199 F.3d 1093 | 9th Cir. | 1999
Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge KLEINFELD; Concurrence by Judge WALLACH.
This is a mining law case. Issues arise regarding the extent to which the owner of an unpatented mining claim or mill site has surface rights despite the absence of approval of his operating plan or bond, and also the constraints on disapproval.
Facts
Ray and Molly Shumway own seven mill sites in the Tonto National Forest in Arizona. Two of the seven mill sites, BLM claim numbers AMC 203225 and 209240, are the subject of this lawsuit. The mill sites were held pursuant to mill site claims. Mining claims and mill site claims, in mining law terminology, are vested pos-sessory rights which are recognized as interests in real property; they are not merely assertions of rights, as claims are in the more common sense of the word. Because this case was decided on summary judgment, the facts, where disputed, are taken most favorably to the Shumways based on the cognizable evidence submitted on the summary judgment motions.
The mill sites are subject to Forest Service operating plan approval because they are in a national forest.
Friction appears to have begun between the Shumways and the Forest Service in the late 1980s. Mr. Shumway states in his affidavit that a Mr. Rodney Byers of the Forest Service came to the district and told him that he “would
The Forest Service also changed its bond requirements with respect to the Shumway mill sites. The operating plan approved in 1979 required the Shumways to .post a $2,000 cash or surety bond to assure eventual reclamation of the disturbed area. In 1980, the Forest Service increased the required performance bond to $3,200. The $3,200 amount was approved again in 1981. By 1990, the bond amount had crept up to $5,200, although less ore was being processed than in the 1980s and no cyanide leaching was taking place. But in 1990, the Forest Service raised the required bond to $18,000.
The Shumways submitted a corporate surety bond, adequate in amount, from Globe Insurance Company, Ltd., but the Forest Service rejected the bond because Globe was not listed by the Department of the Treasury as an accepted surety. The Shumways unsuccessfully appealed the increase in the bond requirement and were unable to post it. They found that no sureties on the Department’s approved list were writing such bonds, and they did not have $18,000 cash they could spare from the milling operations. In 1991, the Forest Service ordered them to stop all milling and mining and leave their residence on the mill site, because they had not posted the bond. The Forest Service subsequently advised the Shumways that if they tried to obtain approval for a new operating plan, they could expect the bond to be raised to $150,000 or $200,000.
Meanwhile, the Shumways, in 1994, applied for patents to their mill sites. A “patent” “is the conveyance by which the [federal government] passes its title to portions of the public domain.”
In 1995, the United States sued the Shumways to evict them from the two mill sites, and require them to remove all their things and clean the sites up. The Complaint alleges that the Shumways were not conducting any milling at the mill sites, had no approved plan of operations, had failed to post the required bond, and were trespassing. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the government, ordering the Shumways to remove themselves and all their things from the sites and to restore the sites to their natural condition, or if they did not, they would forfeit the sites and be required to pay damages sufficient to restore the sites. The Shumways appeal.
Background
It is hard to understand this dispute about a relatively arcane area of law without reference to history. During the first half of the nineteenth century, the United States established a mineral leasing system, so that the government would realize much of the economic benefit of minerals found on public lands. But President Polk reported to Congress in 1845 that the cost of government administration was more than four times the lease income, and the leasing system was abandoned.
The miners’ meetings operated as might be expected of a highly democratic process. They favored the interests of those who were there-mostly individuals and small firms without much capital. A much more centralized governmental process in Washington might have favored those with influence in the national government-perhaps those who might want to maximize federal revenue, preserve federal lands, or protect large firms from having to pay huge amounts to buy claims from small scale prospectors who discovered minerals but lacked the capital to extract them.
Other approaches were possible, and might have commended themselves to people. with different interests. Justice Field took the position, to the great displeasure of the miners, that under the common law after Alta California became American,
Even though most of the gold in the California and other western gold rushes was found on federal land, the federal government adopted a mining law scheme late, long after the customs of ownership by discovery and extraction had been established. The California gold rush of 1849, Colorado in 1859, the Comstock Lode and other strikes in Nevada in 1859-60, Idaho in 1862-63, Montana in 1863, and quite a few others, all preceded the federal mining laws. As in the software industry in the 1990s, the industry developed, many vast individual fortunes were made, and the national wealth was greatly increased, all by a new kind of property, before much of the legal framework for the industry developed.
