Malone v. Big Flat Gravel Mining Co.

18 P. 772, 76 Cal. 578, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 939
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1888
DocketNo. 9876
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 18 P. 772 (Malone v. Big Flat Gravel Mining 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
Malone v. Big Flat Gravel Mining Co., 18 P. 772, 76 Cal. 578, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 939 (Cal. 1888).

Opinion

Hayne, C.

Suit to foreclose laborers’ liens. The plaintiff is the assignee of twenty-six liens for labor performed upon certain mining claims owned and operated by the Big Flat Gravel Mining Company. The proceedings arose under and are to be governed by the law as it stood in 1880. Each lien is set up in a separate count. The court below gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the appeal is by the company and one Paris, who held a judgment lien.

1. The contract set forth in the notices of lien are different from the contracts set forth in the complaint. The notices all set forth contracts for labor at a fixed rate. The lien of. Heath, which is the first in the complaint, may be taken as a type of them all. Its statement of the contract is as follows, viz.: That the company “ entered into a contract with said S. R. Heath, under and by virtue of which said labor was performed, and the following is a statement of the terms, time given, and condition of said contract: To work at general blacksmithing in and upon said premises for an indefinite time, at the rate of seventy-five ($75) dollars per month, payable on demand.” In addition to the above, all the liens (except that of Heath) speak of “the contract price.” Independent of these latter words, however, we think it [581]*581is plain that the statement in the lien is that of a contract by which the rate of compensation is fixed. The statement in the complaint is of contracts by which the rate of compensation is not fixed. All the counts are similar in form. They allege in substance that the party performed labor upon the mine “to the extent and of the value of” so many dollars. If a promise had been alleged, it might have been argued that such allegation would cover the case either of an express or of an implied promise, and that the allegation as to value was surplus-age. But no promise having been alleged, the only promise that can be inferred is the one implied by law to pay the reasonable value of the labor, which would leave the important question as to the amount unsettled. This is an essentially different contract from those set out in the notices of lien; and as we understand the law, the plaintiff can recover only upon the contracts stated in the notices of lien. We do not mean to say that a difference in the amounts stated and the amounts proved would be fatal; and it is possible that there may be other differences which would not be material. But we think that in all essentials the contracts must be the same.

Such difference was a ground of demurrer for ambiguity. (Frazer v. Barlow, 63 Cal. 71.) The demurrer specified the ambiguity, and should have been sustained. In addition to this, the notices of lien, when offered in evidence, were objected to on the ground of a variance; and it was error to overrule said objections.

The foregoing is sufficient to dispose of the appeal; but inasmuch as certain questions, which will arise upon a retrial, have been argued, we proceed to consider them.

2. It is contended for appellants that there was a misjoinder of causes of action. The facts are, that the company owned about five hundred acres of placer-mining ground, which (according to the map at page 380 of the [582]*582transcript) consisted of four claims, designated respectively as A, B, C, and D. Claim C, which comprised 118 acres, appears to have been made up of smaller claims, among which is the John Mains claim of about forty acres. Upon this forty-acre claim was a saw-mill, which was moved from its former position on claim A. The claims were all adjoining each other; and the whole five hundred acres was in the form of a strip along Hurdy Gurdy Creek, which strip was bounded on one side by the creek, on the other side by the Big Flat ditch, which was used to supply water to the claims, on the north by McGrew Gulch and on the south by French Gulch. s The whole appears to have been used and operated as one mine. Twenty-three of the liens are upon the John Mains claim of forty acres, and upon the ditch. These notices mentioned the saw-mill and the connecting pipes, flumes, etc., and also some “ giants.” The remaining three liens are upon the whole five hundred acres, with the ditch and improvements.

The position is, in the first place, that the cause of action as to the John Mains claim should not have been joined with the cause of action as to the whole five hundred- acres, and that said five hundred acres consisted of at least four separate claims, which should not have been joined with each other or with the ditch; and in the second place, that there is stated a cause of action as to certain machinery, “ giants,” pipe, etc., which, if “ lienable at all, ought not to have been joined with the claims.

We do not think there was a misjoinder. Section 1195 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that “any number of persons claiming liens may join in the same action.” This provision, it will be observed, does not say whether the lien must be all upon the same property or simply against the same person. We' incline to the former construction. But we think that since the several claims all adjoin each other, with the ditch as a [583]*583backbone, and are all owned by the same owner, and were used and operated as one mine, they may be considered as one piece of property for the purpose of the present question. We do not understand that the five hundred acres consisted of land which was not subject to appropriation for mining purposes, as appears to have been the case in Williams v. 8. C. Mining Ass’n, 66 Cal. 198. As we gather from the record, the five hundred acres consisted of placer-mining ground. And a party is not restricted in the quantity which he may acquire by purchase, but may purchase as many adjoining claims as he can, and have them included in one patent. (Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636.) We do not say that the unity of the property follows from the unity of ownership alon’é, but from that and the other circumstances mentioned.

Taking the several claims to constitute one piece of property for the purposes of the mechanic’s lien law, we think there was no misjoinder of causes of action. All the liens were upon the John Mains claim, and the ditch and improvements, and the fact that three of them included something further is not material. The court can adjust the rights of the parties by its decree. (See, generally, People v. Hager, 52 Gal. 171; Brady v. Kelly, 52 Cal. 371.)

With reference to the iron pipe, giants, etc., we think they must be regarded as part of the mine, whether they were attached to it or not; for the Civil Code provides that all “machinery or tools used in working or developing a mine are to be deemed affixed to the mine.” (Civ. Code, sec. 661.)

The complaint is not very satisfactory in some of the above respects; but as the case must be reversed for the matter first mentioned, it can be amended so as to conform to the principles above stated.

3. It is contended for the appellants that the statement in the notices of lien as to the name of the person [584]*584by whom the claimant was employed is not sufficient. All the notices state in substance that the claimants were employed by the Big Flat Gravel Mining Company. The argument is, that this is the statement of a conclusion of law, and the code requires the notice of lien to state who, in fact,

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Bluebook (online)
18 P. 772, 76 Cal. 578, 1888 Cal. LEXIS 939, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malone-v-big-flat-gravel-mining-co-cal-1888.