Rice Oil Co. v. Toole County

284 P. 145, 86 Mont. 427, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 14
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1930
DocketNo. 6,512.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 284 P. 145 (Rice Oil Co. v. Toole County) 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
Rice Oil Co. v. Toole County, 284 P. 145, 86 Mont. 427, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 14 (Mo. 1930).

Opinion

*430 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover from Toole county a portion of the net proceeds tax assessed to plaintiff in the year 1926 on account of oil produced from the tracts of land hereinafter mentioned during the year 1925. The cause was tried upon an agreed statement of facts and comes here upon defendant’s appeal. Specifications of error are assigned by defendant and cross-assignments by plaintiff.

All the questions presented have been settled by the decisions in Fulton Oil Co. v. Toole County, ante, p. 367, 283 Pac. 769, and Queen City Oil Co. v. Toole County, ante, p. 401, 283 Pac. 771, except that which we shall now discuss.

In 1925 plaintiff was drilling upon, and extracting oil from, two eighty-acre tracts in virtue of two operating agreements. One tract was included in the Byrne lease, the other in the Stannard lease, both of which will be referred to later.

Of the oil produced from each tract the plaintiff was entitled to seventy-five per cent, the remaining twenty-five per cent going to the land owners and royalty holders.

It was agreed that the two eighty-acre tracts “at all times during the year 1925 were operated by the plaintiff with one camp, one set of employees and officers of the plaintiff corporation, and that said tracts adjoin each other, and are situated on the same geological structure, and were most profitably and advantageously operated as one unit.”

It appears that plaintiff operated the Byrne tract at a loss of approximately $45,000, while the net proceeds from the operation of the Stannard tract were large. Upon the theory that the two tracts of land were operated as a “mine,” plaintiff in mailing its return to the state board of equalization claimed the right to deduct the losses sustained on the Byrne tract from the profits realized from the Stannard tract. This *431 claim was denied by tbe state board of equalization, which found the net proceeds from oil obtained from the Stannard tract to be $247,127.46, certifying the fact to the board of county commissioners of Toole county, which fixed the tax rate at 49.33 mills on each dollar of valuation. The total tax assessed against plaintiff was $12,191.76. On May 31, 1926, plaintiff paid to the county treasurer $6,095.88, the second installment of the tax, but paid $5,993.83 thereof under protest and within sixty days thereafter began this suit. The court entered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $3,187.89, with costs of suit.

The trial court decided correctly that plaintiff was not liable for the taxes upon the twenty-five per cent of the oil belonging to the land and royalty owners (Fulton Oil Co. v. Toole County, supra; Queen City Oil Co. v. Toole County, supra), but evidently was of the opinion that the board of equalization erred in declining to allow plaintiff the losses mentioned above.

Oil is a mineral and the process of extracting it from the rocks is mining. (Burke v. Southern Pac. R. R. Co., 234 U. S. 669, 58 L. Ed. 1527, 34 Sup. Ct. Rep. 907.) Consequently, this court has said an oil-well is a mine. (Mid-Northern Oil Co. v. Walker, 65 Mont. 414, 211 Pac. 353.)

Upon the postulate that an oil-well is a mine it is sought to apply to adjoining tracts of ground held under oil leases the rules governing the development and operation of mining claims held in group.

From the earliest period in which mining for gold and silver was pursued as a business, says Mr. Lindley in his standard work on Mines, section 630, miners were in the habit of consolidating adjoining claims, whether they consisted of one or more original locations, into one, for convenience and economy in working them (St. Louis Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U. S. 636, 26 L. Ed. 875; 11 Morr. Min. Rep. 673; Jackson v. Roby, 109 U. S. 440, 27 L. Ed. 990, 3 Sup. Ct. Rep. 301), and that policy was made applicable to the performance of annual assessment work upon mining claims by *432 section 2324, United States Revised Statutes (U. S. C. A., Title 30, Chap. 2, sec. 28), wbicb provides that, “where such claims are held in common, such expenditure may be made upon any one claim.”

In applying the law it was held generally that claims must be contiguous (Chambers v. Harrington, 111 U. S. 350, 28 L. Ed. 452, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 428), that there must be a community of interest in each claim (Eberle v. Carmichael, 8 N. M. 169, 42 Pac. 95; Lindley on Mines, 2d ed., sec. 630), and that the work performed or improvements made must manifestly tend to the development of all the claims in the group (Copper Mountain M. & S. Co. v. Butte & Corbin Con. Copper & Silver Min. Co., 39 Mont. 487, 133 Am. St. Rep. 595, 104 Pac. 540). The cardinal principle is that the work done upon one claim or more must inure to the benefit of all.

It is true that the term “mine,” means mining property so developed as to yield, or to be capable of yielding, a profit, and this regardless of how the title to the land in which the mineral is found has been acquired (Northern Pac. Ry. Co. v. Musselshell County, 54 Mont. 96, 169 Pac. 53), but this does not trench upon the rules above announced. The principle that the work done upon the consolidated property shall be designed for the benefit of the property as a whole is still controlling. A familiar example is the exploitation of a lode upon which may be located several mining claims; the lode, for the benefit and development of all the claims, may best be exploited by a tunnel, from which cross-cuts may be run, upraises made, and winzes sunk. The entire development bears a correlation to the main object. To what extent sinking wells, generally far apart, over wide areas in developing, or attempting to develop, an oil-field is analogous to mining within the law as above outlined, need not be considered, and the question is one upon which we reserve an opinion.

In this case we have one tract of eighty acres patented to Byrne, the original lessor, who leased the land to Thompson, who assigned the lease to the Kalispell-Kevin Oil Company, which in turn entered into an operating agreement with *433 a predecessor of tbe plaintiff; there was reserved to Byrne and the Kalispell-Kevin Oil Company in the aggregate twenty-five per cent of the oil, or its equivalent.

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Rice Oil Co. v. Toole County
284 P. 147 (Montana Supreme Court, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
284 P. 145, 86 Mont. 427, 1930 Mont. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rice-oil-co-v-toole-county-mont-1930.