When it came, in skeletal form in 1866, and in substantially its current form in the Mining Law of 1872, the federal statutory law of mining “received” customary law in much the same way that the states had received the common law. The statute, still in force, says “all valuable mineral deposits” in federal lands “shall be free and open to exploration and purchase” under prescribed regulations “and according to the local customs or rules of miners in the several mining districts, so far as the same are applicable and not inconsistent with the laws of the United States.”
Despite much contemporary hostility to the Mining Law of 1872 and high level political pressure by influential individuals and organizations for its repeal, all repeal efforts have failed, and it remains the law.
“A mineral claim is a parcel of land containing precious metal in its soil or rock.”
At the second stage, the prospector is required to perform improvements or assessment work. “[U]ntil a patent has been issued therefor, not less than $100 worth of labor shall be performed or improvements made during each year.”
As the Bureau of Land Management’s 1991 internal manual explains the mill site procedure, “mill sites must be used or occupied for mining and milling purposes only, or uses reasonably in support of mining and milling purposes as commonly recognized in the mining industry.”
In ordinary English, a “claim” is merely a demand for something, or an assertion of a right where the right has not been established. The phrase “mining claim” therefore probably connotes to most laymen an unsupported assertion or demand from which no legal rights can be inferred. But that is emphatically not so. In law, the word “claim” in connection with
The question in Bradford v. Morrison
In 1920, oil, oil shale, gas and certain other minerals were carved out of the Mining Law of 1872 and subjected to a federal leasing system, with a saving clause protecting “valid claims existent [at the date of the passage of the Act].”
The Court ordered issuance of a writ of mandamus anyway, holding that failure to perform the assessment work did not “forfeit” the claim, but only subjected it to the risk that someone would locate over it, a risk averted when the original locator resumed work.
In 1955, Congress dealt with the problem of sham mining claims used for other purposes. Sham claims could be used for selling timber from national forests, or obtaining free residential or agricultural land; one decision has suggested sham use of mining claims along streams by non-serious prospectors (but serious fishermen) “to enjoy their own private fishing camp.”
We considered an action by the government for trespass and an injunction, like the one in the case at bar, in United States v. Goldfield Deep Mines Co.
In Swanson v. Babbitt,
Analysis
The Shumways argue that their equitable title in the mill site claims entitles them not to be treated as trespassers, the increase in their bond requirement to $18,-000 and then at least $150,000 if they were to get approval of a new operating plan was impermissible, and that the district court improperly rejected their evidence on summary judgment. We review de novo because the case was decided on summary judgment.
I.
The Shumways argue that because they had received the First Half Final Certificate toward their patent, they had equitable title to the real estate inconsistent with the district court determination that they were trespassers. The government argues that issuance of the First Half Final Certificate established only that the Shumways had filed their papers applying for a patent, not that they were entitled to a patent or possession. To decide the ease, it is necessary to figure out just what the Shumways owned.
The Shumways argue that their right to a patent has vested, because they have done all that they are obligated to do in order to receive one, and the delay in issuance is attributable merely to administrative delay. In this argument, they are incorrect. There is a presumption that they are entitled to a patent, because, as explained above, the statute provides that “it shall be assumed”
The government argues that until the Secretary of the Interior has decided that a patent application is valid, the applicant has no vested rights at all, even if the applicant is in compliance with the mining
The owner of a mining claim owns property, and is not a mere social guest of the Department of the Interior to be shooed out the door when the Department chooses. Rather, pursuant to the Multiple Use Act, the Department must continue to coexist with a holder of a valid claim whose right to possession has vested. Therefore, so long as the Shumways complied with mining law and forest service regulations, they were entitled to the possessory right and title of a locator-a right to possess the mill site-and could not be evicted unless their claim was a sham or otherwise invalid or they failed to observe Forest Service regulations in such a way as to invalidate their claim. The Forest Service does not argue that the Shumways did not have a bona fide mill site claim, so the rest of our inquiry will focus on whether the Shum-ways failed to comply with permissible Forest Service requirements in such a way as to invalidate their possessory rights.
II.
