, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4034
CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedAugust 17, 1951
DocketNos. 1778, 1779
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 99 F. Supp. 8 (Hoban v. Viley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Idaho primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hoban v. Viley, 99 F. Supp. 8, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1237, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4034 (D. Idaho 1951).

Opinion

CLARK, District Judge.

These suits were instituted by complaints filed May 8, 1950 for refund of Federal income taxes.

Jurisdiction is based upon Section 1340 of Title 28 United States Code.

■ They have been consolidated for all purposes other than the entry of judgment.

The facts of the cases are as follows:

1. Plaintiff, Anita M. Hoban, during the taxable years involved in these suits, was. the wife of Leo J. Hoban who died on June 17, 1948. Plaintiffs Joseph L. McCarthy, James F. McCarthy, Jr., and Anita M. Hoban are the duly appointed, qualified and acting executors and executrix of the estate of Leo J. Hoban, deceased.

2. Anita M. and Leo J. Hoban each filed an individual federal income tax return for the calendar years 1942, 1943; 1944 and 1945 with the defendant and each taxpayer paid to him the tax liability reported and assessed thereon. None of these payments are in controversy. Each taxpayer reported income upon the community property basis.

3. Separate deficiencies in tax and interest thereon were thereafter duly assessed upon each return for the calendar years 1943, 1944 and 1945 in amounts which were paid.

The partnership of Small Leasing Company had obtained a lease upon the Douglas Mine of the Douglas Mining Company, Ltd., a corporation, and also, another lease from Hecla Mining Company, Federal Mining and Smelting Company and Hercules Mining Company, or from a trustee of these corporations, covering properties known as the Formosa operation.

In 1906, Hecla Mining Company, Federal Mining & Smelting Company, and Hercules Mining Company owned and operated lead-silver-zinc mines on Canyon Creek several miles above the City of Wallace, Idaho. Each of these companies owned its own concentration mill. Prior to the year 1907, all tailings resulting from the milling processes at these properties and from properties operated by other mine owners prior to that time, had been diverted into and permitted to flow down Canyon Creek, depositing part of the heavier mineral content containing lead, zinc and silver, in and adjacent to the floor of the valley, including the area leased and worked by the Small Leasing Company and both above and below the situs of the dam mentioned in the next paragraph, and thence into a larger stream to which Canyon Creek is a tributary. ■

[10]*10In the year 1907, the three companies aforesaid purchased a large acreage of land which was situated some distance below their respective mills, and through which Canyon Creek flowed, each company contributing to the cost of acquisition ratably in proportion to the tonnage of ore which was being milled by each of them. This acreage was located below a point where the valley of Canyon Creek widened and its floor flattened out to an appreciable extent. Prior to the working of the tailings deposited hereinafter described, the floor of the canyon, except for the bed of the stream, was fairly level with a considerable number of large tree stumps scattered over the flat, while the valley sloped to the southwest following the fall of Canyon Creek, the bed of the stream being approximately six (6) feet in depth. The stream tended to change its course down the valley from time to time. At flood stage, both before and after the construction of the dam, the waters of the stream spread out over the floor of the valley and deposited the heavier mineral bearing tailings. A dam was constructed in 1907 across Canyon Creek on the land thus acquired. This dam was used to intercept and impound a part of the tailings which in the absence thereof would have been carried on down the stream. The dam in question cost approximately $9,000 for its original construction, and about $2,000 additional was expended for maintenance, repairs and additions from 1907 to 1918, since which latter date, no further costs have been incurred. Depreciation was taken on the cost of the dam by the owner companies on a straight line basis. The said dam was about twenty (20) feet in height and about five hundred seventy-five (575) feet in length. The grade of the canyon at and immediately above the situs of this dam was about three (3) per cent. The lake formed by the water backed up by the dam extended about seven hundred (700) feet. This dam impeded the flow of said tailings down the stream and caused a portion of them to become distributed over the adjacent lands which had been purchased by the three companies aforesaid. The entire cost of said dam was borne and paid only by the three companies ratably to the tonnage of ores then being treated in their respective mills.

The lands so purchased, together with the large quantity of residual tailings which have been deposited thereon by the action of the waters of Canyon Creek, have at all times since 1907 been and are still owned by said three companies, either directly or beneficially through an individual holding the legal title thereto as trustee for their benefit. The floor of the valley of Canyon Creek, including the lands so purchased, was and is carpeted with large boulders and detritus. No commercial surface mineral deposit existed in the said area prior to the deposition by the tailings aforesaid by Canyon Creek.

The distribution of tailings above the aforesaid dam over the said land adjacent to the stream was not on a uniform basis, either as to quantity or as to grade in terms of metallic mineral content. The natural action of the stream had the effect of concentrating the heavier materials,— the tailings of higher grade, in channels and in deep spots and holes on the floor of the valley, while the lighter materials of lower grade had a tendency to feather out to the edges of the deposit or to escape over the spillway.

In addition to the tailings diverted into Canyon Creek by the mills owned by the three companies aforesaid, tailings were so diverted by certain mills upstream from the said dam owned and operated by other companies named below and prior to and after 1907. One of these mines and mills, the Tiger-Poorman, was acquired by Federal Mining and Smelting Company in 1904; the other, the Frisco, was acquired by Federal in 1914. Both of the foregoing companies were in operation for a number of years prior to the aforesaid acquisitions. In addition thereto, another mine, the Tamarack-Custer, owned and operated by other interests, began' to divert tailings into Canyon Creek in 1917. Exhibit E appended to this stipulation contains data relative to the tonnage milled by the various mills whose tailings were diverted by the stream. The only mills above the said dam which diverted tailings into Canyon Creek prior [11]*11to the construction of the dam in 1907 were mills owned by the Hecla, Hercules and Federal Companies, or mills owned by predecessors in interest of these companies as aforesaid. It was not the practice of any of the mills diverting tailings into Canyon Creek to reflect the cost or value of these tailings in inventory on their books.

By virtue of this natural action of the stream, the tailings became mixed and blended with river gravel and boulders present on said land and minerals previously deposited thereon as the result of milling operations on Canyon Creek above the dam, as the result of which the deposit was found, in the course of Small Leasing Company’s operations, to vary in depth from a few inches to about twenty-five (25) feet, with the natural river gravel and boulders constituting the major portion of the total materials.

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Bluebook (online)
99 F. Supp. 8, 40 A.F.T.R. (P-H) 1237, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoban-v-viley-idd-1951.