State Ex Rel. Cole v. District Court

254 P. 863, 79 Mont. 1, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 81
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 2, 1927
DocketNo. 6,113.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 254 P. 863 (State Ex Rel. Cole v. District Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Cole v. District Court, 254 P. 863, 79 Mont. 1, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 81 (Mo. 1927).

Opinion

ME. JUSTICE MYEES

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an original proceeding; application for writ of supervisory control.

It appears that Humphrey Courtney, Maurice Courtney and John H. Cole, the relator, all of Granite county, obtained a lease of a certain mining claim in that county and engaged in mining it. It is admitted that, thereupon, there was formed a partnership, which still exists. It is contended by the two first named that it is a mining partnership; by the latter, that it is a general partnership.

Florence Cole Petritz, a sister of relator, sued him, in the district court, in Silver Bow county, for money loaned, in the sum of $5,600, and attached his interest in a lot of personal property in Granite county, the tools and appliances used by the partnership in its mining operations. The sheriff took manual possession of all of such personal property, in its entirety. Thereupon, in the names of Humphrey Courtney, Maurice Courtney and John H. Cole, a mining partnership, doing business under the name and style of Courtney Bros. & Co., plaintiffs, (John H. Cole being the relator herein) the two Courtneys instituted a replevin action in the district court, in Granite county, against the sheriff, for the recovery of all of such personal property, alleging that the plaintiffs owned it and were entitled to the possession thereof and that it was not seized under an execution or attachment against the property of the plaintiffs. The complaint was verified by one of the *4 Courtneys. They gave a replevin bond. The coroner took the property and.delivered it to them and they have it.

Thereafter, in that action, Cole, the relator herein, served and filed a motion for an order dismissing him as a plaintiff in the action. He accompanied it with his affidavit,, declaring that the action was instituted without his knowledge or consent and against his wishes; that he is opposed to the prosecution thereof and wishes to be dismissed as a plaintiff; also, that the partnership composed of the plaintiffs is a general partnership. A hearing on the motion was had. At the hearing, Cole testified in support of his motion. Some documentary evidence was introduced. There was no counter evidence. The district court overruled the motion.

Relator then petitioned this court for a writ of supervisory control, directed to the district court and the judge thereof, respondents herein, to the end that the order of the district court, overruling his motion, be annulled and set aside and that the district court be compelled to take favorable action on his motion. In support of his petition, relator assigns as grounds therefor his contentions that the district court, in overruling his motion, acted without authority and in an arbitrary manner; that relator has no plain, speedy or adequate remedy by appeal; that relator thereby will suffer great and irreparable injury; and various other grounds of kindred nature. Upon the filing and presentation of the petition, an order to show cause was issued and served. Respondents appeared and moved to quash the petition. The motion to quash was argued and submitted.

So far as disclosed by the record before us, we hold the partnership in question is a mining partnership. Section 8050, Revised Codes, 1921, provides: “A mining partnership exists when two or more persons who own or acquire a mining claim for the purpose of working it and extracting the mineral therefrom actually engage in working the same.”

According to the terms of the written lease of the mining claim, set forth in the record, that is just what the lessees *5 undertook to do. According to the testimony of the relator, that is just what they did. They actually engaged in working the mining claim, by extracting therefrom the mineral. Of that, there can be no doubt. The partnership continues and the work continues.

Counsel for relator, in contending that the partnership is not a mining partnership, cite Anaconda Copper Min. Co. v. Butte & Boston Min. Co., 17 Mont. 519, 43 Pac. 924. The facts in that ease are very different from those here presented. In that case the opinion says “the plaintiff and defendant were not actually engaged in working the mine.’’ There is nothing disclosed in that case to show that the plaintiff and defendant ever did engage in working the mine. Here, it is admitted the lessees worked it. In that case, the court points out that the plaintiff and defendant were joint owners of the property, the one owning an undivided three-fourths and the other, an undivided one-fourth. The court further points out that, under the statute, the same then as now, two things are requisite to a mining partnership: (1) That two or more persons shall own or acquire a mining claim for the purpose of working it and extracting therefrom the mineral; (2) that they actually engage in working the mine. The opinion states that, while the first requirement existed, the second did not. Hence, that case is not applicable. However, in the partnership here considered, the record plainly shows that both requirements exist. Counsel for relator cite also Congdon v. Olds, 18 Mont. 487, 46 Pac. 261. Neither is that case applicable. There is in it nothing whatever to sustain the contention that this partnership is not a mining partnership.

Section 8051, Revised Codes, 1921, provides: “An express agreement to become partners or to share the profits and losses of mining is not necessary to the formation and existence of a mining partnership. The relation arises from the ownership of shares or interests in the mine and working the same for the purpose of extracting the minerals therefrom.”

*6 Section 8052, Revised Codes, 1921, provides: “A member of a mining partnership shares in the profits and losses thereof in the proportion which the interest or share he owns in the mine bears to the whole partnership capital or whole number of shares. ’ ’

The provisions of those sections fit the testimony of the relator. He testified there was no particular agreement, in regard to the mining operations, between him and the Courtneys, except that they would get the lease and each would be equally interested in it and they would expend about $5,000 in the mining operations and would share equally losses and profits; there was a sort of implied understanding that, if the lease could be obtained, it would be taken by the three of them and they would carry on mining operations on the leased property; they got the lease and did so; there was no express agreement of partnership. Having conformed to the requirements of law, the law formed the partnership. The law says when certain things are done a mining partnership results. They did the things required. However, people may expressly agree to form a mining partnership. (Skillman v. Lachman, 23 Cal. 198, 83 Am. Dec. 96; Loy v. Alston, 172 Fed. 90.) In this case, even though there may have been an agreement, express or implied, of partnership or an intention to form a partnership, that does not keep it necessarily from being a mining partnership.

The fact that the mining claim, in this instance, was merely leased does not prevent a mining partnership as a result of law.

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Bluebook (online)
254 P. 863, 79 Mont. 1, 1927 Mont. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-cole-v-district-court-mont-1927.