Melrose v. Cooley

196 P. 105, 50 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 162
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1920
DocketCiv. No. 2141.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 P. 105 (Melrose v. Cooley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Melrose v. Cooley, 196 P. 105, 50 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 162 (Cal. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HART, J.

The appeal in this action is from a judgment for plaintiff in the superior court of Nevada County for $750, based on a complaint which sets forth two causes of action—the first for trespass, in tearing out a certain pipe-line, and the second for conversion by the defendants of the pipe-line so removed. The amount sued for was $14,800, being double the amount of actual damages claimed to have been suffered, the complaint alleging that the trespass was malicious and one with an evil intent to vex, annoy, and injure the plaintiff. The cause was tried before a jury.

This action grows out of a sale of a pipe-line under an execution issued on a judgment entered on the twentieth day of April, 1916, in an action wherein one J. H. Hunt sued the plaintiff’s husband, N. M. Melrose, to recover the sum of $494.23, alleged to be due said Hunt from said Melrose.

The complaint in the present action alleges that the plaintiff was the owner of a water right on Missouri ravine, in Nevada County, and was also the owner of a pipe-line leading from Missouri ravine to Iowa ravine and thence, to a reservoir, and that the defendants had knowledge of this ownership; that within one year preceding the commencement of the action (the action was commenced April 18, 1918), but at a date unknown to the plaintiff, the defendants tore out the pipe-line and flume mentioned and removed pipes comprising a part of said line and converted 1,300 feet thereof to their own use.

The controversy is as to the ownership of the pipe-line and flume seized and sold under the execution issued in the action of Hunt v. N. M. Melrose, above referred to, the plaintiff claiming that she acquired ownership thereof through a conveyance from her husband and also from one Fontz prior to the issuance and levy of said execution, and the defendants contending that the conveyance by her husband did not carry with it the pipe-line, etc., and the *770 conveyance of Fontz, if it passed any title at all to plaintiff, vested her only with a one-half interest in the property sold as indicated.

The evidence shows that N. M. Melrose, on or about January 1, 1914, purchased a mining claim known as the, “Missouri placer”; that the Missouri placer embraced the ground on which the diversion of the waters of a stream named and known as Missouri ravine was effected; that after said Melrose became the owner of the Missouri placer, he 'constructed the pipe-line and the flume, which are involved in this action, and which pipe-line led from Missouri ravine, he testifying that he built the pipe-line for the purpose of using the waters of Missouri ravine in working the Ocean Star mine for the Ocean Star Mining Company, of which he was then president and manager. All the pipe-line and the flume, which are referred to ini the complaint, with the possible exception of about ninety-six feet of the pipe-line, were placed by Melrose and were at all times maintained on and across lands owned by one Lucy W. Cooley. At the time that the pipe-line, etc., was built, the Cooley properties, which embraced the Ocean Star mine and which had previously been acquired by Lucy W. Cooley from her husband, were under option for the sale thereof to the Ocean Star Mining Company. Subsequently to the construction of the pipe-line by Mel-rose, the latter, by deed dated April 15, 1915, conveyed .the Missouri placer mine, together with the improvements thereon, to his wife, the plaintiff herein. In said deed of conveyance the pipe-line was not specifically mentioned. N. M. Melrose continued to operate and manage the Ocean Star Mining Company’s business until the month of October, 1915. At this particular time the option held by said mining company on the Cooley property had expired and was forfeited. On August 1, 1915, however, the Ocean Star Mining Company sold all its right, title, and interest in and to the said pipe-line to Kohler and Olson for the stated consideration of $1,868.00. On May 1, 1916, Kohler and Olson sold and transferred the pipe-line to Fontz, who, on October 7, 1916, sold an .undivided one-half interest in the pipe-line to the plaintiff, F. A. Melrose. The instrument conveying said property to Kohler and Olson was signed as follows; “Ocean Star Mining Co., pr. N. M. *771 Melrose, Pres, and Gen’l Manager. A. Perry, Secty & Treasurer, Vic. Pres. (Seal).”

J. H. Hunt, plaintiff in the action against N. M. Mel-rose, in -which the former obtained a judgment against the latter in the sum of $484.23, bought the pipe-line at the sale under the execution issued on said judgment, and, there having been no redemption, a sheriff’s deed including said pipe-line was executed to Hunt, who had previously granted his interest in the pipe-line to defendant, Klinker.

In the month of March, 1916, the defendant, Klinker, took possession of the Cooley properties which, as seen, had been under option to the Ocean Star Mining Company. Klinker, when taking such possession, was the representative of the defendant, Columbia Consolidated Mines Company. This company had become the owner of. several mines, including the Ocean Star. Possession of the Cooley properties was taken by the Columbia under an option from Lucy W. Cooley.

The plaintiff, over objection by defendants, was allowed to introduce in evidence a deed, dated March 16, 1914, from M. D. Cooley, purporting to convey to the Ocean Star Mining Company a right of way for a pipeline across what was known as the German quartz claim. There was, however, introduced by defendant a deed from M. D. Cooley to his wife, Lucy W. Cooley, dated October 25, 1913, granting to her said German quartz claim. There was no evidence showing that Lucy W. Cooley was not the owner of the German quartz claim by virtue of the latter deed at the time of the purported granting by her husband of a right of way for a pipe-line over said mine. It follows, therefore, that M. D. Cooley, when attempting to grant said right of way to the Ocean Star Mining Company; had no interest in the German quartz claim which he could convey.

The question of the ownership of the pipe-line m dispute would seem, from a mere superficial examination of this record, to be enveloped in more or less obscurity or, at least, confusion; but a careful analysis of the evidence, considered in the light of the law respecting appurtenances to real property, has made it clear to our minds that the plaintiff acquired no interest in the pipe-line by virtue of the conveyance to her by her husband of the Missouri *772 placer mine. There was no mention of the pipe-line in said instrument of conveyance, and the said pipe-line was neither appurtenant to nor a fixture of said mine, for it was not used, or even intended to be used, with that mine for its benefit (Civ. Code, sec. 662), or in working or developing said mine. (Civ. Code, sec. 661). Nor, in our opinion, was it a fixture to the Missouri placer within the meaning of section 1013 of the Civil Code, for it was placed on the property of said mine merely because it was at that point that the diversion of the waters of Missouri ravine, with which the line was connected, was accomplished, and, moreover, did not become an integral part of the property of said mine and could be removed at any time without injury to the premises to which it was affixed.- (Civ. Code, sec. 1019.)

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Bluebook (online)
196 P. 105, 50 Cal. App. 768, 1920 Cal. App. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melrose-v-cooley-calctapp-1920.