Thompson v. Wise Boy Mining & Milling Co.

74 P. 958, 9 Idaho 363, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 39
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 74 P. 958 (Thompson v. Wise Boy Mining & Milling Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thompson v. Wise Boy Mining & Milling Co., 74 P. 958, 9 Idaho 363, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 39 (Idaho 1903).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This action was commenced in the district court to enforce a miner’s lien for the sum of $253.75, together with a reasonable attorney’s fee and costs of suit upon four adjoining quartz mining claims which were being worked and operated together as one claim under the name of the “Wise Boy mine.” It appears that the defendants, A. W. Moore, W. E. Kelly, W. P. McDonald and Wilbur E. Moore, were the owners of two of the quartz claims known as the Wise Boy and the North Star, and that W. E. Kelly, A. W. Moore and W. P. McDonald were the owners of the other two claims, being the Crystal Butte and Triple Butte locations.

The .plaintiff claimed his lien for labor performed in and about the quartz-mill which was located on the Crystal Butte claim and where ore was being reduced and treated as it was mined from the Wise Boy and North Star claims. Plaintiff testifies, that the work done by him and for which he was employed was as follows: “I was employed as an amalgamator. As an amalgamator; attending to putting silver into batteries, dressing plates, keeping the machinery in running order, looking after the concentrates and adjusting them and putting them in shape to run; cleaning amalgam, looking after the rock-breaker and generally looking after the entire machinery.” This testimony was substantially in accordance with the statement contained in his lien as to the nature of the work done by him. It was also shown by the evidence that the four claims [365]*365above named were used, worked and operated together as one "mine,” under the name of the "Wise Boy mine,” and the mill was known and designated by the owners and the public at large as the “Wise Boy mill.” The court found as a fact in the ease that these four mining claims constituted the Wise Boy mine and were “run, operated and mined and worked as a mine.” This finding is sustained by the evidence and cannot be disturbed by this court. (See Phillips v. Salmon River Min. etc. Co., ante, p. 149, 72 Pac. 886.)

The most serious question raised by appellants in this case and upon which they seem to rely is that the services rendered by the respondent are not the subject of a lien, and that the lien laws of this state do not contemplate the granting of a lien to one doing such work in a quartz-mill, whether it be situated upon a mine or elsewhere. It is contended- by appellants that under the statute of this state which grants a lien to “every person performing labor upon or furnishing materials to be used in the construction, alteration or repair of any mining claim, building, wharf, bridge, ditch, dike, fiume, tunnel, fence, machinery, railroad, wagon road, aqueduct to create hydraulic power or any other structure, or who performs labor in any mine or mining claim, has a lien upon the same for the work or labor done or materials furnished,” respondent acquired no lien for the character of labor he performed.

Appellants argue that the labor for which this lien was sought was simply labor upon personal property, namely, the ore after being extracted from the mine, and that such labor cannot be said to be work in or upon the mine. They further say: “The real test is whether the labor is such as may have added to the value of the property.” In support of this position they cite McCormick v. Los Angeles W. Co., 40 Cal. 185; Barnard v. McKinzie, 4 Colo. 251; Boyle v. Mt. Key Min. Co., 9 N. Mex. 237, 50 Pac. 347.

The California case cited by counsel has no application to the case at bar, and the reasoning it contains throws but little light upon this question. That was a case where the man who cooked for the crew that were building a reservoir filed a lien [366]*366against the property for his wages, and the court held that the nature of the services rendered were not such.as contemplated by the statutes of that state.

The Colorado case is a case where a teamster filed a lien against a mine to collect his wages for hauling ore from the mine to a mill near by; and the New Mexico case holds that a “general manager and superintendent of a mine who does not perform bodily toil is not entitled to a lien” under the laws of that territory.

Appellant seems to cite these authorities for the benefit of the reasoning contained in them to the effect that liens are allowed because the claimant has done some work in or upon th'e property which tended to improve the same or enhance its value, and the labor thereby became a part of the property upon which he claims his lien. This reasoning was usually correct under the original mechanic’s lien laws enacted for the protection of workmen on buildings and structures, where their labor or material actually entered into the structure and thereby became a part of the property upon which they sought to enforce their •liens.

It seems to us, however, that as these laws have come to be extended to mines and mining properties, this line of reasoning has to a great extent become faulty. To say that the laborer who goes into the placer mine and washes out all the gold it contains, or into a quartz mine and extracts and removes the values it contains, has added to the value of the •mines, is not a course'of reasoning that appeals to us very forcibly.

The legislature in enacting these laws evidently did not have in mind the protection of the mine owners, but rather the protection of the laborers. They were • not contemplating, when they, enacted this law, the probability of the laborers- enhancing or depreciating the value of the prospects, mining claims, or mines, as the case-might be, but rather that the men -who. were employed .and sent out to .do work upon such properties should -be entitled to -a lien on -them for their services. To say that .the laborer -is worthy .-of his. hire is to tell him what, he already [367]*367knows; but what he wants to know and what the legislature evidently intended is that this maxim will be carried a step further, and that he shall be assured that he is not only worthy o£ his hire, but that he will get his pay, and that the property upon or about which he worked shall be liable for such pay.

Respondent’s counsel argues that the “Wise Boy mill was affixed to the mine, was a part of the realty and a part of the 'mine.’” Appellants’ counsel in their reply brief say: “This is not disputed and is entirely immaterial.” If it be true that the mill was “affixed to the mine and was a part of the realty,” and we have no inclination to dispute it, then work in the mill was as much work in the mine as operating a hoist would be work in the mine (Tredinnick v. Red Cloud Consolidated Min. Co., 72 Cal. 78, 13 Pac. 133); or as the sharpening of tools bv a blacksmith (Malone v. Big Flat Gravel Co., 76 Cal. 578, 18 Pac. 774); or as the superintending the work on the mill and machinery (Rara Avis Gold etc. Min. Co. v. Bouschie, 9 Colo. 385, 12 Pac. 433); or the construction of a house contiguous to a mine (Keystone Min. Co. v. Gallagher, 5 Colo. 23); or the construction of a mill on a mine (Williams v. Mountaineer Min. Co., 102 Cal. 134, 34 Pac. 702, 36 Pac. 388); or the “bossing” of men ¿who are working in a mine and keeping their time and giving them orders for their pay (Capron v. Stout, 11 Nev. 304); or an overseer and foreman of a body of miners (Flagstaff Silver Min. Co. of Utah v. Collins, 104 U. S. 178, 26 L. ed. 704).

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74 P. 958, 9 Idaho 363, 1903 Ida. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-wise-boy-mining-milling-co-idaho-1903.