Aliunde Consolidated Mining Co. v. Arnold

16 Colo. App. 542
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 16 Colo. App. 542 (Aliunde Consolidated Mining Co. v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aliunde Consolidated Mining Co. v. Arnold, 16 Colo. App. 542 (Colo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Thomson, J.

This suit was brought by the appellee to recover his salary as mining superintendent for the appellant from October 1, 1897, to November 7, 1897, amounting to §205.54. The defendant answered, admitting that the plaintiff performed service for it during the time stated, and averring that the service was rendered under its employment of the plaintiff, as its mining superintendent, at §166.66 per month, from the 7th day of January, 1896, and that he was paid that sum monthly until the 7th day of October, 1897. It was also admitted that the plaintiff’s salary for the month commencing the 7th day of October, 1897, amounting to §166.66, had not been paid, but indebtedness to the plaintiff in any sum was denied. The answer further set forth the appointment on [544]*544the 11th day of January, 1896, by resolution of the defendant’s board of directors, of the plaintiff, as defendant’s superintendent, with authority to make leases of the defendant’s property on such terms and for such time as he might deem best in the first instance, the leases, however, not to be operative, or take effect, until their submission to, and approval by, Willard Teller, vice president of the defendant, and not to exceed one year until further action by the board; and averred that among the leases made by him was one to James A. Thompson, executed on the 22d day of January, 1896, for a period of one year, under which, without renewal, the plaintiff suffered Thompson to operate until September 8, 1897, and out of which, moneys, amounting in the aggregate to $604.75, came into his hands, for which he failed to account to the defendant. Judgment was prayed for the difference between the moneys alleged to have been retained by the plaintiff, and $166.66, his unpaid salary. The replication denied the retention by the plaintiff of any money belonging to the defendant, and averred that in dealing with the lessee, exacting royalties and adjusting mining expenses, he exercised a discretion with which he was invested by the president and vice president of the defendant.

The plaintiff introduced, in evidence, the following resolution, adopted by its board of directors, at a meeting held on the 11th day of January, 1896: “ On motion of Solomon Turck, it was resolved that the superintendent Wm. D. Arnold, shall be employed to lease the property of the company upon such terms and for such time as shall seem best to him in the first instance, said lease not to be operative, or take effect, until same has been submitted and approved by Willard Teller, the time of such lease not to exceed the period of one year, except upon further action by the board.” The plaintiff also introduced the lease to Thompson, -dated January 22, 1896, and the entries in the books of the defendant relating to that lease. The lease bore the approval of Willard Teller. It reserved a royalty of fifty per cent, of all ore produced, and provided that the cost of blacksmithing, mining timbers and [545]*545logging, should he borne by the lessee; also that the company should do the tramming at the expense of the lessee, unless the superintendent should otherwise direct. It appears from the book entries that the plaintiff received all the money realized from sales of ore, and settled with the lessee. They show that the total amount received for ore from February 14, 1896, to November 8,1897, was 111,697.71, royalty of fifty per cent of which would be $5,848.55, and that the amount accounted for as royalty during the same period was only $5,413.68. ' They also show that the total amount to which the company was entitled for mining expenses, according to the terms of the lease, was $294.27, and that the total amount received on account of such expenses, was $140.52.

The authority exercised by the plaintiff in the operation of the mine appears from the following testimony of Benjamin C. Catren, a witness called by the plaintiff: “ Mr. Arnold had supervision as to the leases and the working of the property, and the money they could get out of it; and everything that was kept out in the way of royalty or tramming, or otherwise, was done under the direction of Mi’. Arnold, and the money that was paid in under the leases, was also done under Mr. Arnold’s direction, and Mr. Arnold was the only man who was checking against the company’s account at Georgetown, so that of all the morpey that was paid in from ore or other sources went into the bank under the direction of Mr. Arnold, and he was the man that checked it out.” This witness was a bookkeeper under the plaintiff during the time covered by Thompson’s lease. He also testified that he sent monthly reports to the company which were taken from the cash book, and that he was never requested to make a complete report. He said that the reports showed the gross amounts received for ore, and the gross amounts paid out to lessees, but it showed no transaction with any particular lessee, or in relation to any particular lease. There was a number of leases given upon different parts of the mine, and against the objection of the defendant, the court admitted evidence of the royalty reserved in one of those leases other than that before [546]*546us. This was error. The resolution from which the plaintiff’s authority was derived, empowered him to make leases on such terms as might seem best to him in the first in-' stance, to take effect when approved by Willard Teller. That a less royalty was reserved in another lease than in this, is immaterial. The terms of each lease, whatever they may have been, were fixed by him subject to Mr. Teller’s approval. The terms of this lease were fixed by him, and approved by Mr. Teller; and it is his conduct in respect to this lease, and not his conduct in respect to some other lease that is now in question. The court also, against the defendant’s objection, permitted the plaintiff to testify to conversations between himself and Mr. Teller, occurring after the execution of this lease, having some relation to leases generally, and to. an expression by Mr. Turck, the president of the defendant, after some kind of an examination of the books, to the effect that he was well pleased with everything. According to the witness, Mr. Teller told him to give a Mr. Atkins a reduction of royalty, because the latter complained that it was too high; and also told him to do what he thought was right by lessees, giving them such deductions as he thought best. The court likewise, notwithstanding objection by defendant, admitted a letter from Mr. Turck,- — -to whom addressed does not appear, — in which he said, “ I note all you have to say, and fully approve your plans and management.” The purpose of this evidence was to show that the plaintiff was authorized by Mr. Teller to make concessions to Mr. Thompson, in respect both to royalties and mining expenses, and to show that Mr. Turck was satisfied with what the plaintiff had done in relation to those royalties and expenses. We do not think the evidence tends to establish either of the propositions. It does not show any modification, or Mr. Teller’s consent to any modification, of the Thompson lease ; or that Mr. Turck’s remark, or his statement in his letter, was made- with any knowledge of the facts. Surely Mr. Teller’s loose observations respecting leases genérally, were not equivalent to an authority to the plaintiff to [547]*547release Thompson from the performance of his covenants. But even if the plaintiff had the countenance of Mr. Teller and Mr. Turck in changing the terms of the lease, it would not- avail him. His authority to make leases was derived not from Mr. Turck or Mr. Teller, but from the hoard of directors, and it was defined and limited by the resolution which conferred it.

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Bluebook (online)
16 Colo. App. 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aliunde-consolidated-mining-co-v-arnold-coloctapp-1901.