Park City Meat Co. v. Comstock Silver King Mining Co.

103 P. 254, 36 Utah 145, 1909 Utah LEXIS 59
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 1909
DocketNo. 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 103 P. 254 (Park City Meat Co. v. Comstock Silver King Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Park City Meat Co. v. Comstock Silver King Mining Co., 103 P. 254, 36 Utah 145, 1909 Utah LEXIS 59 (Utah 1909).

Opinion

EEION, J.

Appellants, in tbeir complaint, after stating tbe necessary matters of inducement, in substance, allege: That on the 19th day of February, 1906, each of them obtained a judgment for specific amounts stated in the district court of Summit County, Utah, against the respondent “Comstock Silver Mining Company, hereafter called “Comstock Company” ; that thereafter, on the 10th day of April, 1906, executions were duly issued upon said judgments, which have been returned wholly unsatisfied; that said Comstock Company has no property upon which an execution can be levied, unless it is the owner of two certain parcels of mining ground which are a part of what is known as the “White Ilawk mining claim,” situated in said Summit County, which parcels were, by said Comstock Company, used for dumping purposes and for a shaft and shafthouse and hoisting works with the machinery and appliances connected therewith. The parcels of ground, which are described by metes and bounds, are somewhat irregular in shape; one being approximately 245 by 50 and the-other 245 by about 100 feet, more or less. It is further alleged that the White Hawk and Black Hawk mining claims are adjoining claims,, the north side line of the former being identical with the south side line of the latter, and the two parcels of ground each are within the boundaries of the White Hawk claim adjoining the south boundary of the Black Hawk claim,, and thus connect with the last-named claim, and in effect constitute an addition thereto.

It is further alleged. That said White Hawk mining claim, as appears from the records of Summit County, stands in the name of the respondent California Mining & Milling-Company, hereafter designated “California Company.” [150]*150That in May, 1901, the respondent Comstock Company was the owner of the Comstock, the Black ITawk, the Intervention, and the Black Bear lode mining claims, all of the aforesaid' mining claims being in Summit County, "Utah, sand that the California Company, at that time, was the owner of the aforesaid White Hawk lode mining claim, also in Summit County. That on or about the date last aforesaid, the said Comstock Company and said California Company entered into an agreement in writing in the form of a conveyance, whereby the said Comstock Company “became the owner forever to dig and sink a shaft upon the said White Hawk mining claim at the point where the shaft dug by said company then existed and now exists, and the perpetual right to the use of that-portion of said White Hawk claim embraced within” the parcels of land above referred to for dumping purposes, “and also the right to occupy forever the ground then and now occupied by its shafthouse and hoisting works for such purposes.” That said Comstock Company, in pursuance of -said agreement, has occupied said ground, and has sunk thereon a deep shaft, and has constructed underground drifts therefrom into said Black Hawk mining claim, and has erected on said ground a shafthouse and placed therein hoisting machinery and the necessary fixtures and appliances in connection therewith for hoisting ore and waste from said mine through said drift and shaft, and has expended large sums of money thereon. “That on or about the 13th day of September, 1905, in the Circuit Court of the Hnited States for the District of Utah, in an action then and there pending, in the nature of an action to foreclose a mechanic’s lien, in which the Mine & Smelter Supply Company was plaintiff and the defendant herein the Comstock Company was' defendant, a decree of foreclosure was duly made, rendered, and entered, wherein it was adjudged that the said Comstock Company was indebted to said Mine & Smelter Supply Company in the sum of $12,155.74, together with interest and costs; and also further adjudged that the said Black Hawk lode mining claim, lot No. 208, said Comstock lode mining claim, lot [151]*151207, the Intervention lode mining claim, lot 308, and the Black Bear lode mining claim, lot 309, together with a mill situate thereon and used in connection therewith, together with the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereunto belonging and in any wise appertaining, to be sold by S. H. lewis, master in chancery of said court, for the purpose of satisfying the amount of said judgment, interest, costs, and accruing costs, and the same was by said master in chancery on or about the- day of -, 1905, sold to said Mine & Smelter Supply Company. That the lien foreclosed in said action was claimed for material and machinery furnished in and about the construction of said mill.” That a deed was duly issue by said master in chancery to said Mine & Smelter Supply Company for said mining claims and appurtenances, and said' supply company thereafter duly sold and transferred said mining claims and the property acquired at said foreclosure sale to the respondent EL A. McOorniek. That the Comstock Company claims “that all of its right, title, and ownership in and to any portion of the surface of said White Hawk mining claim for dumping purposes, and all its right, title, and interest in said White Hawk mining claim, in the nature of a right to sink and maintain a shaft thereon and drive drifts and tunnels therefrom, and to operate the same for mining purposes, and its right to erect thereon and maintain forever a shafthouse for hoisting purposes from said shaft, and that said shafthouse and fixtures therein and machinery used in connection therewith and in said shaft and said drifts therefrom, passed by reason of said master’s deed to the said Mine & Smelter Supply Company,” and from said company to said H. A. McComick, who now claims to be the owner. The claims aforesaid are alleged to be wrongful and fraudulent, and it is alleged that the respondent Comstock Company is in fact the owner of said parcels of ground used for a shafthouse and appliances used in connection therewith, consisting of boilers, pumps, wire cables, mine cages, track rails in tunnel, blacksmith shop, and other fixtures. That the foregoing property is all the property now owned by said [152]*152Comstock Company; but, in view of the claims of the respondents, appellants cannot proceed in law to satisfy their judgments, wherefore appropriate relief in the premises is prayed for.

To this complaint the respondents Comstock Company and H. A. McCornick demurred generally. The demurrer was sustained by the district court, and the appellants, electing to stand on their complaint, the court entered judgment dismissing the action, and hence this appeal.

Referring ta the brief of counsel for appellants, the question presented for decision, stated in their own language, is as follows: “The real issue is: does a lienor acquire rights to lands and to buildings situate thereon, and machinery contained therein, upon which he does not specifically claim a lien, and none of which are described or referred to in the claim of lien, on the ground that such land, buildings, and machinery are appurtenances of the lands and premises as actually described? Our contention is that he cannot.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
103 P. 254, 36 Utah 145, 1909 Utah LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/park-city-meat-co-v-comstock-silver-king-mining-co-utah-1909.