after stating the case, delivered the opinion, of the court.
The bill was dismissed in the court below upon the ground of laches, and the correctness of its ruling in that particular is the first question presented for our consideration.
The gist of the plaintiff’s’bill is the alleged fraud of Chat-field in failing to carry out his contract of October 12, 1880, wherein he agreed, that in the event of succeeding in certain legal proceedings to be instituted by him for vesting the legal title to the Johnston claim in the plaintiff, he would convey to plaintiff an undivided one-eighth .interest in the lode free and clear of all expenses incidental to the litigation ; plaintiff upon his pаrt agreeing to pay an undivided one-eighth of the expenses which should accrue in the developing and opening of the lode. The lode in question had been located on the preceding 4th of August by Johnston as owner of one-half, Joseph W. Adair as owner of one-fourth, and George A. Crittenden as owner of the remaining fourth. It seеms there was a conflict between this and another mining claim known as Smuggler No. 2, and the agreement with Chatfield was made for the purpose of contesting this claim.
It also appeared that plaintiff was one of the parties who bad located the Smuggler No. 2 claim; that early in the year
Plaintiff further contended that these faсts respecting the location of the two claims, and the negotiations with Acheson, Dunseomb and Seaver, were known to Chatfield, Thomson and Sayre, who still insisted that there were certain parties who, as grantees of Dunseomb and Seaver, claimed title under the Smuggler location adversely to plaintiff’s interest in the Johnston claim, and that legal proceedings had already been, or were about to-be, commenced to enforce said claims; that Chatfield, Thomson and Sayre represented that it was desirable
Most of the testimony was directed to the relative merits of the .Smuggler. No. 2 and the J. C. Johnston locations, apparently upоn the assumption by the defendant that the plaintiff was bound to prove that the owners of the Johnston lode had the better title. Plaintiff, however, contends, that the contract of October 12, 1880, and the other conveyances made about the same time, when read in the light of -the surrounding circumstances, are conclusive evidence of the following: First, that the interest actually purchased by Chatfieid in the Johnston mine was a quarter interest, and that the remaining fourth of Johnston’s interest in the property, which he deeded to . Chatfieid, was in trust; second, that this fourth interest was the interest referred to in the contract as being claimed adversely to Chatfieid by certain persons; third, that the defendants Thomson and Sayre were employed to institute the “legal proceedings” mentioned in the contract, and were to' receive as a contingent fee Tor their services in that behalf an eighth of the Johnston'mine, in case those proceedings were, succеssful; fourth, that in such case Johnston was to receive the remaining eighth of this contested quarter; fifth, that the “legal proceedings” mentioned contemplated and included an application for letters patent and the acquisition of the government title, as well as a suit of some kind.
There were also significant facts occurring thereafter which should have put plaintiff upon inquiry, and stimulated him to activity in asserting his rights. As he was one of the original locators, both of the Smuggler No. 2 and the Johnston claims, he must-have known that in any controversy between them, he would have been an important witness, and the very fact that he was not called upon indicated that the suit was not being prosecuted, and strengthened the inference, derivable from all the testimony, that the claim was not then considered of sufficient value to warrant the institution of a suit. That he was accessible as a witness is evident from his own testimony that he was in Thomson and Sayre’s office in 1881, and was working at that time for Chatfield on a sub-contract. The incorporation of the Fulton Mining Company in 1880, and the conveyance by Chatfield, Crittenden and Adair of the entire property to the mining company by deeds put upon record, were wholly inconsistent with.-the spirit, if not with the letter, of the contract, and were circumstances calculated to arouse suspicion, since they divested Chatfield of his interest in the mine, disabled him from instituting legal proceedings -in his own name, and put the ownership of the mine in the shape of capital stock, which was liable at any time to рass into the hands of purchasers who might be entirely ignorant of the plaintiff’s interest. It is but just, however, to say in this connection that plaintiff seems to have been apprised of the fact that these parties were about to associate themselves together in forming a stock company, and that the advantagеs of such a
In May, 1881, plaintiff went to the office of Thomson and Sayre, in Leadville, asked how the case was, and wаs informed that it was compromised. He then told them he would like to take the papers and copy them. They gave them to him. He took them and looked them over; went down to have them copied, but found it wrould cost too much, and did not have it done. These papers were the contracts between Chat-field and himself, Crittenden, Adair and himself, and the original grub-stake contract between Dunscomb, Seaver and' himself. He must then have been informed of the fact that the contract of October 12, 1880, had not been- recorded, although Thomson and Sayre promised him it should be.' In 1882 it seems that he spoke to Chatfield, and said that he thought he ought to be entitled to his interest in the property ; that they should have gone on and contested the case; to which Chatfield replied that they had found that there was “ no shadow of a ghost to maintain his case.” Even then he did not act.
It was not until April, 1885, more than a year after the Fulton Mining Company had obtained a patent to the' property, that he made a formal demand upon Chatfield, and on August 1, 1885, filed his first bill in the Circuit Court of the United States to establish his title to a quarter interest in the lode. This suit does not seem to have been prosecuted with
On the 19th of August, 1886, a second suit was brought in the state cpurt, which, after some delay, caused in part by the death of the plaintiff’s counsel, was dismissed because of a defective summons under the state practice.
While there is no direct or positive testimony that plaintiff had knowledge of what was taking plаce with respect to the title or development of the property, the circumstances were such as to put him upon inquiry ; and the law is well settled that, where the question of laches is in issue, the plaintiff is chargeable with such knowledge as he might have obtained upon inquiry, provided the facts already known by him were suсh as to put upon a man of ordinary intelligence the duty of inquiry. This principle was applied at the. present term of this court in
Foster
v.
Mansfield &c. Railway,
The duty of inquiry was all the more peremptory in this case from the fact that the property of itself was of uncertain character, and was liable, as is most mining property, to suddenly develop, an enormous increase in value. This is actually what took place in this case. A property which, in October, 1880, plaintiff sold to Chatfield upon the basis of $4800 for
The language of Mr. Justice Miller in
Twin Lick Oil Company v
.
Marbury,
We think-it is clear that the plaintiff-did not make use of that diligence which the circumstances of the case called for, and the decree of the court below dismissing his bill is, therefore,
Affirmed.