Even if the Shumways’ right to a patent has not vested, they may still defeat a motion for summary judgment, if they demonstrate that the Forest Service raised the bond requirements arbitrarily, and unreasonably circumscribed their milling operations. To determine whether the Shumways have raised a sufficient factual dispute to defeat summary judgment, we must first revisit the district court’s review of the evidence.
A. The district court’s treatment of the evidence.
The Shumways argue that the district court erred in treating as undisputed the Forest Service’s claims that their mill sites had changed, were strewn with junk, and that cleanup would cost $150,000. The district court rejected Mr. Shumway’s affidavit on the ground that it was “self-serving and conclusory” and rejected an affidavit by a Mr. Clay Richard Thorne on the ground that he failed to allege personal knowledge. The district court said that the Shumways had submitted “no evidence” contradicting the government’s evidence that much of the material on the mill sites was “scrap or junk.” This evidence was material both to whether the Forest Service had authority to order the Shum-ways to remove the material, and to the amount of a reasonable bond. Because the Shumways had a possessory right to their mill sites, they were not only permitted, but until their right to a patent vested, required to use and occupy the mill sites for milling purposes,
Regarding the things on the property, the district court was bound, on summary judgment, to determine only whether there was a genuine issue of material fact, and was not empowered to weigh the evidence or determine the truth of the matters asserted.
Mr. Shumway’s affidavit was of course “self-serving,” as the district court noted. And properly so, because otherwise there would be no point in his submitting it. That an affidavit is self-serving bears on its credibility, not on its cognizability for purposes of establishing a genuine issue of material fact. If the affidavit stated only conclusions, and not “such facts as would be admissible in evidence,”
Mr. Shumway swears in his 1995 affidavit to a number of material facts for which personal knowledge and competence is established by the affidavit. He says “the operations conducted on my mill sites have not substantially changed over the last 15 years,” and “I process ore on a regular basis at the mill site in the same manner I have done for the last 15 years.” As to the things on the site, he says “All of the equipment and materials stored on the mill sites have been or were incidental to the milling operations including my horse which I use to ride the perimeter fence of my mill sites and to ride into the wilderness (no vehicles are allowed) to inspect mines that are in the wilderness area.” These statements are all “such facts as would be admissible in evidence” on Mr. Shumway’s testimony, so the district court erred in disregarding them. They must be taken as true for purposes of determining whether there is a genuine issue of fact precluding summary judgment.
As for Mr. Thorne, he established competence as an expert witness on some matters and personal knowledge on others. He says in his affidavit that he is the president of an environmental consulting, cleanup and testing firm, has mined himself in the same area since the early 1970s, has testified in state and federal courts as a mining expert, and personally inspected the Shumway mill site with a Stanford University biochemist he employs. He swears that “I have personally processed many tons of ore from my own mining operations through the Shumway mill site,” and “I have personal knowledge that many other mining interests in the area have utilized the Shumway mill site for processing or assaying of their ore.” As to the alleged junk, Mr. Thorne says “I have inspected the equipment located on the Shumway mill site and in my estimation the usable mining equipment alone has a replacement value for mining purposes of no less than $400,000.” After describing his familiarity with the Shumway mill sites “since their inception,” Mr. Thorne says “there has been no substantial change whatsoever in the Shumway mill site operation nor has there been any increase in environmental damage at all for the past several years.” As to the tailing ponds, Mr. Thorne says “I have personally inspected the terrain” and states and explains his opinion that there is little if any risk of environmental contamination because of where they are located, even considering the 100 year flood level. He says the chemicals are properly stored, and hazardous chemicals are used only in the laboratory, which is “properly constructed with a cement floor.” All this is based on what Mr. Thorne swears in his affidavit he saw with his own educated eyes. His affidavit shows “affirmatively that the affiant is competent to testify” to these matters and that it is “made on personal knowl
The Shumways also submitted evidence attached to their brief on appeal, showing that in contrast to the government’s new estimates of $150,000 to $200,-000 to clean up the site, 75 to 100 times the original bond requirement, they had obtained an actual bid to do the work for $13,115. Because this was not submitted to the district court when it considered the summary judgment motion, it can have no bearing on whether the district court erred.
