72 F. 301 | 8th Cir. | 1895
after stating the case as above, delivered the opinion of the court.
The first question to be considered has reference to the action of the circuit court in assuming to state the account itself, after an examination of the testimony which was taken and returned by the respective masters, instead of requiring the masters, or either of them, to report their individual conclusions upon the testimony-so taken. It is contended in behalf of the appellants that such action on the part of the circuit court deprived them of the rights’, secured by equity rule S3, and that the decree should, for that reason alone, be reversed. With reference to such contention, it is only necessary to say that the action in question was doubtless at variance with the ordinary practice, but it affords no ground for reversing the decree, if it was for the right party .and for the -right amount. Notwithstanding the fact that it is ordinarily the duty of a master to file a written report containing his conclusions
It is next insisted by the appellants that those provisions of the decree of January 21, 1893, were and are erroneous, which required the defendants, Jerome B. Wheeler and the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company, to account for the shares of stock and dividends derived by them from the Compromise Mining Company, and that that portion of the final decree of August 22, 1894, was likewise erroneous which adjudged that the complainants below were entitled to 304 shares of the capital stock of the Compromise Mining- Company, and that they were further entitled to have and recover from the defendants $104,984.05 on account of ores taken by the Compromise Mining Company from the Emma Mine prior to January 1, 1893. These propositions necessitate a further statement of certain facts disclosed by the record, and, as the several contentions are closely related, for convenience they will be considered together. When the case was formerly before this court, we alluded to the fact that the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company had conveyed about four acres of the Emma mining location to the Compromise Mining Company, and that the latter company, which had not then, and has not since, been made a party to the suit, claimed to be the owner of that portion of said mine under conveyances executed by said Jerome B. Wheeler and by the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company. The former record, however, did not disclose any material facts relative to tne organization of the Compromise Mining Company, further than the fact that there was such a company, and that it had acquired the title to a portion of the Emma mining claim. It now appears, as will be more fully shown by the annexed diagram, marked “Plat A,” that there were in the same neighborhood a number of. mining claims or locations belonging to different, persons; among others, the Durant, the Emma, the Aspen, the Spar, the Connamara, and the Forrest.
Emma, the Aspen, the Connamara, the Forrest, and one or two other claims' not shown by the plat. The claim so preferred by the owner of the Durant Mine was based on the ground that the lode which was found underneath the several adjacent mining
In view of the foregoing facts, we think that the point is well made, in behalf of the appellants, that the circuit court erred in attempting to subdivide and apportion the stock of the Compro
The point is made by the appellants that they should not be .compelled to surrender 12/*2 of the interest in the Compromise Mining Company’s stock, which they acquired in the manner aforesaid, and that they should not be compelled to account for the dividends, if any, which they have received, from the Compromise Mining Company by virtue of their having acquired an interest in that company’s stock. It is urged, in substance, that as the ■deeds and powers of attorney conveying the one-third interest of William J. Wood, deceased, in the Emma Mine, to Jerome B. Wheeler, have been canceled and annulled, the complainants below may hereafter proceed against the Compromise Mining Company for so much of the Emma mining location as has been conveyed to that company. It is further suggested that the complainants should be left to seek relief against that company for so much of the Emma Mine, and the ores taken therefrom, as it now claims to own under the conveyance made to it by the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company. We are not able, however, to assent to that view of the case. The complainants below have not appealed from the final decree, which gave them an interest in the' Compromise Mining Company’s stock, and required the defendants, Wheeler and the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company, to account for the dividends received thereon from the Compromise Mining Company. By not appealing from that portion of the decree, they have elected to receive and accept from the said defendants their due proportion of the consideration which was paid for the conveyance of a portion of the Emma Mine to the Compromise Mining Company. Such action on the part of the heirs of William J. Wood, deceased, ■ who are parties to this suit, amounts tó; a ratification of the conveyance, .made by the Aspen
It remains to he further decided, on this branch of the case, whether the circuit court erred in awarding to the complainants the sum of $104,984.05 as their just proportion of the moneys received by Jerome, B. Wheeler and the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company from the Compromise Mining Company, on account of ore extracted by it from that portion of the Emma Mine which was conveyed to the Compromise Mining Company. We are of the opinion, as heretofore stated, that the complainants are entitled to recover from the appellants 12/*2 of whatever dividends were paid to them by the Compromise Mining Company on account of ores taken from the Emma Mine; but the important «juestion to be determined is whether the evidence introduced on (he hearing before the masters warranted a finding against the appellants in the sum of $104,984.05, or in any other amount, on account: of dividends thus received. This is an issue of fact to be determined in the light of all the evidence, and it is only necessary to state the conclusion that has been reached after an attentive reading of the testimony.
