Mine & Smelter Supply Co. v. Idaho Consolidated Mines Co.

118 P. 301, 20 Idaho 300, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 97
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 118 P. 301 (Mine & Smelter Supply Co. v. Idaho Consolidated Mines Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mine & Smelter Supply Co. v. Idaho Consolidated Mines Co., 118 P. 301, 20 Idaho 300, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 97 (Idaho 1911).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

This is a controversy between a lien claimant for materials furnished and a mortgagee as to the validity and priority of a lien claim. The appellant, the Commercial and Savings Bank of Racine, Wis., holds a mortgage of $250,000 against the Idaho Consolidated Mines Co., which was filed of record on the 10th day of February, 1909. The respondent, the Mine and Smelter Supply Company, claims a lien on the property covered by the mortgage for materials and supplies furnished between the 5th day of November, 1907, and the 17th day of September, 1909, for the construction of mills and assay office and equipping the mill and mine. Judgment and decree were entered establishing the respondent’s lien and its priority over the appellant’s mortgage, and this appeal has been prosecuted.

No question arises over the execution of the mortgage or its validity or the amount due thereon. Neither is there any dispute over the amount due to the respondent. The only real question to be determined is whether the material and supplies furnished were supplied under such terms and conditions, or under such a contract,, as will bring the case within the purview of the statute ,and entitle the respondent to a lien therefor. The whole matter reduces itself down to more of a question of fact than law, and has necessitated a very diligent examination of the entire evidence in the case. Our examinartion of the facts as disclosed by the record has not been as illuminating as a record ought to be in such a case. Some of the facts which we consider very essential and for which we have searched diligently are so obscured by verbiage and some seeming evasions that we find ourselves in doubt as to the true situation in several respects. We gather, however, in substance the following conditions from the record:

The Idaho Consolidated Mines Co., which was the owner of a large mining property commonly known as the Minnie Moore Mine, in Blaine county, was working and operating the mine, [304]*304and for some seven or eight years had been running an open account with respondent for supplies and materials used in repairing and operating the mine. About July, 1907, Irvin E. Rockwell, the company’s manager, entered into negotiations with the respondent for the purpose of securing a credit with the company sufficient to cover the purchase of such materials and supplies as would be necessary for the construction of a quartz-mill and the adjuncts thereto, and the equipping and supplying of an assay office, and such other works and equipments as were incident to or necessary in connection with such a mill and mine. The Mine and Smelter Supply Company sent its agent to the company’s mine, where he looked over the situation and made estimates as to the probable expense that would be incurred in the work proposed, and he reached the final conclusion that it would cost at least $15,000. It was thereupon agreed that the company might go ahead with the construction of its mill and the equipping of the mill and mine as proposed, and that the respondent company would furnish the materials and carry the account from one to two years. The mining company accordingly began sending in its orders for various materials, supplies and machinery, and orders for various items were sent from time to time for a period covering nearly two years. The orders always designated the particular things desired, but, with the exception of a very few items, it does not appear that any designation was made in the orders as to what the items were for, that is, whether they were for the mill or the mine or were ordinary running supplies. The plans for the mill were changed at least once, if not a couple times. It seems that in the first place the plan contemplated a two-unit mill, or a wet and dry side mill. In the course of the work, however, the mining company secured a new engineer, and the company finally determined on a different process for the unit B or the wet side of the mill. This was finally determined upon some six months after the contract had been made whereby the mining company was to secure the credit from respondent. The work was carried along and finally completed, and in the meanwhile the mining company had ordered [305]*305equipment and supplies aggregating $30,506.83. During the same time, it paid $18,302.16. There is no controversy here but that the lien, if any exists at all, relates back to the date of the commencement of the work or improvement or the commencement to furnish the material. (Sec. 5114, Rev. Codes; Pacific States etc. Co. v. Dubois, 11 Ida. 335, 83 Pac. 513.)

The question now arises as to whether this whole amount can be properly claimed as having been furnished under the contract for the construction and equipment of the mill and assay office and such work as was contemplated at the time the credit was granted, or whether a part of it only was furnished on that contract and the balance on a general open, current account for general supplies. The appellant contends that $7,655.99 of the sum here claimed was furnished on what is designated “General Sales Account,” and was never supplied under the contract for materials and supplies on the mill contract, and that the balance, $4,548.68, remains due on what is designated the “Mill Equipment Account,” and that the company failed to file its lien within the statutory time after the last item was furnished, and that it can therefore have no lien for this balance. The record discloses that the respondent company, after the orders had reached some twenty or twenty-two thousand dollars, began protesting to the mining company that the account was becoming too large and that it must be reduced, and that they could not allow the indebtedness to increase or fill orders on hand until some arrangement might be made. So far as the supply company is concerned, it appears that all orders furnished were furnished on one and the same account. It is admitted that the account was paid off and all indebtedness was satisfied for articles up to the 5th day of November, 1907. It is likewise admitted that the articles and materials covered by this action were furnished between the 5th day of November, 1907, and the 17th day of September, 1909. The last article appears to have been furnished on the latter date. The lien was filed November 26, 1909. This brings the filing of the lien within the statutory time, and if the materials and articles herein for which this [306]*306claim is filed come properly within the lien law and the contract or agreement of the parties, then the lien should be allowed.

Rockwell, the managing and purchasing agent for the mining company,rtestified as follows: “It is a fact that between the 5th day of November, 1907, and the 17th day of September, 1909, that I ordered goods and supplies from the Mine and Smelter Supply Co. and that the same haven’t been paid for, and that involved a total amount of just $12,204.67; and it is a fact that all goods ordered prior to that time had been paid for by our company.” Now, it appears from the evidence of Rockwell and his bookkeeper that the books of the mining company were kept so as to show two accounts, one designated as “Mill Equipment Account” and the other as “General Sales Account.” It is claimed by the appellant that the articles purchased and entered in the mill equipment account were the only articles and material that properly comes within the terms of the contract and for which a lien could be had, and that those items entered under the general sales account were an open and current account and not intended to be used or applied under the special contract for the mill supplies, and that the respondent was not entitled to any lien for that claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P. 301, 20 Idaho 300, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mine-smelter-supply-co-v-idaho-consolidated-mines-co-idaho-1911.