1 Colo. L. Rep. 158 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado | 1880
In the month of September, 1878, Charles R. Bissell, Simon H. Foss and Absalom V. Hunter, owned in equal parts three-fourths of the Winnemuc mine, and three-fourths of seven-sixteenths of the New Discoveiy mine, near Leadville in this state. The remaining one-fourth interest in the same property was owned by Edward Handley, George W. Robertson and Amos B. Rawlings, and all were engaged in working the mines, which were very productive. In their relations to each other as owners of the property, the parties named were tenants in common; and in respect to their operations in working and mining on the property, they were mining partners. As to their partnership relation, nothing more is shown than the fact that'they were working the mines and sharing in the proceeds according to their respective interests, so that the relations of the parties were not the subject of express contract, and must be ascertained from their ownership of the property and their conduct in working it. In the month of September, 1878, the parties were greatly
The matter in controversy is whether upon,what took place in the purchase of the Handley interest in the mines, Bissell is in equity to be regarded as a party thereto. Out of the relations of
An attempt was made in argument at the bar to put this case upon the footing of a numerous class in the books in which real property was granted upon a parol pledge from the grantee to make some disposition of it; as where a son has been granted an estate upon condition that he will support his father during his lifetime, or where a devisee has promised the testator to divide the estate with another. In all such cases the trust may be established by parol, and the trust itself stands on the plainest principles of justice. But to point out the distinction between those cases and the case under consideration, can hardly be necessary. Foss received nothing from Bissell on account of the purchase of the property, nor did he take the property with the understanding that he should admit Bissell to an interest in it. If he had received the property upon a pledge to hold it for Bissell, or to make some other disposition of it, his failure to do so would be a fraud upon the grantors as well as the beneficiary, of which either might complain, and the principle invoked would be applicable. But here there was nothing of that kind. The property was sold to Foss who in fact received it, and Bissell comes to complain that he was not admitted to the purchase as by his agreement with Foss he should have been. However he may have been misled by the conduct of Foss he was not in fact a pur
If now we turn to the co-tenancy of the parties we find in that relation nothing of weight respecting the question under consideration. For although tenants in common are not at liberty to assail the common title by which they all hold, they may deal with each other touching their respective interests. Freeman’s Co-tenancy, 165. While Bissell, Foss and Hunter, and the Hand-ley party were all bound to maintain the common title, each was at liberty to purchase from the other in the same manner as a stranger might purchase from any or all of them. Alexander v. Kennedy, 3 Grant’s Cases, 380. It has never been claimed that a purchase by one co-tenant oft he interest of another would inure to the benefit of all who should retain their interest, and certainly there is nothing in the relations of such owners to support that doctrine.
The limitations to individual action on the part of the members of a partnership in respect to those matters which may or may not be within the scope of the partnership business, are in many cases not easily defined. We know, however, that fidelity to the partnership is the highest duty of its members, and that no member can be allowed to turn the partnership concerns to his own account. And whenever a member is found to be seeking a private advantage from partnership dealings, the courts are prompt to correct such an abuse of the confidence reposed in him by his associates. A familiar application of the principle is found in the cases cited by counsel, in which it is held that a partner cannot in his own name, renew the lease of the premises used by the firm. In New York, the doctrine was applied to a case in which the renewal did not begin until the co-partnership had expired by its own limitation, and the reasons assigned by the court are entirely satisfactory. Mitchell v. Reed, 61 New York, 123. The position assumed in these cases is that the renewal is ancillary to the original lease, and so far connected with it that it shall be regarded as a part of it; and as the original lease was owned by the firm, any attempt by a member to appropriate the renewal to his own use is a direct conversion of the property of the firm. In other words, the doctrine is that a member of a firm shall not be permitted to take unto himself the property of the firm, and the renewal of the lease whereof the firm holds the original is such
And this brings us to inquire, what right or interest of the co-partnership of which he was a member was used or asserted by Foss in making the purchase of his associates’ interest in the mines? Is it true that in a mining partnership the firm has a right of pre-emption as to the interests of retiring partners in the mines ? The answer is not doubtful. Where the partnership is formed expressly to work mines, and the mines are held by lease, the lease and renewal of it is as the courts have held, partnership property. But in the case at bar, the partnership arose out of a community of ownership in the mines, and the parties were in a very large sense involuntary associates. They came together upon the ground that they were tenants in common of the mines and not upon any agreement to engage in the business of mining. Indeed they had no agreement whatever respecting their joint operations, but they stood solely on their ownership of the property, in consideration of which they united for the purpose of working it. They were partners in the working,'but not in the ownership of the mines, arid their firm was a thing of the hour without hope of existence. In that kind of association it cannot be said that there is in the collective body a right to acquire new interests which its members are bound to respect. The object of the partnership was to take out ore, and in all things directed to that end, each member owed allegience to the company. Beyond that, they were entirely free to act touching their interests in the mines, as well as other individual property. Each member held his interest in the mines in his own right, with power to dispose of it as he should think proper, and each was free to deal with his associate or with a stranger in respect to such interest. So also each member was at liberty to buy from his associates, and thus enlarge his interest in the whole property without reference to the partnership relation. On the whole case no reason can be found for saying that the purchase of the Handley interest inured to the benefit of Bissell, or that he had any share in it. If in making it Foss violated his promise to Bissell, in that there was moral wrong and possibly there may be
The money will be awarded to Foss and Hunter.