20 F. 4 | U.S. Cir. Ct. | 1884
Lead Opinion
{orally.) In this suit a demurrer to the bill has been filed. The grounds of demurrer are: First, that the bill does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and, second, that Chapman and Sayre are necessary parties to the bill.
I shall not attempt an extended review of the case, as I do not deem it necessary, nor have I so thoroughly collated the facts in the case as I should desire, were I to attempt to review it upon all the points raised. But it seems to us that the considerations which I am about to submit are controlling in the matter; and, if so, the demurrer-upon both points must be overruled.
The bill sets out that in 1876 the defendant, Baker, entered into a certain contract, “A,” with the Pioneer Mining Company, the predecessor in interest of plaintiff in this suit. This contract was for the purpose of securing the payment to Baker of an acknowledged indebtedness due him from said company, as provided therein. In case this indebtedness was not paid within three years from the date of said contract, Baker was entitled to take possession of the property and mines of the company, work the mines, and from the net proceeds thereof pay himself the amount due him, with expenses, and a reasonable compensation for his services. Subsequent to that contract, another contract, “B,” was entered into between Baker and W. S. Chapman, then president of said Pioneer Mining Company. This contract was made, as alleged in the bill, for the benefit of said company, ánd, taken in connection with contract “A,” there can be little, if any, doubt on this point. It was virtually in aid of contract “A.” -Its
I may observe that in the contract made December 20, 1878, between Chapman and Sayre and Baker, Baker expressly agreed that he would not sell or incumber the mine. The contract provides for the 'redemption of the property when the debt is paid. In 1882 Baker extended the time for the redemption of the property. Now, if these things demonstrate anything, it appears clear to my mind that Baker, in each and every one of these transactions, and Chapman and Sayre also, considered that he, Baker, merely held this property as a pledge to be handled by him to pay himself his indebtedness; and if he has been paid he ought to surrender the property to the owners.
This is all as to the first point of the demurrer.
As to the second point raised, that Chapman and Sayre should be made parties to the bill, whatever Chapman and Sayre may have done in and about this property and in making these contracts, they acted, in their official capacity, for and on behalf of the Pioneer Mining Company. It is possible, and I believe it is true, that they signed some of these contracts individually, and not in their official capacity; and it might seem, viewing the contracts alone, and not in connection with all of the facts set forth in the bill, that they were of a-personal nature. As I observed before, if they sought to do anything in derogation of their duties as trustees and directors of the company, to that extent their contracts might be held void; but, to the extent to which their acts and contracts were beneficial to the company, the company would have a right to the enjoyment of such benefit. All of the contracts which they at any time made were made in regard to the property of the company. They did not assume to own any of the property themselves. They were merely stockholders and directors in the Pioneer company, which fact Baker well knew. If Chap
The demurrer, therefore, is overruled upon both points.
Concurrence Opinion
(orally, concurring.) J. desire to make an observation or two in addition to what has been said by my associate. There is some point made and a considerable argument had on the fact that there was no valid conveyance from the Pioneer Mining Company to Baker. These parties, Chapman and Sayre, so far as appears, were not authorized to convey, and they did not attempt to convey, to Baker. There does not purport to be any conveyance from them to Baker. The legal title, which became vested in Baker, did not pass through that channel, but through a purchase at a sheriff's sale under the judgment in favor of the California Powder Works, instead of another decree of foreclosure in favor of Baker for $100,000, as it seems to have been at first contemplated. But tho sale and purchase were made in pursuance of an express agreement and understanding that the mine and other property of the Pioneer Mining Company should be redeemed upon terms expressed in the agreement. Tho result of the various agreements, in substance, was that Baker should purchase the property in question at the sheriff’s sale under the powder works judgment; should have possession, work, and develop the mine, pay all the necessary expenses, together with a reasonable compensation fer his own services, and pay the amount of his own claim against the company, the powder works judgment, and all other indebtedness of the Pioneer Mining Company specified in the agreement, within a designated time, out of the proceeds of tho mine; and when this should he accomplished, or when the sums provided for should be otherwise paid, on behalf of the Pioneer company, the property remaining should be restored to said company, or to said Chapman and Sayre. Tho time within which this was to bo done, so as to prevent the title becoming absolute, was limited. The sale took place and the purchase was made by Baker under the powder works judgment, and the title vested in pursuance of the agreement,
It is alleged in the bill that those moneys so intended, and secured to he paid, have all been paid out of the proceeds of the mine. If not, that the complainant has offered to pay, and that it is now ready to pay, any balance that may be found due on an accounting. If these allegations are true, and the demurrer admits their truth, then the indebtedness of the Pioneer Mining Company, contemplated, has been paid out of the proceeds of the property of this company, and not out of the property of Chapman and Sayre, or of either of them; and the complainant, the successor in interest of the Pioneer Mining Company, is entitled to a reconveyance of the mine and other property sold under the judgment mentioned; and if the defendant refuses to reconvey, .then, clearly, it seems to me, it *is entitled to the relief prayed in llie bill.
On the other point, that Chapman and Sayre are indispensable parties to the bill, I do not know what the pleadings and proceedings may develop in the subsequent stages of the case, but there is nothing on the face of the bill, as it now stands, to show that Chapman and Sayre are indispensable or necessary parties to the bill. No relief is asked against them, and it does not appear that they personally claim any interest in their own behalf either against the complainant or the defendant. The court can order them to be brought in at any time when it appears that the rights of the present parties to the bill cannot he fully and finally determined without their presence. They would, perhaps, bo proper parties, but there is nothing disclosed on the face of the bill as it now stands to render it necessary to make them parties. As before stated, the agreements first set out were made in the name of the corporation. The subsequent agreements in the names of Chapman and Sayre, in form, all recognize the title of the property as being in the corporation, and all the agreements and proceedings relate exclusively to the property and the indebtedness of the corporation, and are intended to facilitate the payment of the indebtedness of the corporation out of its own property. Chapman and Sayre were, in faet, two out of the three trustees, and they owned all the stock except one forty-eighth part. According to the allegations of the bill, the indebtedness of the corporation had been paid out of the proceeds of the working of the productive mine, owned by the corporation, subject only to the incumbrances indicated, in pursuance of the terms of the various agreements, and of the trusts
I concur in the order overruling the demurrer.