16 Colo. App. 542 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1901
This suit was brought by the appellee to recover his salary as mining superintendent for the appellant from October 1, 1897, to November 7, 1897, amounting to §205.54. The defendant answered, admitting that the plaintiff performed service for it during the time stated, and averring that the service was rendered under its employment of the plaintiff, as its mining superintendent, at §166.66 per month, from the 7th day of January, 1896, and that he was paid that sum monthly until the 7th day of October, 1897. It was also admitted that the plaintiff’s salary for the month commencing the 7th day of October, 1897, amounting to §166.66, had not been paid, but indebtedness to the plaintiff in any sum was denied. The answer further set forth the appointment on
The plaintiff introduced, in evidence, the following resolution, adopted by its board of directors, at a meeting held on the 11th day of January, 1896: “ On motion of Solomon Turck, it was resolved that the superintendent Wm. D. Arnold, shall be employed to lease the property of the company upon such terms and for such time as shall seem best to him in the first instance, said lease not to be operative, or take effect, until same has been submitted and approved by Willard Teller, the time of such lease not to exceed the period of one year, except upon further action by the board.” The plaintiff also introduced the lease to Thompson, -dated January 22, 1896, and the entries in the books of the defendant relating to that lease. The lease bore the approval of Willard Teller. It reserved a royalty of fifty per cent, of all ore produced, and provided that the cost of blacksmithing, mining timbers and
The authority exercised by the plaintiff in the operation of the mine appears from the following testimony of Benjamin C. Catren, a witness called by the plaintiff: “ Mr. Arnold had supervision as to the leases and the working of the property, and the money they could get out of it; and everything that was kept out in the way of royalty or tramming, or otherwise, was done under the direction of Mi’. Arnold, and the money that was paid in under the leases, was also done under Mr. Arnold’s direction, and Mr. Arnold was the only man who was checking against the company’s account at Georgetown, so that of all the morpey that was paid in from ore or other sources went into the bank under the direction of Mr. Arnold, and he was the man that checked it out.” This witness was a bookkeeper under the plaintiff during the time covered by Thompson’s lease. He also testified that he sent monthly reports to the company which were taken from the cash book, and that he was never requested to make a complete report. He said that the reports showed the gross amounts received for ore, and the gross amounts paid out to lessees, but it showed no transaction with any particular lessee, or in relation to any particular lease. There was a number of leases given upon different parts of the mine, and against the objection of the defendant, the court admitted evidence of the royalty reserved in one of those leases other than that before
The following instruction is inexplicable : “ The court instructs the jury that it stands admitted on the part of the defendant that it is indebted to the plaintiff, for salary due. him on the seventh day of November, the sum of $205.54.” A verdict for the plaintiff necessarily followed that statement. But the statement was contrary to the fact. The answer, in terms, denied indebtedness to the plaintiff. In addition to explicit denial, it averred conditions inconsistent with such indebtedness. It did more: it alleged a liability in its favor against the plaintiff, largely exceeding in amount his unpaid salary, and its evidence was in line with its pleading. A denial is not an admission. To say that the plain
Let the judgment be reversed.
Reversed.