84 P. 47 | Cal. | 1906
This is an action to foreclose liens of laborers employed in sinking an oil-well. The defendant the Belmont Oil Company owned the south half of a certain quarter-section of land in Kern County known as the "Baradino Placer Mining Claim." The land was leased to its co-defendant, the Kern King Oil and Development Company, and that company had contracted with the defendants Martin and Berry for its development by sinking one or more oil-wells thereon. The contract between the Kern King Company and Martin and Berry was in writing, but was not recorded. Plaintiff and his assignors were employed by Martin and Berry, and performed labor in sinking one of the wells contracted for by the Kern King Company, and they claim a lien upon the entire tract of eighty acres as a "mining claim" within the meaning of that expression as used in the lien law. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1183 et seq.) By the decree of the superior court it was adjudged that the plaintiff had a valid lien for the amount found due from Martin and Berry, together with interest and counsel fees, upon the whole of the eighty acres, and that the lien attached not only to the leasehold interest of the Kern King Company, but to the fee. The usual order followed for a sale of the premises, application of the proceeds to payment of costs and satisfaction of the liens, and for a deficiency judgment against the contractors. The two corporations have joined in an appeal from the judgment, which was taken less than sixty days after its rendition, and they have included in the transcript a settled statement on motion for a new trial, claiming, along with other assignments of error, that one of the material findings is unsupported by the evidence. The appeal was taken to this court before the recent amendment of the constitution, and was subsequently assigned to the district court of appeal for the second district, where the judgment of the superior court was reversed as to both appellants. (84 P. 45.) The cause is now for decision after rehearing in this court.
As against the Belmont Company and Martin and Berry, the judgment was entered upon their default. The Kern King Company demurred, and, its demurrer being overruled, answered the complaint, but failed to appear at the trial. *580 We think it was rightly held by the district court of appeal that the judgment against the Belmont Company is erroneous. As to it the only evidence of service of summons was a certificate of a constable, while, except in case of service by a sheriff, the Code of Civil Procedure requires proof by affidavit. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 410-415.) There is, however, a question whether this rule has not been relaxed in favor of constables by section 153 of the County Government Bill of 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 492, c. 277), and since that question has not been argued we leave it undecided; for, even if there had been proof or finding of due service of the summons on the Belmont Company, the default judgment as to it would have been erroneous, for two reasons: 1. There is no allegation in the complaint that the Kern King Company had authority as lessee to develop the mine, or that the Belmont Company had knowledge that the work was being done; and 2. The mine is charged with a lien for a larger amount than the demand stated in the summons, which in this particular does not correspond with the prayer of the complaint. For these reasons the judgment against the Belmont Oil Company must be reversed, and this leaves nothing to be considered except the right of the plaintiff to a lien upon the leasehold interest of the Kern King Oil and Development Company.
The more important questions presented by the appeal of that company relate to the construction of the lien law in its application to claims for labor in the development of mineral oil lands. The law contains express provisions as to "mining claims" to the effect that a miner working on a claim, or a mechanic erecting reduction works or other structures useful in connection with mining operations thereon, has a lien upon the entire claim for his wages, or the value of his material. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 1183-1187; Williams v. Mountaineer etc. Co.,
The question, therefore, is whether this eighty-acre tract of land in process of development as an oil mine is a mining claim within the meaning of the lien law, and we think that in any view of the case this question must be answered in the affirmative. Under the act of Congress of 1897 (Act Feb. 11, 1897, ch. 216, 29 Stats. 526, [U.S. Comp. Stats. 1901, p. 1434]), the location and sale of oil land is governed by the mineral laws of the United States applicable to the location and sale of placer mining claims, and if land is located and held under this law, it is a mining claim before patent in every sense of the word, and for the purpose of the lien law it does not cease to be a mining claim when, by a patent from the government, the fee is transferred to the locator or his assigns. This was clearly held in Bewick v. Muir,
There may be a question whether the legislature has thoroughly fulfilled its duty in this respect, but the law, such as it is, should be given a construction as fully in harmony with the constitution as its terms will admit, and since there is no reason for making a discrimination against those who contribute to the development of oil claims, they should have the full benefit of the literal terms of the statute. This, indeed, is necessary to preserve its harmonious operation. The constitution and the law alike purport to give the artisan, laborer, or materialman a lien upon "the property" which his labor or materials have created or improved. If labor or materials have gone into a building or other structure, the lien attaches to the structure, to the ground upon which it stands, and to a space about it sufficient for its convenient use or occupation, that being deemed — and rightly so — the property created or improved. In case of labor or material contributed to the development or working of a mine, the rule, though expressed in different terms, is in effect the same. For mining claims have always been restricted by the rules and customs of miners prior to the enactment of the mining laws, and since that time by the laws themselves, to what is regarded as a reasonable quantity of placer ground, and in case of lode claims to so much only of the ground adjacent to the lode as is required for convenient working. The statute, therefore, does not in reality contain two rules for determining what is subject to a laborer's or materialman's lien. It contains but one rule, and that the rule of the constitution which fastens a lien upon the property improved or benefited; and oil claims, being within the reason as well as the letter of the law, are, as they should be, governed by the same rule. When labor or material is expended *584 in developing an oil claim, the lien attaches to the claim. If it is the claim of a single locator to twenty acres, the lien covers the twenty acres, and if it is a consolidated claim of several locators the lien will cover the whole of the consolidated claim, if it is being worked as a whole. In this case the land — eighty acres — is only half the size permitted by law to be located as a consolidated claim. It is known as the "Baradino Placer Mining Claim." It is described in the complaint as a mining claim. It is not denied in the answer of the Kern King Company that it is a mining claim. The court finds that said company had a lease of the claim with power to develop it, and that it owns all the apparatus and improvements on the ground. There was really no issue between the plaintiff and the Kern King Company as to the land being a mining claim — so far as oil land can, under any circumstances, be a mining claim — and if there had been an issue it is found in favor of the plaintiff. The superior court, therefore, did not err in holding that plaintiff's lien extended to the whole eighty acres. This conclusion disposes of all the exceptions based upon the failure of plaintiff to allege, and of the court to find, that the whole of the eighty acres is necessary to the convenient use and occupation of the well.
Several assignments of error are based upon the failure of plaintiff to allege that the contract with Martin and Berry was in writing, or that it was for more than one thousand dollars. When no contract between the owner of land and his contractor is recorded, those who work under the contractor have no means of knowledge whether the contract is in writing or not, or whether it is for more or less than one thousand dollars, and these facts being peculiarly within the knowledge of the owner, he suffers no detriment from the failure of plaintiff to make them the subject of conjectural allegation. Here the facts that the contract was in writing and that it was for more than one thousand dollars, were clearly proved and found by the court, and the error, if any, in overruling the special demurrer directed to this point was harmless. This view also disposes of the objection to the second and third counts of the complaint for failing to allege that anything was due the contractors when the lien notices were filed. The contract being void, payment by the owner to the contractor is no defense to the claim of lien. *585
We cannot say that it was an abuse of discretion to deny the Kern King Company's motion for a continuance, based upon the sole ground that its counsel was detained by previous professional engagements in Santa Clara County. It should have been made to appear that under the circumstances other professional advice was unavailable, and that there was a meritorious defense to the action, which could not be effectively presented without the presence of the absent attorney. Nothing of this kind was shown.
We find no error in the proceedings of the superior court prejudicial to the Kern King Oil and Development Company, and the judgment against it is therefore affirmed. The judgment against the Belmont Oil Company is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings against that company as the plaintiff may be advised.
Henshaw, J., Shaw, J., McFarland, J., Angellotti, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.