Vulcan Lands, Inc. v. Victoria Older Currier

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 21, 2023
DocketD082234
StatusPublished

This text of Vulcan Lands, Inc. v. Victoria Older Currier (Vulcan Lands, Inc. v. Victoria Older Currier) 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
Vulcan Lands, Inc. v. Victoria Older Currier, (Cal. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

Filed 12/21/23 CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

COURT OF APPEAL, FOURTH APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION ONE

STATE OF CALIFORNIA

VULCAN LANDS, INC., et al., D082234

Plaintiffs, Cross-defendants and Appellants, (Super. Ct. No. CIVDS1913143) v.

VICTORIA OLDER CURRIER et al.,

Defendants, Cross-complainants, and Respondents.

APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of San Bernardino County, Lynn M. Poncin, Judge, and John Nho Trong Nguyen, retired judge of the Orange County Superior Court (assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to art. VI, § 6 of the Cal. Const.). Affirmed. Fennemore, J. Jackson Waste, Mark A. Ostoich; Thomas Vogele & Associates, Thomas A. Vogele and Timothy M. Kowal for Plaintiffs, Cross- defendants and Appellants. Spach Capaldi & Waggaman, Madison S. Spach, Jr., Shaheen A. Etemadi; Reich Radcliffe & Hoover, Marc Gene Reich and Adam T. Hoover for Defendants, Cross-complainants and Respondents. In the 1950’s and 1960’s, landowners in southwest San Bernardino County transferred 19 parcels of land to various individuals by grant deed, reserving a partial interest in “all oil, gas, and other hydrocarbons and minerals” beneath the surface. Once severed, the surface and mineral estates changed hands over the years. The current owners of the surface estate are mining companies that wish to extract sand and gravel from the combined 196-acre tract called Area Q through open-pit excavation. Mineral rights holders (descendants of the original grantors) claim a one-half interest in their mining proceeds. At issue in this appeal is whether “minerals” in the original reservations include rights to mine sand and gravel. Concluding they do, the trial court granted summary judgment and entered judgment in the mineral rights holders’ favor. The mining companies appeal, claiming Bambauer v. Menjoulet (1963) 214 Cal.App.2d 871 (Bambauer) establishes that sand and gravel are not minerals as a matter of law. With open-pit mining rendering the surface unusable for decades, they maintain the original parties could not have intended otherwise in severing the mineral and surface estates. As we explain, our aim is to uncover the intent of the original grantors and grantees; neither a dictionary definition of “minerals” nor constructions of that term in statutes or past cases are dispositive. While our record is sparse, the mineral rights holders established through evidence that sand and gravel had been mined in the region for decades before the grant deeds. It is undisputed that sand and gravel possess commercial value. While open- pit mining over the next 30 years will affect usability of the surface estate, it does not render the conveyance a nullity where the surface estate retains and can profit from a 50 percent interest in the extracted minerals. At most, anticipated surface destruction through open-pit mining merely creates an

2 ambiguity that Civil Code section 1069 resolves in favor of the mineral rights holders. Concluding Bambauer does not compel a different result, we affirm the judgment.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

Vulcan Lands, Inc. (Vulcan), CalMat Co. (CalMat), and Arundel Company, LLC (Arundel) are the fee simple owners of 19 plots of real

property in San Bernadino County.1 Each parcel is burdened by reservations contained in original grant deeds executed between 1953 and 1964. The grantors severed the surface estate from the mineral estate, reserving for themselves a one-half interest of “ ‘all oil, gas and other hydrocarbons and minerals now or at any time hereafter situated therein and thereunder or producible therefrom . . . together with the free and unlimited right to mine,

drill and bore . . . .’ ”2 Seeking to excavate sand and gravel through open-pit mining operations on the combined tract, the mining companies filed suit to quiet title and obtain declaratory relief. They claimed the mineral reservations did not cover sand and gravel because those materials lacked a definite chemical composition, and their removal would significantly impair the surface estate. Current mineral rights holders Victoria Older Currie, Nancy Wood Yarborough, Catherin Older Lapat, Robert M. Older, and Deena Rae Ortiz

1 We refer to the three companies collectively as the mining companies. 2 One grant deed differs from the rest. In parcel No. 0262-211-06 (the sole property owned by plaintiff Arundel), a 1958 grant deed may have reserved a 100 percent interest in “all oil, gas, and other hydrocarbons” without any reference to minerals. While this appears in the recorded legal description for the property, the original deed is illegible, and no claim is made that it does not convey mineral rights or should be interpreted differently from the others. 3 (collectively, the Olders) filed a cross-complaint for declaratory relief that sand and gravel were covered by their mineral reservations. As they state on appeal, “[T]here is no question that the Property will be used for mining sand and gravel; the only question is whether the profits of the mining must be shared with [the Olders].” Each side filed motions for summary judgment. The mining companies did not submit any evidence with their motion. The Olders filed two counsel declarations in support of their motion and requested judicial notice of

certain exhibits.3 Attorney Marc Reich prepared a table summarizing the mineral rights reservations in each of the grant deeds. Attorney Shaheen Etamadi filed a declaration authenticating discovery evidence bearing on the scope of the mineral reservation. First, Etamadi attached the mining companies’ discovery responses, in which they admitted lacking documentary or testimonial evidence of the original parties’ intent as to sand or gravel mining rights. They further admitted that the parcels were located near their existing Cajon Creek mine and an ancient stream called Lytle Creek, and that sand and gravel were extracted through mining. A planning commission report attached to Etamadi’s declaration described the proposed project. The mining companies wished to develop a 196-acre combined tract called Area Q into an open pit quarry to mine sand and gravel over a 30-year period. A map situates Area Q in the southwest corner of San Bernardino County (outlined below in blue):

3 The mining companies’ objections to the Olders’ documentary evidence and request for judicial notice were overruled, and the court’s ruling in that regard is not challenged on appeal. 4 A zoomed in map depicts the site near Cajon Wash and Lytle Creek Wash:

As will be discussed, the mining companies proposed removing a two-foot layer of topsoil and subsoil before commencing open-pit mining to a depth of 120 feet. Other documents attached to Etamadi’s declaration described the history of mining operations in San Bernardino County. A 1995 Department of Conservation, Division of Mines and Geology report authored by Dinah Shumway (Shumway report) explained that “[s]and and gravel has been 5 produced from various locations in Southwestern San Bernardino County since the early 1900s.” Specifically, the Lytle Creek area had been mined since 1922 for aggregate material. Shumway noted that nearby Cajon Creek “has been noted as an alternative source of aggregate.” Along similar lines, a 1999 conservation study coauthored by Vulcan employee Douglas Sprague (Sprague report) stated that before CalMat acquired its property near Cajon and Lytle Creeks in the mid-1980s, that site “had been mined by several companies since the 1920s” and had historically supplied “construction

aggregate materials.”4 The two sides disagreed on the law. Citing Bambauer, supra, 214 Cal.App.2d 871 and Geothermal Kinetics, Inc. v. Union Oil Co.

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