St. Anthony Mining & Milling Co. v. Shaffra

120 N.W. 238, 138 Wis. 507, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 79
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 120 N.W. 238 (St. Anthony Mining & Milling Co. v. Shaffra) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Anthony Mining & Milling Co. v. Shaffra, 120 N.W. 238, 138 Wis. 507, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 79 (Wis. 1909).

Opinion

Timlin, J.

The appellants claim to be entitled to the possession for mining purposes of two lots designated respectively, for convenience, as the Delaney lot and the Stephenson lot, and base that claim upon a parol license from the former owners of these lands to some remote predecessors in occupation under whom appellants claim by relinquishments, parol transfers, and succession in occupation and use for more than twenty years nest prior to the commencement of the action. During all this time the appellants and their said predecessors in occupation, by payment of tribute, royalty, or rent, consisting of a fraction of the ore mined or raised, recog-[509]*509nizecl the paramount title of the owners in fee, and they now recognize such paramount title, hut claim that under ch. 75, Stats. (1898), formerly ch. 260, Laws of 1860, and ch. 117, Laws of 1872, they have acquired a right to hold and enjoy the possession of said lots for the purpose of mining thereon upon payment of tribute or royalty to the fee owners, and that the lapse of time has prescribed any remedy of the fee owners to treat them otherwise than as such possessors. Some criticism is made upon the fee title of the respondent, but we -are assured by appellants’ brief that they make this criticism merely for the purpose of challenging the sufficiency of the notice to quit served upon them by respondent, and do not wish otherwise to deny that the respondent is the owner of the title in fee subject to appellants’ rights as licensees for the purpose of mining and removing the ore. We shall therefore take it for granted that the respondent has title in fee to the lots in question.

Ch. 75, Stats. (1898), is in many respects a very peculiar statute, and its provisions, as well as its peculiar use of mining terms, indicate a local origin. It applies only to mining contracts and leases for the digging of ores and minerals, viz.: (1) licenses or leases “verbal” or written made to a miner; (2) only where there is no contract between the parties contrary to its provisions; (8) only where there are no terms established by the landlord contrary to its provisions. The class of contracts affected is consequently very narrow. But with regard to a contract which does fall within its provisions the latter are quite sweeping. Such lease or license as does fall within the purview of the statute shall not be revocable by the maker thereof (1) after a valuable discovery has been struck; (2) after a valuable prospect has been struck; (3) but if the miner shall forfeit his rights by negligence such as establishes a forfeiture according to mining usages, then the “maker” of the lease or license may revoke it notwithstanding a valuable discovery or a prospect “has been [510]*510struck.” This appears to permit revocation after discovery for a particular cause, but whether or not the cause exists is to be determined by proof of mining usages. Sec. 1649, Stats. (1898), provides, however, other causes for forfeiture of such license or lease after discovery, viz.: (1) concealing or disposing of ores or minerals, or (2) concealing or disposing of “mines or diggings” for the purpose of defrauding the lessor of his rent, and (3) neglect for three days after notice and claim of rent to pay rent on ores or minerals “raised” by the tenant or licensee. Having thus fixed the legal effect of the class of licenses and leases above described with reference to possessory rights, the statute further declares, “the discovery of a crevice or range containing ores or minerals shall entitle the discoverer to the ores or minerals pertaining thereto, subject to the rent due his landlord, before as well as after the ores or minerals are separated from the freehold.” The words “crevice or range” are probably here used with some local significance, because the word “range” as applied to mineral deposits is commonly understood to designate a large stretch of country, often many miles in length and of considerable width, carrying with some continuity or at intervals ore deposits belonging generally to the same geological stratum. A “crevice,” on the other hand, is a word sometimes applied to a mineral-bearing vein. In Raisbeck v. Anthony, 73 Wis. 572, 586, 41 N. W. 72, these two words were considered to be equivalent to the expression “lode or vein,” thus limiting the word “range” by its associated word, “crevice,” which latter word has been defined to mean mineral-bearing vein. Beals v. Cone, 27 Colo. 473, 62 Pac. 948, 958; Van Zandt v. Argentine M. Co. 8 Fed. 725; Terrible M. Co. v. Argentine M. Co. 89 Fed. 583. It is somewhat questionable whether this construction of the words “crevice or range” is the most appropriate to the conditions existing in the lead and zinc mining regions of Wisconsin, because such mineral deposits might not be aptly described in that way. Wis. Survey Bull. No. 9, [511]*511Lead and Zinc Deposits (1903). But the construction thus placed upon the statute has stood for twenty years and we do not feel authorized to change it.

The purpose of the statute seems to he to give the miner who is operating under a lease or license from the owner of the land, terminable at the will of the latter, the right, in case he discovered a prospect, to continue his exploration free from any right of the lessor or licensor to cut him off by revocation 'before the prospect so discovered was explored sufficiently to determine whether it would lead to a discovery or not, and in case he discovered a crevice or vein to entitle him to follow that deposit of ore within the lines of the land upon which he was licensed to work lengthwise, sidewise, and downward until he had exhausted the crevice or vein, paying the agreed or customary tribute or royalty to the landowner in the meantime. Thus a miner entering under a mere license or lease, revocable at the will of the lessor or licensor, by discovery became entitled to all the rights which he would have, had the license or lease in the first place had incorporated into it the terms of this statute.

Under such a statute the word “discovery” must in the interest of certainty of titles have a reasonably strict construction. In Raisbeck v. Anthony, supra, it was held that the location of a new deposit of ore further along the vein and in the direction of the extension of an exhausted deposit and between the same rock walls was a continuation and expansion of the same vein, which had pinched out where the former workings were abandoned, and not the discovery of a crevice or range within the meaning of this statute. That was rather a stronger case for the licensee than the case at bar, and if that case be accepted as law the defendants in this case have not brought themselves within the statute. For, as we view the evidence, the lots in question were known mineral ground and had been worked and mined long prior to the inception of defendants’ license. The defendants or their predecessors in [512]*512occupation uncovered and raised some ores of zinc called “dry-bone” and “jack” which were valuable and marketable, but the evidence leads us to believe, as it led i the circuit court to-believe, that this was "the development and uncovering of a mineral deposit in a known mineral-bearing lot and alongside-of the old lead diggings, rather than a discovery of a crevice or range, vein or lode.

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Bluebook (online)
120 N.W. 238, 138 Wis. 507, 1909 Wisc. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-anthony-mining-milling-co-v-shaffra-wis-1909.