92 Mich. 254 | Mich. | 1892
The court below directed verdict and judgment in favor of the defendant. Plaintiff brings error.
Thet facts shown upon the trial were that the defendant and his brother, Alexander, owned 40 acres of land in the Upper Peninsula, and in 1882 the plaintiff obtained an option upon it, and explored for ore, which he found* in the summer of 1883. This discovery led to the formation of a corporation under the mining laws of this State, called, “ The Beta Mining Company.” In this company the plaintiff was the owner of 8,000 shares, the McKinnons 5,950 shares each, and a Mr. Fair-child 100 shares. The articles of association recite the conveyance to the company by the plaintiff of his option, and the execution of a lease to the company. Upon the completion of the articles of incorporation an agreement was entered into between the plaintiff and the company by which the 8,000 shares belonging to the plaintiff were placed in the hands of the defendant, as treasurer of the company, to the end that the plaintiff should continue his explorations until he should “find and sink into the ore a shaft at least 20 feet deep in good marketable ore, and drift across and through the same from foot to hanging wall.” When such deposit was found, the stock of plaintiff, so held, was upon demand to be given to him.
Upon the trial plaintiff’s testimony showed that in the summer of 1886, after an expenditure of over $8,000 of his own money, he discovered marketable ore, sunk the shaft to the depth required by the contract, and drifted across it. At this time the entire 8,000 shares of his stock were in the hands of the defendant. As soon as the work was completed entitling him to his stock, plaintiff advised defendant of the fact, and called for his stock. Defendant answered that the stock was burned, but that
This is an action of trover to recover from the defendant the value of the stock. The defense to the action was that the defendant held the stock as treasurer of the company, under a contract made with the company, and that the demand should have been made upon the company instead of upon McKinnon, and -that the company, and not McKinnon, under the circumstances here stated, was liable, if any liability existed.
We think the court below was in error in directing the verdict in favor of the defendant. The claim made against the defendant was that he was guilty of wrong and deceit in withholding the stock when demand was made upon him for it. It is true that McKinnon, as agent of the company, could not be held liable for acts of negligence of the company itself; but he is charged
It is contended, again, that trover is not the appropriate remedy, and that there was not a sufficient demand and refusal to constitutes conversion. There was some evidence in the case tending to show a conversion by the defendant; at least, it became a question for the jury to determine. Daggett v. Davis, 53 Mich. 38. That trover will lie for shares of stock was held in Morton v. Preston, 18 Mich. 60.
The verdict and judgment must be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.