Mullins v. Butte Hardware Co.

65 P. 1004, 25 Mont. 525, 1901 Mont. LEXIS 65
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1901
DocketNo. 1,332
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 65 P. 1004 (Mullins v. Butte Hardware Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mullins v. Butte Hardware Co., 65 P. 1004, 25 Mont. 525, 1901 Mont. LEXIS 65 (Mo. 1901).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE PIGOTT

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mullins, the plaintiff, and the Butte Hardware Company, a corporation, one of the defendants, have appealed from a judgment and from orders denying motions for a new trial in an action for the partition of the Yellow Jack quartz lode mining claim.

On May 13, 1891, the claim, which is now within the corporate limits of the city of Butte, was located by one Cummings. "When the location was made and for some time theretofore, Cummings, one Bowen, one Moss, one Hamilton and perhaps others, were occupying parts of the surface ground, each having [527]*527a dwelling house or other visible evidence of possession upon the part occupied by him. The principal purpose of making the location was to obtain title to the surface of the claim in order thereby to protect the occupants in their holdings and secure to them in severalty the ownership of the land used by them respectively. With this object chiefly in view the occupants agreed among themselves that Cummings should locate the claim for the benefit of all, that each would contribute his proportionate share of the expenses incident to procuring title, and that when patent issued the proper conveyances would be made, the one to the other, in order to vest in each full title to tire surface ground occupied by him, and also to vest in him an undivided interest in the minerals in the same proportion as his surface holding bore to the entire surface. In compliance with the agreement the claim was located by Cummings. The receiver’s receipt was issued on December 30, 1884, and recorded December 3, 1887. On December 21, 1893, the patent was issued to him and three others (including one Schwab), who had succeeded to the interests of certain of the occupants. The patent was duly recorded on January 17, 1894. The expenses were paid proportionátely by those interested and the agreement fully performed except as to the making of the deeds conveying the surface rights in severalty to the respective occupants, Cummings delivering deeds of conveyances whereby the undivided interests of the respective persons in the mining claim were transferred to them in the proportions theretofore agreed upon, and the legal title which Cummings should acquire by patent was assured to them according to their several undivided equitable interests. All the deeds were duly recorded, the last on October 1, 1883. None of these deeds to the original occupants described or referred to any surface-ground interest as distinguished from undivided interests in the whole claim, nor did it in any way attempt to describe an interest in severalty. In 1885 Cummings made a deed to the defendant. Nickel which, in addition to an undivided one-sixteenth interest in the Yellow Jack claim, purports to convey a parcel of land 50 by [528]*528248 feet in area which had been occupied by Cummings; but, as will be seen, this is not important in so far as the rights of the appellants are involved.

Intermediate the location of 1819 and the issuance of patent, as well as subsequently,'sundry deeds, mortages, and other instruments were executed by the different owners to whom Cummings had, prior to 1884, conveyed undivided interests, in most of which the property conveyed or affected was described as undivided interests in the Yellow Jack lode claim, no reference being- made to surface rights as distinguished or as held separate from the mineral interests. During all of this period, extending from a date anterior to the location down to the time when this action was begun, most of the respective occupants of the surface of the claim at the time of its location, and their successors in title, remained in open, visible, and notorious possession of, and paid taxes upon, the parts of the surface originally occupied and which they had agreed to convey after patent so that each might own in severalty. Some of the occupants and their grantees — notably Bowen, McDermott, and Nickel — erected permanent and valuable buildings. After 1885 there were several meetings had' for the purpose of carrying out the agreement made among the original occupants of the several parcels of the surface ground, but owing to the nonattendance of one or more of the owners nothing further was ever done. The superintendent of the Butte Hardware Company attended some of these meetings. Mullins, is not shown to have had notice or knowledg'e of the attempts to consummate the original agreement.

In the consideration of these appeals we shall endeavor to confine ourselves to the points made by counsel. We feel justified under the circumstances of the case in the inference that any question not presented by counsel is waived or its solution deemed unnecessary. So viewing the case, the plaintiff’s chain of record title may be stated as follows: Deed dated June V, 1880, by Cummings, the locator, conveying to Moss an undivided one-half interest in the claim; mortgage dated January. [529]*52923, 1882, by Moss to one Hanser, conveying the same undivided interest (and purporting to convey also a piece of ground in area 67 by 120 feet) ; sheriff’s deed consequent upon sale under foreclosure of the mortgage dated July 10, 1883; deed dated November 29, 1889, by Hauser to one Davis, of an undivided half interest, (subject to a prior deed of November 2, 1885, from Hauser to one Raymond purporting to convey the lot just mentioned) ; and deed made in 1895 by Davis to' the plaintiff conveying all his interest (thirty undivided sixty-fourths) in the Yellow Jack lode claim. The record title of the Butte Hardware Company, so far as it is necessary to state it, stands thus: On June 18, 1880, Cummings conveyed to one Schwab an undivided one-fourth interest in the claim; on May 5, 1884, Schwab conveyed an undivided one-eighth interest to the Butte Hardware Company. The record titles of the respondents, the Bowen heirs, and McDermott, and Fitschen stand thus: Deed by Cummings conveying to Bowen one undivided eighth interest in the Yellow Jack lode claim, made and placed of record October 1, 1883; deed by Bowen conveying to McDermott one undivided sixteenth interest in the claim, made November 14 and placed of record November 15, 1883; deed by Bowen to Hauser and Fitschen purporting to convey to them an undivided one-eighth interest in the claim, made and recorded D&cember 29, 1884; agreement by Hauser, Fitschen, Cummings, and Schwab (grantees named in the patent) with Bowen, to convey to him when patent should be issued an undivided one-eighth interest in the claim, made December 29, 1884, recorded July 11, 1885; through mesne conveyances the respondents named are clothed with record title to certain undivided interests in the claim.

The title of Moss to an undivided thirty-sixty-fourths interest in the claim having been thus vested in the plaintiff, he brought this action for the partition of the Yellow Jack lode claim, including the entire property conveyed by the patent irrespective of any supposed surface rights other than those incident to; following, and covered by, the title to the claim as [530]*530located and patented.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 1004, 25 Mont. 525, 1901 Mont. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-butte-hardware-co-mont-1901.