Utah Copper Co. v. District Court of Third Judicial Dist.

64 P.2d 241, 91 Utah 377, 1937 Utah LEXIS 12
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1937
DocketNo. 5825.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 64 P.2d 241 (Utah Copper Co. v. District Court of Third Judicial Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Utah Copper Co. v. District Court of Third Judicial Dist., 64 P.2d 241, 91 Utah 377, 1937 Utah LEXIS 12 (Utah 1937).

Opinions

EPHRAIM HANSON, Justice.

This is an original proceeding in this court instituted by the plaintiff Utah Copper Company, a corporation, engaged in mining and in operating a copper mine in Salt Lake county, Utah, against the District Court of the Third Judicial *378 District of the State of Utah, in and for the County of Salt Lake, and the respective judges thereof, and Stephen Hays Estate, Inc., a corporation of the state of Utah, for a writ of mandamus commanding the District Court and the judges thereof to grant the plaintiff leave to amend its complaint in an action of condemnation proceedings pending in the said District Court and to proceed with, try and determine the issues as so presented by the amended complaint, and to review and vacate an order made by the District Court striking from the amended complaint certain paragraphs thereof, and to enjoin and restrain the District Court from entering judgment of dismissal on merits as to a portion of plaintiff’s cause of action in the condemnation proceeding with respect to tracts of lands C and D owned by defendant Stephen Hays Estate and referred to in plaintiff’s original complaint and in its petition for the writ, which tracts, on a prior appeal of the cause, were by this court on remittitur directed and ordered to be dismissed on merits by the District Court.

As appears by the verified petition for the writ and the opinion of this court on the prior appeal, referred to in the petition (Utah Copper Co. v. Stephen Hayes Estate, Inc., 83 Utah 545, 31 P. (2d) 624, 632), the plaintiff is engaged in carrying on and conducting mining operations by an open-cut method near the town of Bingham Canyon in Salt Lake county, in which operations it is necessary for plaintiff to remove large quantities of what is called overburden, consisting of earth, rock, and other material carrying a small percentage of copper, to enable the plaintiff to remove more valuable ores on its mining properties. A large amount or quantity of such overburden so removed is and for some years has been dumped and deposited on lands owned' by plaintiff in what is called Dixon Gulch, extending down the mountain side with an average grade or slope of 26 per cent, which gulch at its lower extremity joins Bingham Canyon and where the gulch is considerably narrower than above, being shaped something like a funnel.

*379 The defendant Stephen Hays Estate, Inc., is the owner in fee of a tract of land below and adjoining the lands of plaintiff, which lands of the estate extend across the gulch from side to side and beyond and downward to what is called Bingham Canyon. That is to say, the estate was and is the owner of the lands in which is embraced and included the entire gulch, except the upper portion thereof owned by plaintiff and upon which it, for a number of years, dumped and deposited large quantities of overburden containing a small percentage of copper. The upper portion of the lands of the estate embraced within the gulch and adjoining the lands of plaintiff is referred to in the proceeding as tract D, and the lower portion thereof as tract C. The ownership of the estate to the upper portion of tract D is subject to an easement for railroad purposes acquired by the Bingham & Garfield Railway Company from the predecessors in interest of the Hays Estate. In the construction of the railroad across the gulch, the railway company on its acquired right of way filled the gulch with earth, rock, and material, some of which is similar to that contained in the plaintiff’s dump, a part of the fill extending on plaintiff’s ground and part on grounds of the estate adjoining that of the plaintiff. Upon such fill, the railway company constructed and operated its railroad across the gulch by virtue of an easement for a right of way for railroad purposes acquired by it from the predecessors in interest of the Hays Estate. The railway company otherwise acquired no right, title, or interest in or to the lands of the estate or any part thereof, and the portion of the fill placed on ground of the estate became a part thereof and belonged to the estate. It was so held on the prior appeal and was so found by the trial court from which the appeal was taken.

For a number of years small quantities of copper in carbonate and sulphide form, saturated with waters from rain and snow falling upon the dump and seeping and percolating within it, became soluble in water and susceptible of being recovered by precipitating the same by the use of copper *380 precipitants. The waters thus impregnated with and carrying copper in solution from natural causes seeped and percolated from the dump, and seeped and percolated in and through the soil and earth of the adjoining lands of the Hays Estate embraced within the gulch and referred to as tract D and downward to the lower portion thereof on what in the proceedings is referred to as tract C, where the waters at the bottom of the gulch are collected by plaintiff and conveyed to its precipitating tanks.

In the case of Utah Copper Co. v. Montano-Bingham Consol. Min. Co., 69 Utah 423, 255 P. 672, where waters from similar causes in this case, from rain and snow falling on a dump of plaintiff, became impregnated with and carried a small percentage of copper solutions, it was held by this court that so long as such waters remained in the dump they were the property of plaintiff, but when they from natural causes seeped and percolated from the dump in and through the soil and earth of lands of another, the waters, though carrying copper in solution, were lost to plaintiff and became the property of such other and could not be followed nor reclaimed by the plaintiff. Here, as in the Montana-Bingham Case, the waters in the dump of plaintiff, from rain and snow falling on the dump and becoming impregnated with and carrying copper solutions from natural causes, seeped and percolated from the dump into and through the soil and earth of the lands of the Hays Estate adjoining the lands of plaintiff upon which the dump existed.

So in view of the decision in the Montana-Bingham Case, plaintiff here, the Utah Copper Company, in May, 1928, commenced an action in the District Court of Salt Lake County against the defendant Stephen Hays Estate to condemn tracts of land D and C of the Hays Estate through the soil and earth of which the waters so impregnated with and carrying copper solutions seeped and percolated, and to collect such waters on tract C, and to condemn easements over several other tracts of land described as tracts A and B of the Hays Estate in the gulch, and by means of pipe lines to *381 convey and carry the waters into and from tract C to precipitating tanks of plaintiff, and tract G for a transmission line.

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Bluebook (online)
64 P.2d 241, 91 Utah 377, 1937 Utah LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/utah-copper-co-v-district-court-of-third-judicial-dist-utah-1937.