B. The Forest Service requirements.
The Shumways argue that the Forest Service has exceeded its authority by raising the bond requirements arbitrarily and unreasonably circumscribing their milling operations. The record establishes a genuine issue of fact as to whether this is so.
The owner of a mining or mill site claim does not need a patent, or a vested right to issuance of a patent, to possess and use the property for legitimate mining or milling purposes. A mining or mill site claim is “property in the fullest sense of the word.”
Mining claims located after the effective date of the 1955 Multiple Use Act are subject, when a patent has not yet issued, to a right in the United States to manage surface resources and allow others to use surface resources, though these uses “shall be such as not to endanger or materially interfere with prospecting, mining or processing operations or uses reasonably incident thereto.”
1. Circumscribing activity on the mill site.
The Multiple Use Act empowers the Forest Service to regulate non-mining activity upon mining claims, so long as the non-mining activity does not interfere with mining activities or “uses reasonably incident thereto.”
As to the equipment, or the “junk” as the Forest Service refers to it, the Shum-ways have also established a factual issue for trial. While the Forest Service might regard the equipment on the Shumways’ sites as junk, it has not proved it. The Shumway affidavit establishes a genuine issue as to whether the equipment and materials are incidental to his milling operations. The Thorne affidavit establishes a genuine issue by providing evidence that the Shumways have $400,000 worth of equipment, a proper laboratory properly used, and properly stored valuable chemicals.
The Forest Service’s own evidence in some respects establishes a genuine issue in favor of the Shumways. In particular, the Forest Service’s photographs, submitted to show the “junk,” display much that plainly is not. For example, a photograph of a pile of tires is submitted to show “junk.” But to anyone who drives much on bad, unpaved roads, what is notable about the tires is that they are mounted on intact steel wheels. Such mounted tires have a use, and a market among those who operate vehicles in terrain where flats are frequent and bent wheels not unusual. Those of us who occasionally drive on mining roads buy them, to have a couple of extra mounted spares. If the Shumways drive the rigs shown in the exhibits, then it is extremely plausible as Mr. Shumway says in his affidavit, that these mounted tires are equipment incidental to his milling operations. That the Forest Service calls what appear to be good wheels “junk” may reflect a lack of competence on its part to evaluate other people’s equipment, rather than a lack of value of the equipment.
Likewise, the Shumways have established a genuine issue about whether their trailer is “junk” that should be removed or a dwelling reasonably incident to mill site activity for which their claim is held. The Shumways’ evidence establishes that (1) they mill at the mill site, which would give them a reason to live there, just as a grocer may have a reason to live upstairs from the store; (2) the Forest Service previously ordered them to have someone living there, to protect against vandals who might spill cyanide; and (3) even though they no longer use cyanide, they still need security to protect the site from vandals. That a sham mining claim cannot furnish legal basis for a dwelling site does not imply that a dwelling is not reasonably incident to a genuine mine or mill site. The need of humans to eat, sleep, and relax in the remote locations where mines have often developed has always necessitated mining camps, bunkhouses, and other dwellings.
2. The plan of operations and the bond requirement.
As required by the Forest Service’s organic act, the Secretary of Agriculture was delegated the authority to promulgate regulations for the protection of the forests:
The Secretary of Agriculture shall make provisions for the protection against destruction by fire and depredations upon the public and national forests which may have been set aside ...; and he may make such rules and regulations and establish such service as will insure the objects of such reservations, namely, to regulate their occupancy and use and to preserve the forests thereupon from destruction.71
That same organic legislation limited that power, requiring that no such rule or regulation “prohibit any person from entering upon the national forests for all proper and lawful purposes, including that of prospecting, locating and developing the mineral resources thereof.”
The Forest Service regulations impose numerous requirements on anyone running a mining operation in the National Forests. Mine and mill site operators must give the Forest Service “a notice of intent to operate,” and based on this notice “[i]f the District Ranger determines that such operations will likely cause significant disturbance of surface resources, the operator shall submit a plan of operations,” unless the mine operation falls within a small group of exceptions.
The Forest Service may also require a mine or mill site operator to furnish a bond to secure compliance with the plan of operation’s reclamation requirement.
