Ketchum Coal Co. v. District Court of Carbon County

159 P. 737, 48 Utah 342, 4 A.L.R. 619, 1916 Utah LEXIS 33
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1916
DocketNo. 2964
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 159 P. 737 (Ketchum Coal Co. v. District Court of Carbon County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchum Coal Co. v. District Court of Carbon County, 159 P. 737, 48 Utah 342, 4 A.L.R. 619, 1916 Utah LEXIS 33 (Utah 1916).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

This is an original application to this court for a peremptory writ of mandate to require Hon. A. H. Christensen, Judge of the District Court of Carbon County, Utah, to vacate an order or judgment dismissing the defendant Pleasant Valley Coal Company, hereinafter called company, as defendant from a certain action pending in said court wherein the plaintiff in this proceeding is plaintiff, and all of the other defendants above named, including said company, are defendants, and reinstate said company as a defendant in said action, and to proceed to try the same against all of the defendants, including said company. The application was made upon notice duly served upon all of the defendants. All except the Utah Fuel Company have appeared by their respective counsel and have joined in a demurrer to the application, and have also filed an answer to certain portions thereof. For the purposes of this decision it is not necessary to. consider anything except the general demurrer which has been argued by respective counsel and the cause duly submitted. Neither is it necessary to make any further reference to the defendant Utah Fuel Company, nor to the answer of the defendants since it presents no issues which affect the result reached by us.

The application is based upon substantially the following facts: Some time in the year 1913, the plaintiff, under the [347]*347name of Ketehum Coal Company, a corporation, owning a coal mine in Carbon County, Utah, and the applicant in this proceeding, hereinafter styled plaintiff, commenced an action in the District Court of Carbon County against the defendants above named and other defendants to condemn a certain strip of ground to be used for tramway, tunnel, and other purposes in connection with the operation of its coal mine. In July, 1913, an order condemning a certain strip of ground was duly entered by said district court and the plaintiff was given, and took, possession of the strip condemned as aforesaid. During the first half of this year, however, some of the defendants interfered with'plaintiff in its right of possession of said strip, and upon applying to the District Court of Carbon County for relief from said interference said court refused to grant the relief demanded and dismissed plaintiff’s application. The plaintiff thereupon made an application to this court to require the district court to enforce its order of possession and use of such strip, which application was duly granted. Ketehum, Coal Company v. A. H. Christensen, Judge et al., - Utah -, 159 Pac. 541. In plaintiff’s complaint filed in the condemnation proceeding it was alleged that the defendants claimed to own the property sought to be condemned, and it was further alleged that the company claimed to be the owner of certain portions of section 1, township 13 south, range 9 west, particularly describing the subdivisions affected and over a large.portion of which lands the strip in question, which is 60 feet wide and 1,300 feet in length, extended. The company answered plaintiff’s complaint and in its answer set up various defenses to plaintiff’s right to condemn the property, and in connection therewith also claimed title to the strip of ground and to the land over which said strip ’extended. It also claimed a large amount of damages, both for lands affected and other-wise. It is not necessary to refer to the answers of the other defendants. The plaintiff in due time filed its reply to the company’s answer. In the reply the plaintiff sought to meet the defense set up by the company and also explained and denied its claim for damages. The plaintiff also alleged in the reply that since the commencement of the action it had acquired title to the strip of ground [348]*348in question, setting forth in great detail tbe source of title, and denied the company’s title; and in that connection it also set forth with much particularity the facts assailing the company’s title and the reasons why the company did not have title to the strip of ground in question and to the other lands for which it claimed damages. No attack was made upon the reply, and the company proceeded to take the deposition of a certain witness for the purpose of controverting at least some of the facts pleaded in the reply. The case, it seems, was set for trial, but before that time arrived the company filed a motion in which it asked the court to dismiss the condemnation proceedings as against it for the reasons: (1) That the plaintiff was seeking to condemn property to which it had “set up paramount title in itself by virtue of a conveyance” from one who claimed title in fee, and that it claimed that it had acquired all rights to said property by virtue of said conveyance; and (2) for the reason that plaintiff was merely maintaining the action as against the company “for the purpose of attempting to quiet its title to the property sought to be condemned, alleging and claiming that it has paramount title to said property sought to be condemned, and that the defendant Pleasant Valley Coal Company has no title therein or thereto.” The district court granted the motion and dismissed the action as against the company, except as to a very small area of ground which was. a part of said strip. The dismissal thus excluded from the condemnation proceedings practically the whole strip of ground which had been condemned and of which plaintiff had taken possession pursuant to the order of July, 1913, and upon which it alleges in this application it had expended about $40,000 in carrying out the purposes for which it had sought to condemn the same. By excluding the company and the strip of ground from the condemnation proceedings a large portion of the area of ground involved in that action has been eliminated therefrom.

