Moulton Mining Co. v. Anaconda Copper Mining Co.

23 F.2d 811, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3252
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 9, 1928
DocketNo. 5143
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 811 (Moulton Mining Co. v. Anaconda Copper Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moulton Mining Co. v. Anaconda Copper Mining Co., 23 F.2d 811, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3252 (9th Cir. 1928).

Opinion

HUNT, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs appellants brought suit against defendant appellee to quiet title to the Poser mining claim at Butte, Mont. The suit was brought under section 9479, Montana Revised Code, which authorizes an action against any person who may*elaim any right, title, estate, or interest in real estate adverse to plaintiffs’ ownership, whether such claim or possible claim be present or contingent, for the purpose of determining such claim, or possible claim, and quieting title to said real estate.

Plaintiffs alleged that they owned and possessed the Poser claim, and all veins, lodes, and ledges having their tops and apexes therein through their entire depth or downward course, measured between vertical planes passed through end lines; that do[812]*812fendant owns a group of mining claims adjoining the Poser claim on the south, all being subsequent in time of initiation and location of rights to the rights of the Poser; that within the Poser claim is the Rainbow lode, discovery vein of" the Poser, the entire width of the apex of the Rainbow being included within the surface boundaries of the Poser claim for its entire length, and crossing both’ end lines of the Poser; that there is, also within the surface boundaries of the Poser claim, the Poser vein, which extends longitudinally throughout the claim from end line to end line, and also a vein or lode, for convenience designated the Intermediate vein, the entire apex of which extends longitudinally throughout the Poser from end line to end line; that the Poser and the Intermediate dip southerly and penetrate underneath the surface of the adjoining group of claims of defendant; that in the Poser claim, between the 1,000 and 1,300 levels of the workings, the Poser vein crosses and extends beyond the vertical plane, passing through the southerly side boundary of the Poser claim, and is found running down beneath the surface of the adjoining claims of defendant; that defendant claims an interest adverse to plaintiffs in and to the Poser and Intermediate veins, and particularly those parts of the Poser and Intermediate which lie vertically beneath the surface .of the defendant’s group of claims, and between the Poser end line planes produced southerly as described, and has at various places penetrated each vein with its mine workings; that the claims of defendant, as to its ownership of the said claims of the Poser and Intermediate existing vertically beneath the surface of defendant’s group, and between the Poser claim end line planes produced as aforesaid, are groundless, and a cloud upon the title of the plaintiffs to the Poser and Intermediate veins as described, which are a part of the Poser claim, and that defendant has no right in or to said extralateral claims of either the Poser or the Intermediate vein, as described in the complaint, or to any portion thereof; that defendant penetrated into ex-tralateral parts of the Poser and intermediate veins as described, and extracted valuable ore, and threaten to continue workings upon said extralateral portions of the Poser and Intermediate veins.

The prayer is that defendant be required to set forth the nature of its claim to said ex-tralateral portions of the Poser and Intermediate veins or lodes described, and that all adverse claims to the same or any portion .thereof be determined by a decree of the court; that it be adjudged that defendant has no estate or interest whatever to any portion of the Poser or Intermediate veins as described in the complaint; that plaintiffs’ title be decreed to be good, that injunction issue, and that accounting be had.

By answer defendant admitted its ownership of a group of mining claims adjoining the Poser claim on the south; alleged ownership of all veins and ore bodies within the surface boundaries extended downward vertically of such claims south of the Poser; alleged that the Rainbow lode has its apex within the surface boundaries of the Poser claim for its entire length; denied the existence of the “alleged and pretended” Poser and Intermediate veins or lodes, or of any segment, spur, or branch thereof, or that defendant claims any ownership of any segment ór segments of said veins; denied that it mined any ore which belonged to plaintiffs, and prayed for a decree dismissing the complaint..

Upon the trial it was stipulated that the Poser claim was prior in time in discovery and location to the claims of defendant to the south, and that discovery, on the Poser was made on the Rainbow lode at the west end line of the claim as described in the patent.

Certain admissions of the respective parties as to ownership and possession of their respective mining claims narrowed the main issue to the question whether the Poser and Intermediate veins existed as alleged. Some advance was made in solving that issue as to the Intermediate vein by the admission of defendant that there was a vein called the Intermediate, branching from the Rainbow in the Poser subsurface. At the close of the trial the defendant admitted that part of a vein, called by plaintiffs their Intermediate vein, but which defendant called the Yiew vein, was the property of plaintiffs to an extent as follows:

“In so far as the plaintiff has the apex of the View vein at any place westerly from the point where the Emily crosses the south side line of the Poser claim, they are entitled to all ore and minerals in the Yiew vein between the plane of their west end line and a parallel plane drawn down through the point where the Emily crosses the south side line of the Poser.”

.Much testimony was heard, and the court, in a carefully considered opinion, held, substantially, that the Poser claim is located on and lengthwise of the Rainbow, of northerly dip and east-west age; that both are intersected by the Emily vein of northeasterly [813]*813dip and northwest age; that the Emily vein at the surface enters the Poser claim 370 feet west of the southeast corner, and departs 50 feet east of the northwest corner; that at the surface a vein, called Poser by plaintiffs and Pilot by defendant, enters the claim at the southeast comer, dips northerly, running northwesterly to the east side of the Emily; that at some depth the ^Intermediate vein branches from the south side of the Rainbow west of the Emily, dips southerly, and runs easterly; that there are other veins in the Poser; that the Black Rock fault of southerly dip courses through the Poser claim from end line to end line; that within defendant’s claims arc veins which apex in defendant’s ground; that of these veins some (which are named) are of east-west age, with southerly dip and easterly and westerly strike; that there are also the Emily and one other vein of northwest age, having northeasterly dip and northwesterly strike; that the Black Rock fault is also within these claims; that from 100 to 800 feet south of the Poser claim, and from 1,300 to 3,000 feet in depth, thei-e are extensive bodies of ore within defendant’s vertical boundaries, with apexes in defendant’s ground; that, inasmuch as none of the ore bodies are in the Poser or Pilot vein east of the Emily vein, the questions for decision were (1) the existence of the Poser vein west of the Emily vein, and (2) the relation of the Intermediate vein to the small ore body on the 2,800-foot level. It was found that what is called the Poser vein was not a vein of the true fissure type characteristic of the Butte district, but merely a conjugated fracture and stock work and of vein segments, and on the east end was made up from the Pilot vein, belonging to plaintiffs.

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 811, 1928 U.S. App. LEXIS 3252, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulton-mining-co-v-anaconda-copper-mining-co-ca9-1928.