The Forest Service, in 1990, requested that the Shumways submit a new plan of operations since “their operations had changed substantially,” citing additional equipment, pile of refuse and change in the type of chemicals used. The Forest Service eventually agreed to approve the plan of operations that the Shumways submitted in December 1990, but increased the bond requirement for the Shumways’ mill sites from $5200 to $18,000. But because the Shumways’ bond was by a surety not approved by the Department, no surety approved by the Department would write the bond, and the Shumways could not spare $18,000 cash, their plan of operations was not approved. Nothing else about the plan was disapproved except the Shum-ways’ surety on their bond. More recently the Forest Service estimated that the required bond would be between $100,000 and $150,000. The Forest Service justified
The Forest Service’s Complaint asked the court to evict the Shumways because they had not filed a plan of operations nor the required bond. The Shumways argue that the Forest Service would not accept their plan until they filed the requested bond. But the bond amount, argue the Shumways, was impermissibly arbitrary.
Based on our review of the evidence before the trial court, there is an issue of fact as to whether or not the government improperly increased the bond amount to an arbitrary figure, and threatened additional arbitrary increases if the Shumways met the figure. As we discussed above, the Shumways presented evidence contradicting the Forest Service’s assertion that the mill site operations had changed substantially and that their equipment and materials were “junk.” If that is true, the bond amount should not have drastically changed.
The Shumways have also raised a genuine issue of material fact as to whether remediation would include the cost of hauling away the equipment and materials on the site. If, as the Thorne affidavit says, the equipment has a replacement value of $400,000 then costs of transportation would merely be a factor affecting the price at which the equipment could be sold.
Nor does the record provide a basis for evicting the Shumways. There is uncontradicted evidence that the Shumways own the mill site claims. There is no evidence in the record before us that (as was the case in Goldfield Deep Mines
Conclusion
Genuine issues of fact preclude summary judgment.
REVERSED.
. See Berry v. Valence Tech., Inc., 175 F.3d 699, 703 (9th Cir.1999).
. See 36 C.F.R. 228.4 (1998).
. Smelting Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.S. 636, 640, 26 L.Ed. 875 (1881).
. Id. at 640-41.
. See John C. Lacy, Historical Overview of the Mining Law: The Miners’ Law Becomes Law, in The Mining Law of 1872: A Legal and Historical Analysis 16 — 17 (1989).
. See Charles Howard Shinn, Mining Camps — A Study in American Frontier Government 38-39 (Knopf ed.1948) (1885); see also Charles Wallace Miller, Jr., Stake Your Claim!: The Tale of America's Enduring Min-ingLaws 16-17 (1991).
. Shinn, supra note 14, at 168.
. Stephen J. Field, The Annoyances of My Judicial Life 135 in Personal Reminiscences of Early Days in California (1893 2d ed.) (1877).
. Miller, supra note 14, at 2-3.
. 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England 284-85 (1765).
. 30 U.S.C. § 22 (1994). Cf. Alaska Stat. § 01.10.010 (Lexis 1998) ("So much of the common law not inconsistent with the Constitution of the State of Alaska or the Constitution of the United States or with any law passed by the legislature of the State of Alaska is the rule of decision in this state.”); Cal. Civ.Code § 22.2 (West 1982) ("The common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States, or the Constitution or laws of this State, is the rule of decision in all the courts of this State.”).
.See, e.g., Sen. Dale Bumpers, Reform of the 1872 Mining Law, in The Mining Law of 1872: a Legal and Historical Analysis 7 (1989); Associated Press, Babbitt Calls Mining Law "Outrageous Gift,” The Denver Post, May 15, 1997, at B8; Miller, supra note 14, at 238-246 (stating that environmental organizations and large mining companies have favored replacement of Mining Law of 1872 with leasing scheme, but the "little man” has so far succeeded in mobilizing sufficient political strength to prevent change).
. See 30 U.S.C. 42(a) (1994).
. St. Louis Smelting & Ref. Co. v. Kemp, 104 U.S. 636, 649, 26 L.Ed. 875 (1881).
. Id.
. 30 U.S.C. § 26.
. 30 U.S.C. §28.
.30 U.S.C. § 29.
. Id.
. Id.
. See 30 U.S.C. § 42(a).
. BLM Manual, release 3-270, Millsite Claim Patent Applications § 3864.1(F).
. Id. at ch. 6(A)(2).