The parties do not agree upon what ground the district court granted the company’s motion. The plaintiff has, however, made the court’s oral opinion a part of the record in this case. The company disputes that what plaintiff has presented [349]*349to us correctly reflects wbat the district court said in passing on the motion, and contends that it does not contain all that was said. We need not concern ourselves with all that the court may have said. Its reasons for dismissing the action against the company are not controlling. The controlling question is whether the dismissal can be sustained in law.

As already pointed out the motion to dismiss was based upon two and two grounds only. All that the court said, as appears from the stenographer’s report, is directed to those grounds. From what the court said we are well satisfied that in passing on the motion it based its decision entirely upon the fact that the plaintiff in its reply had set forth that since the action was commenced it had acquired the title to the lands which the company claimed to own, and therefore, as the court said, the ‘‘ controversy between plaintiff and defendant (company) # * * is purely and simply a question of quieting the title.” The court then goes on to enlarge upon its reasons for dismissing the action, and finally concludes that the question concerning the title "should be determined outside of the condemnation suit, and the court so holds.” In other portions of the court’s oral opinion the same grounds are stated. There cannot be any doubt that the court granted the motion upon the sole ground that the plaintiff had set up in its reply that it had acquired the title to the strip of ground to which the company also claimed title, and that therefore the title to the lands in question was involved.

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

Related

D'Aston v. Aston
844 P.2d 345 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1992)
Coppedge v. Harding
714 P.2d 1121 (Utah Supreme Court, 1985)
Mohr v. Iowa State Highway Commission
124 N.W.2d 141 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1963)
State Ex Rel. Florida Industrial Comm. v. Willis
124 So. 2d 48 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1960)
Rushing v. Bush
260 S.W.2d 900 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Haslam v. Morrison, District Judge
190 P.2d 520 (Utah Supreme Court, 1948)
Evans v. Evans, Judge
98 P.2d 703 (Utah Supreme Court, 1940)
Hyde Park Town v. Chambers
104 P.2d 220 (Utah Supreme Court, 1939)
Harris v. Turner, Judge
85 P.2d 824 (Utah Supreme Court, 1938)
Chez Ex Rel. Weber College v. Utah State Bldg. Commission
74 P.2d 687 (Utah Supreme Court, 1937)
Bd. of Edu. of Ogden City v. Anderson
74 P.2d 681 (Utah Supreme Court, 1937)
Wasatch Oil Refining Co. v. Wade, Judge
63 P.2d 1070 (Utah Supreme Court, 1936)
Tenney Telephone Co. v. United States
82 F.2d 788 (Seventh Circuit, 1936)
Wrightsman v. Southwestern Natural Gas Co.
1935 OK 724 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Utah Copper Co. v. Stephen Hayes Estate, Inc.
31 P.2d 624 (Utah Supreme Court, 1934)
Herzog v. Bramel
23 P.2d 345 (Utah Supreme Court, 1933)
Town of Perry v. Thomas
22 P.2d 343 (Utah Supreme Court, 1933)
Richards v. District Court of Weber County
267 P. 779 (Utah Supreme Court, 1928)
Utah Copper Co v. Montana-Bingham Consol. Mining Co.
255 P. 672 (Utah Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 P. 737, 48 Utah 342, 4 A.L.R. 619, 1916 Utah LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchum-coal-co-v-district-court-of-carbon-county-utah-1916.