Lamb v. Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Co.

138 P. 902, 37 Nev. 9
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1914
DocketNo. 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 138 P. 902 (Lamb v. Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lamb v. Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Co., 138 P. 902, 37 Nev. 9 (Neb. 1914).

Opinion

By the Court,

McCarran, J.:

This is an action to enforce a mechanic’s lien. Two causes of action were asserted by appellant, plaintiff in the court below. The Goldfield Aristock Mining and Leasing Company was the lessee of those certain lode mining claims known as Lucky Boy No. 1 and Lucky Boy No. 2. The Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company was the owner of the claims and the lessor. The second cause of action relied upon by appellant is based upon services performed upon the property and a claim of lien filed pursuant thereto by George B. Crowell, the latter’s claim of lien having been, for a valuable consideration, assigned to appellant, by reason of which cause of action judgment is prayed for against respondents.

By the complaint of appellant it is averred that the lease executed by the Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company to the Goldfield Aristock Mining and Leasing Company was for the purpose of developing and improving and extracting ore from the Lucky Boy No. 1 and [11]*11Lucky Boy No. 2 lode mining claims, and it is further alleged that the lessor, the Goldfield Lucky. Boy Mining Company, had knowledge that the materials furnished by the lien claimant were used in the development of the claims, and that the lessor had full knowledge that the lien claimant was working on the property. It is further alleged that no notices were posted by the lessor exempting the mining claims leased from liability for materials furnished, or for labor performed upon or in the development of that property.

On the 20th day of August, 1908, as appears from the record, the appellant filed in the office of the county recorder of Esmeralda County his claim of lien, duly verified by him, and had the same recorded.

[1] A demurrer was sustained to the first cause of action, and, there being no assignment of error as to the order of the court sustaining that demurrer, it is not involved.

Appellant, having proceeded to trial on the second cause of action, offered in evidence George B. Crowell’s notice of mechanic’s lien, as filed in the office of the county recorder August 20,1908. An objection was interposed by the defendant upon the ground that the offer of appellant was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and inadmissible for any purpose in the case. The trial court, without sustaining the objection of defendants on the ground stated, held that the lien notice was not admissible for the reason that, in order to make the owner of the property responsible personally for the indebtedness, the work must have been done for that owner himself.

The lien law of the State of Nevada (section 2213,- Rev. Laws) provides that all miners, laborers, and others who work or labor in the amount of $5 or more in or upon any mine, or upon any shaft, tunnel, adit, or other excavation, designed or used for the purpose of prospecting, draining, or working any such mine, and all persons who shall furnish any timber or other material, to the value of $5 or more, to be used in or about any such mine, whether [12]*12done or furnished at the instance of the owner of such mine, or his agent, shall have and may each respectively claim and hold a lien upon such mine for the amount and value of the work or labor So performed or material furnished.

In the notice of mechanic’s lien, filed by George B. Crowell and offered as evidence in the court below, the lien claimant asserts the Goldfield Aristock Mining and Leasing Company to be the agent of the Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company. It also asserts that the Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company is the reputed owner of the Lucky Boy No. 1 and Lucky Boy No. 2. The lien notice is sufficient in other respects and substantially conforms to the requirements of the statute.

In appellant’s second cause of action it is alleged that the Goldfield Aristock Mining Company was the lessee of the Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company, and that the lease given by the latter to the former was for the purpose of developing and improving and extracting ore from the Lucky Boy No. 1 and Lucky Boy No. 2. Nothing is alleged in either the lien notice filed by Crowell, or in the complaint of appellant, as to the terms of the lease, or as to whether or not the lessor is to receive any part or percentage of the proceeds or mineral productions that might be derived from the mining operations.

The trial court offered to enter judgment against the respondent Goldfield Aristock Mining and Leasing Company as lessee. This the appellant refused to accept, stating that the company was insolvent, and that the judgment against it was of no value.

There is practically but one question before this court to determine in this case, namely: Is the mining property of a lessor to be held liable for materials furnished and labor performed on the property at the instance or request of the lessee?

It is our judgment that the trial court took an erroneous view of the matter presented. It must be observed at the outset that from the pleadings and record in this case it is disclosed that the respondent, the Goldfield Lucky [13]*13Boy Mining Company, admits the services performed and the materials furnished, as alleged in appellant’s second cause of action, but, in this respect, they allege that the materials were furnished and services were performed at the instance and request of the Goldfield Aristock Mining and Leasing Company, the lessee, and that, as a lessor, the Goldfield Lucky Boy Mining Company was not responsible for the debts incurred by its lessee in the mining operations carried on under the lease. They further contend that the mining claims of the lessor cannot be bound by the lien.

In dealing with this subject, the courts of the land have not been at all harmonious. The Supreme Court of Colorado, in dealing with this subject under a statute exempting the leaseholder in certain instances, has held that a mechanic’s lien will not attach to the interest of the owner of the mine for work done or material furnished in working or developing a mine, where the work is done or material furnished at the instance of, or under a contract with, one whose only interest is that of lessee. (Wilkins v. Abell, 26 Colo. 462, 58 Pac. 612.)

The Supreme Court of Colorado has on several occasions referred to the case of Wilkins v. Abell, supra, and on each occasion has reaffirmed the rule as there laid down. In the case of Little Valeria Gold M. & N. Company v. Ingersoll, 14 Colo. App. 240, 59 Pac. 970, that court, after referring to their decision in the case of Wilkins v. Abell, said: "There must be some showing to the point that the owner of the realty was in some manner obligated, either because he was a privy and party to the contract of employment, or because, in some other way than by the lease, he authorized the lessee to contract, or because the agreement, by its terms, gave the lessee authority.”

In the case of Griffin v. Hurley, 7 Ariz. 399, 65 Pac. 147, that court laid down the rule that the interest of the lessee is alone liable.

In the case of Gould v. Wise, 18 Nev. 257, 3 Pac. 30, this court, speaking through Mr. Justice Belknap, held, in substance, that the interest of a lessor may be [14]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 902, 37 Nev. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lamb-v-goldfield-lucky-boy-mining-co-nev-1914.