. Id.
. Benson Mining & Smelting Co. v. Alta Mining & Smelting Co., 145 U.S. 428, 12 S.Ct. 877, 36 L.Ed. 762 (1892).
. Id. at 434, 12 S.Ct. 877.
. Id. at 432, 12 S.Ct. 877.
. Bradford v. Morrison, 212 U.S. 389, 29 S.Ct. 349, 53 L.Ed. 564 (1909).
. Id. at 394, 29 S.Ct. 349.
. United States v. North Amer. Transp. & Trading Co., 253 U.S. 330, 40 S.Ct. 518, 64 L.Ed. 935 (1920).
. See id. at 337-38, 40 S.Ct. 518.
. 30 U.S.C. § 193.
. Wilbur v. United States ex rel. Krushnic, 280 U.S. 306, 50 S.Ct. 103, 74 L.Ed. 445 (1930).
. See id. at 315, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. See id.
. See id.
. See id. at 317, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. Id. at 316, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. Id. at 317, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. United States v. Curtis Nevada Mines, Inc., 611 F.2d 1277, 1282 (9th Cir. 1980).
. 30 U.S.C. § 612(a).
. See 30 U.S.C. § 612(b).
. See Curtis-Nevada Mines, 611 F.2d at 1284.
. United States v. Goldfield Deep Mines Co., 644 F.2d 1307 (9th Cir.1981).
. See id. at 1308.
. Id. at 1308 n. 2.
. Swanson v. Babbitt, 3 F.3d 1348 (9th Cir.1993).
. Id. at 1350.
. Id. at 1353.
. Id. at 1353.
. Id. at 1354.
. See Burrell v. Star Nursery, Inc., 170 F.3d 951, 954 (9th Cir.1999).
. 30 U.S.C. § 29 (1994).
. Id.
. Benson Mining, 145 U.S. at 432, 12 S.Ct. 877.
. See Swanson, 3 F.3d at 1353.
. See Bradford, 212 U.S. at 394-95, 29 S.Ct. 349; Wilbur, 280 U.S. at 316, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. 30 U.S.C. § 42 (1994); United States v. Bagwell, 961 F.2d 1450, 1455-56 (9th Cir.1992).
. See 30 U.S.C. § 612(a) (1994) (stating that mining claim shall be used only for "prospecting, mining, or processing operations and other uses reasonably incident thereto”).
. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c); Summers v. A. Teichert & Son, Inc., 121 F.3d 1150, 1152 (9th Cir.1997).
. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986); Summers v. A. Teichert & Son, Inc., 127 F.3d 1150, 1153 (9th Cir.1997).
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e).
. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(e).
. See USA Petroleum Co. v. Atlantic Richfield, Co., 13 F.3d 1276, 1279 (9th Cir.1994).
. Bradford, 212 U.S. at 394, 29 S.Ct. 349.
. See North Amer. Transp., 253 U.S. at 334, 40 S.Ct. 518.
. Wilbur, 280 U.S. at 316, 50 S.Ct. 103.
. 30 U.S.C. § 612(b).
. Id.
. 16 U.S.C. § 551 (1994).
. 16 U.S.C. § 478.
. Id.
. United States v. Weiss, 642 F.2d 296 (9th Cir.1981).
. Id. at 299.
. Like the plaintiffs in Weiss, the Shumways do not claim that the regulations at issue were unreasonable. Therefore we do not consider that issue in this case.
.36 C.F.R. § 228.4(a) (1998).
. See 36 C.F.R. § 228.4 (1998).
. 36 C.F.R. § 228.5(a).
. See 36 C.F.R. § 228.13.
. 36 C.F.R. § 228.13(b).
. See 36 C.F.R. § 228.13(c), (d).
. United States v. Goldfield Deep Mines Co., 644 F.2d 1307 (9th Cir.1981).
Concurrence Opinion
concurring separately:
I concur in this opinion. The Forest Service would do well to remember that miners explored and built much of the western United States using long-established techniques, some of which dated from the Middle Ages. Many of those methods are still perfectly workable. Mining equipment, especially that used in grading, crushing, and grinding ore may well be old, battered, and rusty and yet still be entirely serviceable, particularly for small operators. It is hardly “junk”.