Rimledge Uranium & Mining Corp. v. Federal Resources Corp.

374 P.2d 20, 13 Utah 2d 329, 1962 Utah LEXIS 210
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 1962
Docket9604
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 374 P.2d 20 (Rimledge Uranium & Mining Corp. v. Federal Resources Corp.) 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
Rimledge Uranium & Mining Corp. v. Federal Resources Corp., 374 P.2d 20, 13 Utah 2d 329, 1962 Utah LEXIS 210 (Utah 1962).

Opinion

CALLISTER, Justice.

Plaintiffs instituted this suit for an accounting of royalties due from defendants and for a declaratory judgment as to the ■proper basis for determining the royalties. From a summary judgment in favor of defendants, plaintiffs appeal.

In 1953 Robert B. Daniel and A. T. Pryor, Sr. located upon the Colorado Plateau some mining claims known as the “Radon group.” In the same year these locators executed a mining deed to one Reuckhaus, as trustee, in which was reserved “a royalty of fifteen per cent (15%) of all gross proceeds from the sale of ore from said claims, the gross proceeds to include any bonuses or premiums upon the ore mined, but shall not include transportation and development allowances paid or granted to the lessees(emphasis added)

In November, 1954, Daniel and Pryor assigned to U & I Uranium Corporation *331 one-third ‘ of their royalty interest. ' The royalty basis in this assignment was' “the net mill or smelter returns from any or all ore to be thereafter shipped or produced from said mining ground.” U & I then conveyed to W. E. McCormick “two-fifths (2/s) of said five per cent (5%) royalty, being a two per cent (2%) royalty from gross sales of all ore that may be taken from said ground.” This assignment also recited that U & I had purchased from Daniel and Pryor “one-third (%) of said royalty so reserved, being a royalty of five per' cent (5%) of the gross sales of oré from said mining ground.”

W. E. McCormick then -assigned'to plaintiff Rimledge Uranium and' Mining -Corporation “a royalty interest of two per cent (2%) of gross sales of oré extracted'.; i* * from * * * the Radon group.” Rim-ledge then conveyed to plaintiff -Kenneth J. McCormick “a gross royalty of twenty-five hundredths of one per cent (.25%) of the gross proceeds fro-m the sale of ores, and minerals extracted, mined, removed 'and sold. * * * ” ^

Prior to the assignment by W. E. McCormick to Rimledge, he quitclaimed to the predecessor of defendant Federal Resources Corporation any interest he might have in the mining claims apart from his royalty interest. In return he was given a letter - relating to his royalty interest. This-’ letter contained the following:' '

“Federal Uranium Corporation hereby acknowledges and confirms' that -you are the owner of a royalty of two .per cent (2%) of all the gross proceeds from the sale of all ore from the lode mining claims listed above, the gross proceeds to include any bonuses or premiums upon the ores mined, btit shall not include transportation and development allowances paid or granted to the owners of said claims; it is further acknowledged that the aforesaid royalty of two per cent (2%) of all gross proceeds, as above specified, shall be paid by the .oré depot or purchaser directly to you. * * * ” (Emphasis added.)

Under the Atomic Energy Act of 1946 1 ownership of all uranium in the public domain was reserved to the United States, and under the same act, the Atomic Energy Commission was created to administer the government’s uranium program. Under its regulations, the AEC or its authorized agents were designated as the sole, authorized purchasers of uranium ore. During all times pertinent hereto there was in effect AEC Domestic Uranium Program Circulars 5 and 6. Circular 5 established minimum guaranteed prices for uranium ore produced on the Colorado Plateau and provided *332 for development and transportation allowances. Circular 6 provided for the payment of bonuses for ore sold to the AEC from eligible mining claims.

In August, 1955, defendants began selling unconcentrated uranium ore from the Radon mining claims to the AEC. The ore was sold to the AEC at the prices set forth in Circular 5. In the early part of 1957 the Uranium Reduction Company completed a mill at Moab, Utah, and defendants obtained a license from the AEC to sell ore to URC. The initial contract between defendants and URC provided that the latter purchase the unconcentrated ore at Circular 5 prices.

Apparently to obtain a more favorable tax treatment, the defendants, on July 1, 1958, entered into a new arrangement with URC. Under this arrangement the defendants delivered the ore to the mill and retained title thereto until the milling process was completed, and then the concentrated ore was sold to URC. Two separate agreements were made: a Custom Milling Agreement and a Concentrate Purchase Agreement. Under the first it is provided the URC shall process ore for the defendants who, in turn, are required to pay certain processing charges. The Concentrate Purchase Agreement provided that URC would purchase the concentrate at an amount equal to Circular 5 prices plus milling charges.

Since ore was first sold in 1955, and continuing until the commencement of this lawsuit, the defendants have computed and paid the royalties based on Circular 5 prices for unconcentrated ore.

Plaintiffs brought this action for an accounting and a declaratory judgment that the royalties were to be computed on the gross proceeds of the sale of the ore, meaning the proceeds derived from the sale of the concentrated ore to URC without deductions for milling charges. Defendants moved for a summary judgment asking that the royalty basis be determined as the sale price of raw ore or, if there is no such sale, the value of raw ore in the vicinity in which the ore is mined, or in the alternative, on the proceeds of the sale of the concentrated ore less plaintiffs’ proportionate share of the costs of milling. Plaintiffs made a cross-motion for summary judgment asking that the defendants be ordered to render an accounting of “2% of all gross proceeds from the sale of all ore * * * based upon the sale price actually received.”

In granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment and denying plaintiffs’, the lower court ruled that the royalty was to be based on the selling price of raw ore, and if raw ore as such is not sold, but is processed by the defendants, then the royalty is to be based on the fair market value of raw ore in the vicinity. Alternatively, at the *333 election of the plaintiffs, the royalty is to be based upon the proceeds derived from the sale of the concentrated ore, but plaintiffs’ proportionate share of the milling costs are to be deducted.

The lower court further ordered that “the plaintiffs have and recover nothing by their suit. * * * ”

Plaintiffs, upon this appeal, argue that the lower court misconstrued the provisions providing for royalties, but that no matter what might be the proper basis for computing the royalties, they should not be precluded from an accounting.

The initial question presented is whether the term “gross proceeds” as used in the various assignments means the sale price of raw ore, (or the value of the raw ore if not sold in this form) or whether it means the sale price of the concentrated ore without any deduction for the milling costs.

Plaintiffs place great stress upon the dictionary definitions of the words, “gross,” “proceeds,” “sale,” and “ore.” We do not quarrel with these definitions in the abstract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
374 P.2d 20, 13 Utah 2d 329, 1962 Utah LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rimledge-uranium-mining-corp-v-federal-resources-corp-utah-1962.