S. S. & G. Mining Co. v. Fullerton

1926 OK 854, 250 P. 911, 120 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1926
Docket16974
StatusPublished

This text of 1926 OK 854 (S. S. & G. Mining Co. v. Fullerton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
S. S. & G. Mining Co. v. Fullerton, 1926 OK 854, 250 P. 911, 120 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 392 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

FOSTER, C.

The defendants in error, S. C. Fullerton and W. W. Dobson, were plaintiffs, and the plaintiff in error, the S. S. & G. Mining Company, a business trust composed of A. M. Gaines, Jesse G. Starr, and Frank Sharp, was defendant, in the trial court, and the parties will hereinafter be designated as they appeared in that court.

The plaintiffs filed their petition in ejectment against the defendant in the district court of Ottawa county, and recovered a judgment for the possession of certain real estate described in their petition, and damages for the unlawful detention thereof from July 30, 1923, in the sum of $3,298.69.

The plaintiffs asserted title to the real estate described as the N. E. quarter of the N. E. quarter, sec. 36, township 29. range 22, in Ottawa county, under a certain mining lease dated the 10th day of February, 1920, from Te-meh-heh Quapaw to S. 0. Fullerton for the term of ten years from the date of said lease. They further claimed that since the 30th day*of July, 1923, defendant had unlawfully kept plaintiffs out of the possession of the land, appropriating to tneir own use valuable lead and zinc ores of the value of $50,000. A copy of the mining lease under which plaintiffs claimed title was attached to their petition.

The defendant alleged in its answer that the mining lease under which plaintiffs claimed was an overlapping lease, and void in that it overlapped a prior valid, lease executed by the allottee, Te-meh-heh Quapaw, to S. C. Fullerton, dated July 23, 1911, and expiring ten years thereafter. It further alleged that it entered into possession of the real estate in controversy on or about the 8th day of May, 1919, under the lease of July 23, 1911, and continued in possession of said land under said lease, carrying on mining operations thereon until July 1, 1923, after which time the rights of the plaintiffs in said land fully expired, and that thereafter the plain-Fffs had no right, title or interest of any character in said land.

In a cross-petition the defendant sets up title to said real estate through a mining lease executed subsequent to July 30, 1923, to Eagle Picher Lead Company, approved by the Secretary of the Interior, and by the lessee therein subleased to the defendant on July 30, 1924, and -it asserted title, and r'ght of possession under said sublease and asked that its title be quieted, and that the min *99 ing lease under which the plaintiffs claim be removed as a cloud on its title, and the plaintiffs permanently and perpetually enjoined from claiming or asserting any title or interest in the said real estate. Plaintiffs filed an amended reply, in which they in effect denied the validity of the lease oi July 23, 1911, and set up a mining lease executed by the allottee to plaintiffs on the 5th day of September, 1908, which expired by its own limitation on September 4, 1918, and that at the time they tools: their lease of February 10, 1920, there was no valid mining lease covering the.land in controversy.

The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury. There was no conflict in the material facts as disclosed by the evidence at the trial.- It disclosed that on. the 5th day of September, 1908, the al-lottee, Te-meh-heh Quapaw, executed and delivered to plaintiffs a mining lease expiring by its own terms on the 5th day of September, 1918; that on the 23rd day of September, 1911, and during the subsistence of the prior lease of September 5, 1908, the plaintiffs took another lease trom the allot-tee, which by its terms expired on the 23rd day of September, 1921; that during the term of the 1911 lease the plaintiffs acquired from the allottee two other short term leases, to begin to run in the future, purporting to extend the term of the 1911 lease to July 22, 1923. On the 10th day of October, 1913, the plaintiffs sublet to O. S. Picher certain rights under their lease of Ju!y 23, 1911, together with the two short term leases referred to above, for -a term ending July 1, 1923.

O. S. Picher, in turn, on July 14, 1917, subleased to the Defender Mining Company for the term ending July 1, 1923. On August 8, 1919, the Defender Mining Company in tiirn subleased to the defendant for the term ending July 1, 1923. Through its sublease from the Defender Mining Company, of August 8, 1919, the defendant entered possession of the land prior to February 10, 1920, under the 1911 lease, and the plaintiffs received royalties thereunder until July 1, 1923, the date of the expiration of the 1911 h-ase and the two short term leases extending the 1911 lease.

On May 25, 1918, the plaintiffs executed an unconditional release and cancellation of all mining leases held by them prior to that time, which included both the lease of September 5, 1908, and the lease of July 23. 1911, and thereafter took their lease of February 10, 1920, on which they base their claim of right to recover in the instant action.

The evidence further discloses that, subsequent to the lease of July 23, 1911, the plaintiffs, in an action brought against them in the United States Court for the Eastern District o. Oklahoma by one Eward, pleaded and re.ied upon the 1911 lease as a valid lease, and ultimately prevailed in that litigation upon the strength of their asserted claim of validity of said lease of July 23. 1911.

In these circumstances the defendant complains that the trial court erred as a matter of law in not concluding that the lease of February 10, 1920, under which plaintiffs claim, was an overlapping lease and therefore void.

It is apparent that the validity of the lease of February 10, 1920, depends upon whether or not the lease of July 23, 1911, was a valid lease, for if the lease of July 23, 1911, is itself invalid as an overl-apping-lease, then the lease of. February 10, 1920, would have been executed at a time when there existed no valid lease upon the real estate, and being otherwise in conformity with the leasing regulations prescribed by Congress governing the leasing of lands by restricted Quapaw Indians for business and mining purposes, should be upheld.

It is clear then that the disposition to be made of the case here on appeal turns on whether the lease of July 23, 1911, was a valid lease. Defendant asserts its validity, and says that said lease being in full force and effect on February 10, 1920, and having then a term of approximately a year and a half to run, plaintiffs’ lease overlapped the lease of July 23, 1911, and was therefore void under the leasing regulations of Congress.

They assert that its validity must be sustained upon two -grounds; (a) Because the lease of July 23, 1911, being a lease from the same lessor to the same lessee on the same land, it operated as a surrender of the mining- lease of September 5, 1908; and (b) plaintiffs having placed the defendant in possession under the lease of July 23, 1923, they are estopped to deny its validity.

By the Act of Congress of June 7, 1897 (30 Stat. 72), it was provided in part as follows;

“That- the allottees of land within the limits -of the Quapaw Agency, Indian Territory, .are hereby authorized to lease their lands or any part thereof for -a term not exceeding three years for farming or grazing purposes or ten years for mining or business purposes.”

Except as provided in the leasing provi *100

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Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 854, 250 P. 911, 120 Okla. 98, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/s-s-g-mining-co-v-fullerton-okla-1926.