Sledge v. Stolz

182 P. 340, 41 Cal. App. 209, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 409
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 15, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1976.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 182 P. 340 (Sledge v. Stolz) 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
Sledge v. Stolz, 182 P. 340, 41 Cal. App. 209, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 409 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

This is an action tried hy the court without a jury to have a decree declaring that plaintiffs are the owners of certain mining claims free and clear from any rights acquired by defendants or any of them thereto, under the certain agreement and deed mentioned in the complaint.

A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled and defendants answered and went to trial on the merits. Findings of fact were in favor of plaintiffs and judgment was entered in accordance therewith. Defendant, Tuolumne Deep Channel Mining Company (hereinafter referred to as the Mining Company), appealed from the judgment on the judgment-roll alone.

It is alleged in the complaint that, on August 30, 1912, plaintiffs were the owners of certain described mining property situated in Tuolumne County and, on that day, entered into a written agreement with defendants, H. F. Stolz and J. Cabell Brown, relative to said mining claims, which is attached to the complaint as exhibit “A” and made part thereof; that, agreeably to paragraph VI of said exhibit “A,” plaintiffs executed a deed of grant of said property and placed the same in escrow with the First *211 National Bank of Sonora with, instructions as provided in said sixth paragraph of said exhibit “A,” which said deed was, prior to November 21, 1914, delivered to said defendants, Stolz and Brown; that, after August 30, 1912, and prior to January 1, 1916, said defendants, Stolz and Brown, transferred to defendant, said Mining Company, “all their right, title, and interest under said contract exhibit ‘A,’ and all their right, title, and interest of in and to the real property described in this complaint”; it is then alleged, paragraph VI, “that nothing was done by the defendants, or any of them, on said real property in accordance with the terms of the said agreement, exhibit ‘A’ and the deed made pursuant thereto, or otherwise, or at all, excepting as follows”: then follows a statement of the work done, consisting of assessment work in 1913 and 1914; also certain drilling and prospecting on said claim which “commenced in May, 1914, and continued to November, 1914, and then ceased,” and no other work was done until in September, 1915, and continued until December, 1915, which work was performed by three men and no more, since which time no work of any kind has been done on- said property; that plaintiffs have frequently, during the year 1916 and prior to filing the complaint (which was July 3, 1916), demanded of said defendants, “under penalty of forfeiture of all rights in said property for failure so to do that they do proceed and perform work on said premises as contemplated and as provided for by the said agreement exhibit ‘A’ and the deed made pursuant thereto, but said defendants have refused and failed, and each of them has refused and failed to perform any work on said premises since December, 1915, of any kind, ’ ’ and that plaintiffs notified said defendant that a “failure so to do would result in a forfeiture of all their rights of in and to said property, and of in and to said contract, exhibit ‘A’ ”; that nothing has been paid to plaintiffs as profits derived from working said mine and defendants have and each of them has “completely violated the terms and conditions of said contract, exhibit ‘A’ and the deed of conveyance made pursuant thereto in failing to work said mine as provided by the terms of said contract”; that defendants, other than said above-named defendants, claim to have some interest in said property, but “all of said rights *212 and claims are subordinate to the right and ownership of these plaintiffs of in and to said property. ’ ’

The consideration mentioned in exhibit “A” is five dollars “and for and in consideration of the covenants and conditions hereinafter contained to be by the respective parties hereto kept and performed. ’ ’ By paragraph 4, the parties of the second part (Stolz and Brown) were let into possession of the mine “for the purpose of prospecting and drilling the same to ascertain what if any valuable mineral bearing earth, ore or rock, or placer gold, lie within, upon or under the said property”; that if it proved “to the satisfaction of the parties of the second part that there is insufficient mineral bearing earth ... to warrant . . . developing or operating” the agreement was, upon written notice to first parties, “to be of no further force or effect,” but if found satisfactory by second parties after drilling and prospecting the mine, they were to continue the work and “shall pay over and deliver unto the said parties of the first part, or to W. N. Sledge who for that purpose is hereby constituted the agent of the parties of the first part, twenty-five per cent of the net profits derived from the working of all mineral bearing earth ... by the parties of the second part,” which was to be paid immediately after each clean-up, which latter “shall take place not less than twice in each calendar year.” Paragraph 6, referred to in the complaint, provided: “That the parties of the first part will, contemporaneously with the execution and delivery of this agreement, make and execute a good and sufficient grant, bargain and sale deed of the above described mining claims and property, which said deed shall be deposited with the First National Bank of Sonora, in the town of Sonora, state of California, with instructions to said bank to deliver said deed to the parties of the second part as soon as said parties of the second part shall have expended the sum of five thousand dollars in prospecting, drilling, developing and working said mining claims and property, and the production of a writing signed and sworn to by the parties of the second part, or by either of them, setting forth that said sum has been so expended, or by the production and exhibition to said bank of satisfactory proof of such expenditure, shall be full authority to said bank for the delivery of said deed by it to the parties of the second part, and in such *213 event said bank is hereby instructed to deliver said deed as hereinabove provided.” The agreement then provides what shall be regarded as expenses to make up this five thousand dollars: “Provided, however, that said deed after its delivery by said bank shall in no way interfere with the right of the parties of the first part to receive one-fourth of the net profits derived from the working of said claims and property thereafter, nor avoid the obligation of the parties of the second part to make such payments.” Paragraph 8 provides that second parties shall commence said work of drilling, prospecting, and working said mine within one year from the date of the agreement, and that “the actual work of development^ and operation shall be commenced by said parties of the second part within two years from and after the date hereof, and shall diligently continue and prosecute such work until such time as said parties of the second part shall determine in their sole judgment” that further work is not profitable, “in which event this agreement shall be of no further force or effect, and any rights hereunder, except those which shall have already vested, shall cease and determine.”

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 340, 41 Cal. App. 209, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sledge-v-stolz-calctapp-1919.