Large sums of money, by way of dividends, were doubtless paid to -loi-ome 5. Wheeler, from time to time, after the formation of
At this point it becomes necessary to notice a defense interposed on the last hearing before the circuit court, by which the defendants below sought to evade all liability to account to the heirs of William J. Wood, deceased, for any ore extracted by them from the Emma Mine, except such as may have been taken from that small triangular portion of the claim which lies between the south end line of the Spar claim and the north end line of the Durant claim, both lines extended westwardly. See Plat A. Jerome B. Wheeler, as it seems, is the owner of the Spar claim indicated on Plat A, lying to the east of the south end of the Emma location. The contention is, in substance, that the lode on which the Emma claim was originally laid, and from which all the ore mined underneath the surface of that claim has been taken, has its apex in the Spar and Durant claims, which lie east of the Emma, and on higher ground. It is insisted, therefore, that inasmuch, as Wheeler and the owner of the Durant claim hold the
The next question for consideration is whether the circuit court erred in awarding to the complainants below the sum of $434,-008.58 as their just proportion of the value of all ores extracted from the Emma Mine by Jerome B. Wheeler and by his grantee, the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company. The record shows that the gross sum last mentioned contains an allowance for interest on the value of ores mined and sold, computed up to July 16, 1894, and that it is made up of two items, to wit, the sum of $195,252.97, which was the amount allowed, together with interest, on account of ores mined and sold by Jerome B. Wheeler prior to January 1, 1886, which is hereafter termed the ‘Wheeler Period,” ,and the sum of $238,755.61, which was the sum allowed for
In a petition for a rehearing that was filed by the appellants after the announcement of the terms of the decree, the appellants conceded that the gross receipts from the Emma Mine, including interest allowances, during the smelting company period, amounted to $1,803,6(58.64. They further admitted that the total disbursements for necessary mining expenses during the same period did not exceed $1,071,017.32, leaving the sum of $732,651.32 as the net balance for distribution among the several owners of the Emma Mine, of which latter sum it was conceded that the complainants below, representing 32A‘¡ of the interest of William J. Wood, deceased, were entitled to $209,828.95. The amount apportioned to the complainants by the1 circuit court, including interest, on account of their share of the proceeds of the mine during the same period, was, as above stated, $238,755.61. After a patient investigation of the testimony and the accounts, we have concluded that: the evidence contained in the record is insufficient to warrant an allowance against the appellants on account of ores mined and •sold during the smelting company period in excess of $209,328.95, and that sum has accordingly been fixed as the correct amount of the allowance. It does not give credit to the appellants for what are termed “general expenses” of the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company, or “litigation expenses,” because the evidence before us is insufficient to enable us to determine with any degree of accuracy what portion of such expenses ought to be apportioned to and charged against the Emma Mine, as distinguished from the numerous other mines belonging to the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company, on account of which such expenses were incurred.. The appellants having failed tq furnish any satisfactory evidence as to these alleged outlays, or to make any apportionment thereof on the hooks of the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company when the money was expended, they were, as we think, properly disallowed as credits in the accounting.
Greater difficulty has been experienced in determining the amount that ought to he awarded to the complainants below on account of the product of the Emma Mine during what is termed the “Wheeler Period.” The mine, as it seems, became productive some time during the year 1884, hut at what precise date is not shown with certainty; and it was thereafter worked by Wheeler until about January 1,1886, when it was conveyed by him to the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company. The circuit court awarded to the complainants, including
One further question remains to be noticed and decided. The circuit court rendered a decree against Jerome B. Wheeler and tin; Aspen Mining & Smelting Company, jointly, for 12A2 of the value of the ores taken from the Emma Mine during the Wheeler period, and also during the smelting company period. Such action on its
For the reasons heretofore fully indicated, the final decree rendered by the circuit court on August 22,1894, should be modified as follows: First. The sum of $434,008.58, specified in the first paragraph of said decree, should be expunged therefrom, and in lieu thereof the sum of $404,581.92 should be inserted. Second. The entire second and third paragraphs of said decree should be stricken out and expunged therefrom, and in lieu thereof the circuit court should adjudge, determine, and decree that the complainants, Margaret Billings, James O. Wood, Charles E. Wood, Thomas E. Wood, Hiram H. Wood, and William Wood are justly entitled to 12/*2 of whatever interest the said Jerome B. Wheeler and the Aspen Mining & Smelting Company have, or have heretofore had, in the stock of the Compromise Mining Company, growing out of the conveyance of a part of the Emma mining claim to the said Compromise Mining Company; that within 20 days from the entry of the modified decree the said Jerome B. Wheeler and the said Aspen Mining & Smelting Company do cause to be executed, and filed with the clerk of the circuit court of the United' States for the district of Colorado, a good and sufficient conveyance or assignment to the said complainants of an undivided : V42 of the aforesaid interest in the stock of the Compromise Mining Company'so held and acquired by them as aforesaid; that thereupon the said