Norris v. United Mineral Products Co.

158 P.2d 679, 61 Wyo. 386, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 19
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1945
Docket2306
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 679 (Norris v. United Mineral Products Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Norris v. United Mineral Products Co., 158 P.2d 679, 61 Wyo. 386, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 19 (Wyo. 1945).

Opinion

*393 OPINION

Riner, Justice.

In this proceeding by direct appeal the appellants, plaintiffs below, question the propriety of a judgment *394 of the District Court of Weston County, rendered in an action which was commenced in Crook County, and the venue thereof thereafter changed by stipulation of the parties to the County first mentioned. The action was one to quiet title to certain placer mining claims, the mineral sought to be obtained thereby being what is now commonly known as bentonite. See Chittim v. Belle Fourche Bentonite Products Company, 60 Wyo. 235, 149 Pac. 2d 142, 145, 146, for a brief general description of this mineral. Injunctive relief was also sought in the action by the plaintiffs against the defendants, who are now the respondents here, to restrain alleged continuous trespasses on the part of the latter upon ground which plaintiffs claimed as the owners thereof.

The parties who will usually be referred to subsequently as aligned in the District Court appear to agree that the material facts to be considered on appeal are substantially these:

J. Merle Blakeman, on August 31, 1934, filed in the United States Land Office at Buffalo, Wyoming, an application for an Oil and Gas Permit for the lands in controversy in this lawsuit and also other lands all of which were then public mineral lands of the United States. The permit thus applied for was granted by the Department of the Interior, April 9, 1936, and continued in force until it was cancelled on September 9, 1939, by that department of the government.

On March 20, 1936, the defendant, Paul R. PeterSon, and others associated with him, undertook to locate the <fMuddy No. 1” Bentonite Placer Claim, and, so far as the formal requirements of locating a placer mining claim including discovery of mineral, posting the lands and filing proper notices were concerned, these requirements appear to have been met. The lands included in this claim were: the NW^NW1^, of Section 28, *395 W%SW]4 Section 21, and NE^SE^ of Section 20, all in Township 49 North, Range 65 West of the 6th Principal Meridian, in Crook County, Wyoming. On that date also the defendant, Jack Dinwiddie with others undertook to locate the “Dinwiddie” Bentonite Placer Claim on the E^NE^ of said Section 20, Township 49 North, Range 65 West of the 6th Principal Meridian in said county and they also complied with the formal requirements of making a placer mineral location, as mentioned above, in connection with the “Muddy No. 1” claim. However, we may properly note that it should be kept in mind that these claims thus undertaken to be established were upon lands embraced in the Blakeman Oil and Gas Permit and while it was in full force and effect.

Nevertheless, these two locator groups appeared to have remained in undisturbed possession of their claims aforesaid not abandoning them at all but during each subsequent year taking the necessary legal steps to retain same through performance of the proper amount of annual labor for each claim or establishing due exemption therefrom. It seems that from March 20, 1936, and until September 25, 1939, these parties in fact engaged in removing the bentonite mineral from these claims and selling it.

After the cancellation of the Blakeman Permit on September 9, 1939, as above stated, the defendants still relying on their filings for the “Muddy No. 1” and “Dinwiddie” claims aforesaid, the plaintiffs went upon the ground and located the NW]4NW^4 of said Section 28, the W14SW34 of said Section 21, the NE%SE% of said Section 20, as the “Skinny No. 1” Bentonite Placer Mining Claim, and the NE14 of said Section 20 as the “Skinny No. 2” Bentonite Placer Mining Claim. It will be observed that the plaintiffs’ “No: 1” claim covered exactly all the ground included in the defend *396 ants’ “Muddy No. 1” claim already described, while the “Skinny No. 2” and the “Dinwiddie” were in conflict in respect of the EI/2NE14 of said Section 20. These locations of the plaintiffs’ were made September 26, 1939. The following day their location certificates were duly filed in the proper Crook County office. Subsequently affidavits of annual assessment work on plaintiff’s two claims for the period ending June 30, 1941, were filed as required by law.

November 2, 1940, and May 31, 1941, the “Muddy No. 1” locators aforesaid undertook to make supplemental and amended locations of that claim. Sundry conveyances from the locators of the “Muddy No. 1” and “Dinwiddie” claims appear to have been made but there is no question that all the parties interested in the ground in controversy were not before the District Court on the trial of the cause either as plaintiffs or defendants.

August 27, 1941, the locators of the two “Skinny” claims above described filed their petition in this lawsuit to quiet title relative to both these claims and prayed judgment against the defendants that “these plaintiffs be declared to be the lawful occupants and owners of the said mining claims as against any and all claims of the defendants and that the defendants be enjoined by this Court from further trespassing upon the said premises, removing bentonite therefrom or in any manner invading the rights and privileges of these plaintiffs or any of them in their peaceable possession of the said premises.” Additional relief was also asked that the defendants account for the value of the benton-ite removed from the plaintiffs’ claims and “that these plaintiffs be confirmed in their ownership and right to the peaceable possession of the said placer mining claims and that they have their costs herein expended.” The parties stipulated that the time of the defendants *397 for answering this pleading should be extended until October 11, 1941.

Dinwiddie and his associates made another location of the “Dinwiddie” placer claim on September 5, 1941, the certificate of location for which was filed for record in Crook County, September 10, 1941. Aside from its recitals as to marking the claim’s boundaries the certificate reads:

“KNOW ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS: That the undersigned citizens of the United States and the State of Wyoming, have located and claim by right of discovery and location, the Dinwiddie Placer Mining Claim, lying and being in an unorganized mining district, in Crook County, State of Wyoming, covering and embracing the East half of the Northeast Quarter of Section twenty, in Township Forty-nine North of Range Sixty-five West of the 6th P. M., containing 80 acres.
This location is made by the undersigned as an additional location, the undersigned being successors in interest of the locators of Dinwiddie Placer Mining Claim embracing the same lands herein located — made on March 20, 1936 and certificate of location of which was recorded on March 21, 1936 in the office of the county clerk of Crook County, Wyoming in Book II of location certificates at page 302 and without waiving any rights under said location but claiming all the benefits of said original location as well as all of the benefits of an original location of said described land as of this date.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 679, 61 Wyo. 386, 1945 Wyo. LEXIS 19, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norris-v-united-mineral-products-co-wyo-1945.