47 Colo. 320 | Colo. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiffs, who allege that they are lessees of the Carruthers lode mining claim in San Miguel county, brought this action against The Smuggler-Union Mining Company, the alleged lessor, for damages occasioned by their wrongful eviction by the lessor, and obtained a judgment from which defendant appeals. The assignment of errors contains many specifications. As the judgment must be reversed because it is not based upon sufficient legal evidence, only the objection on this ground and such other specifications as might be material in the event of a new trial will be considered.
This application was not made under sec. 364 of the Code, as that applies only where there is a suit pending involving some title or interest in the mine itself (People ex rel., etc., v. De France, 29 Colo. 309), but is based upon the inherent power of a court of equity to permit an examination of the subject-matter of an action. Defendant strenuously contends that such an order, in a case like this, and under such issues, is without precedent and wholly beyond the power of the court in the absence of a permissive statute. In Montana Company v. St. Louis Mining & Milling Company, 152 U. S. 160, it was said that courts of equity have frequently granted such orders, and while the custom is not decisive of the question, the right to make them has never been denied by the courts. The observation may not have been necessary to that decision, because the inspection there was granted under authority of a statute; but, in passing upon the constitutionality of the statute, the court said, that if courts of equity, by virtue of their general powers, have such authority in a case pending before
But there are other, and equally conclusive, reasons why the order was wrong, harmful to defendant and resulted in obstructing the due administration of justice. Let us consider for a moment its meaning and effect. The court apparently was in doubt about its power to compel defendant to admit plaintiffs into the mine; otherwise .the order would probably have been made absolute. Its alternative char
We proceed to search the record to see what it exhibits on such issue. The lease under which plaintiffs claim provides that all ores .shall be taken out of the mine through the seventh level and down the Union shaft. The ores extracted by plaintiffs during . their six months ’ occupancy consisted of two separate lots, which, by special permission of defendant, they took out through the Sheridan shaft. But all parties understood and say that this was not of right, but a special privilege limited to the two shipments. It was because of this designated method of removing ores contained in the lease tendered to-Dunlap and (rearing that they refused to accept it, and Kent knew this before he began negotiations with defendant. Both of the plaintiffs say that because of the condition of the seventh level and the Union shaft, of its distance from the leased premises and for other reasons not necessary to mention, no profits could-be made in working the mine if the
. which defendant was not obliged to give, such as a right of way through a certain tunnel. Upon this . evidence of plaintiffs themselves, defendant insisted that they had disproved their own case and asked a . direction to the jury to that effect. In passing upon this motion, the trial judge said that plaintiffs ’ testimony was contradictory and inconsistent, yet he . thought the matter should be submitted to the jury to determine which claim of plaintiffs was true. The judge evidently overlooked, or for the moment forgot, a previous and correct ruling which he had made, that because plaintiffs had not averred in their
In other respects the evidence of profits was insufficient. In view of plaintiffs’ admission that no profits could be made if they were confined to the Union shaft, evidence as to profits which they made out of two special shipments taken out through the Sheridan shaft by permission of defendant was manifestly improper as a foundation on which to compute profits if the lease was worked and the ores removed as its terms provided. Yet -such incompetent evidence was the basis on which plaintiffs estimated their profits for milling ores which they claim they could have extracted had they not been ousted. During the six months they were in possession, they did only about fifteen feet of development work in running a drift, the ores they took out being from workings on the vein opened by previous lessees or
Plaintiffs may have produced enough evidence as to the profits they made out of the two lots of ore which they mined and milled by special permission of defendant, hut they failed to prove that they would have made any profits, even out of these shipments, had they mined and removed the ores as they were required to do by the lease, as the trial court said. And it is altogether clear that they produced no reliable or reasonably certain evidence either as to the quantity or value of the ores that remained in the mine after the ouster, and which they might have milled during the remainder of their term, or. that there would have been any profits. On the contrary the evidence is wholly conjectural and consists of mere guesses, as the trial court itself suggested. The witnesses did not even purport to consider their
Out of many authorities that might he cited in support of our conclusion, we refer to Central Coal and Coke Co. v. Hartman, 111 Fed. Rep. 96, where Sanborn, circuit judge, in an exhaustive and discriminating opinion, discusses profits as an element of damage in such cases.—1 Sutherland on Damages (3d ed.), § 59 et seq.; 3 Sutherland on Damages (3d ed.), §867 et seq.; 13 Cyc., pp. 36, 49-53, 157, 161, 212, 213, 219; 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), pp. 616-626; Boston & Albany R. R. Co. v. O’Reilly, 158
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. Reversed and remanded. .