Russell v. Johns Manville Co.

20 Cal. App. 3d 405, 97 Cal. Rptr. 634, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 26, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 4, 1971
DocketCiv. 1309
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 20 Cal. App. 3d 405 (Russell v. Johns Manville Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Russell v. Johns Manville Co., 20 Cal. App. 3d 405, 97 Cal. Rptr. 634, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 26, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

GARGANO, J.

Appellants brought this action in the court below for declaratory relief and to quiet title to numerous unpatented mining claims located in the New Idria Mining District west of Coalinga. However, the controversy presently centers on the enforceability of an alleged mining lease to five unpatented mining claims known as Joaquin, Black Ridge, Hidden Spring, Sugar Loaf, Pine Flat and Dick Spring; the Pine Flat and Dick Spring claims were located by J. M. Koski, the Joaquin and Black Ridge claims were located by Mrs. Koski, and the Hidden Spring and Sugar Loaf claims were located in the names of the Koskis’ minor daughters, Karolyn May Koski and Lois Koski. We shall recite only those facts that are pertinent to resolve this controversy.

In the year 1954 appellants, three partners operating through a corporation named the Southwest Oil Company, were engaged in mining chromite ore under a mining lease on a group of mining claims known as the JamesCorbett claims and were selling the ore to the United States government under a stockpiling program. In the summer of that year appellant E. F. Chambers concluded that there was a large chromite deposit on the Koski claims, and as the representative of the partnership met Mr. Koski who suggested a mining lease. Later the two men met in the law offices of a Mr. Leckman, and at their request Leckman drew up a lease. 1 The lease *408 was for a period of 20 years, and for so long as the lessees produced mineral substances from the leased claims; it provided for the payment of royalties to lessors but did not expressly require the lessees to engage in mining activities, to do any development or mining work or make any improvements, nor did it provide for the payment of a minimum rental or minimum royalties; it merely required appellants to do the discovery work on four claims, with the Koskis to contribute the sum of $328 for the performance of that work.

On September 7, 1954, Mr. Koski signed the lease on behalf of himself and as the attorney in fact of Mrs. Koski and his two minor daughters. Thereafter, appellants did the required location work, and Koski contributed the sum of $328 toward the work. On January 24, 1955, a new lease was executed by appellants and all of the Koskis containing the same terms' as the first instrument, except that the provisions relating to the discovery work were omitted. It was signed by all of the Koskis, apparently because Mr. Koski had no authority to sign the first lease on behalf of the members of his family; in his findings, the trial judge considered the two documents to be the leasing agreement.

After obtaining the Koski mining lease, appellants continued to mine and produce chromite ore from the James-Corbett claims. They also- secured another lease from the Butler estate on chromite bearing land adjoining the Koski claims. Appellants then became involved in litigation relating to the Butler estate and eventually secured possession of that property. In the latter part of 1955, appellants began to produce chromite ore from the adjoining Butler property, and from 1955 to June-1958, when the government stockpiling program came to an end, produced substantial quantities of ore from the property and sold it to the United States government. In the meanwhile, appellants engaged in no mining activities of any consequence on the Koski claims and produced virtually no ore of any kind from these properties, even though it is conceded that the properties contained valuable deposits of chromite, cinnabar and asbestos; they made no improvements, did no geological mapping and made no production studies or cost analyses; appellants merely did the annual assessment work.

In 1959 the Kern County Land Company entered the New Idria Mining District, and by 1960 had located numerous mining claims in the same general area as the Koski claims; some of the claims were on open land and others overlapped the Koski claims. In the following year, on February 24, 1961, the Koskis contracted to- sell their claims to the Union Carbide Corporation. Union Carbide surveyed the Koski boundaries, and pursuant to its agreement with the Koskis filed amended claims in its own name; these amendments intentionally included excessive areas in an attempt to *409 invalidate known prior claims of the Kern County Land Company and were ineffective and void. In May 1961, Union Carbide quitclaimed the Koski claims back to the Koskis, who in turn sold them to the Central California Minerals Company. Then Central California Minerals quit-claimed the claims to the Coalinga Asbestos Company, Inc.; Coalinga Asbestos, Inc. had also acquired the Kern County Land Company claims.

At the conclusion of the court trial the trial judge made extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law. At first glance, the court’s findings appear to be inconsistent, but when they are viewed as a whole and reconciled with all reasonable inferences and necessary implications, it is apparent that the court’s decision was this: The court found that the instrument the Koskis signed in January of 1954 was a lease, not a license as respondents maintained. The court then found that because the lease purported to tie up valuable chromite mining deposits and other valuable ores for a period of 20 years, with no obligation on the lessee’s part to do anything whatever to develop the property, particularly during the existence of an advantageous government stockpiling program, or to pay minimum rentals or minimum royalties, it was so harsh, unreasonable and inequitable “as to require a court of equity to refuse to enforce it." The court therefore concluded that the lease contained an implied condition, imposing a duty upon the lessees to use reasonable diligence in developing the property for the purpose for which it was leased and that appellants’ failure to do so was deliberate and unconscionable and completely frustrated the lessor’s hopes and intentions, resulting in a forfeiture and abandonment of their leasehold interest. Judgment was entered accordingly, and appellants appeal.

Preliminarily, we observe that respondents’ argument that the instrument the Koskis signed in January 1954 was in reality a license which was revoked when the Koskis sold their claims to the Central California Minerals Company is persuasive. (Shaw v. Caldwell, 16 Cal.App. 1 [115 P. 941]; Carlisle v. Lady, 109 Cal.App. 567 [293 P. 686]; Von Goerlitz v. Turner, 65 Cal.App.2d 425 [150 P.2d 278].) The instrument is entitled a lease and it contains the words “grant, demise and let,” but it only gives the lessees a limited possession for special purposes, i.e., “the exclusive right of prospecting for and mining for and producing, taking and removing ore. . . .” Also, although the instrument gives appellants the right to enter the premises to construct and maintain buildings, structures, smelters and machinery, appellants were not obligated to do so or to prospect, develop, mine or produce any ore from the property; at most they were obligated to pay royalties if they produced ore and sold it to the government or to other purchasers. Arguably, the alleged lease conferred a privilege on appellants to occupy the premises for prospecting and mining

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 Cal. App. 3d 405, 97 Cal. Rptr. 634, 40 Oil & Gas Rep. 26, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-v-johns-manville-co-calctapp-1971.