Beaver Park Co. v. Hobson

283 P. 772, 86 Colo. 559
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 2, 1929
DocketNo. 11,998.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 P. 772 (Beaver Park Co. v. Hobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beaver Park Co. v. Hobson, 283 P. 772, 86 Colo. 559 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion of the court.

Parties appear here in inverse order and are referred to as in the lower court or the Beaver Park Land and Water Company ás the land company; the Beaver Water and Irrigation Company as the water company and the Beaver Park Company as the new company.

Prior to June 5,1921, the land company owned a large tract of land known as Beaver Park, located in Fremont county, Colorado. The water company owned an irrigation system, including the Schaeffer storage reservoir, which furnished water for this tract. Part of the land was owned by the land company and part had been sold to farmers together with water certificates entitling the purchasers to water from the water company. In 1910 the land company had advanced to the water company for construction purposes $602,074.80, to liquidate which the water company agreed to furnish water for irrigation to the land company or its grantees and thereby exhausted its remaining water supply. The land company’s grantees, consisting of approximately 165 families, were entirely dependent upon the water --company for irrigation of their lands.

On June 5, 1921, the “Pueblo flood” destroyed the Schaeffer reservoir, without which there was an insufficient amount of water in the water company’s system to *561 supply water for the lands under cultivation in Beaver Park. All stock of the water company was owned by the land company, and Spencer Penrose, Chas. L. Tutt, H. M. Blackmer and J. D. Hawkins at the time of the flood were directors of both companies, which were then without funds. On March 14,1922, the land company and the water company executed a joint mortgage securing a bond issue of $225,000. Futile efforts were made to dispose of these bonds, and, because of the imperative neces- • sity' to reconstruct the Schaeffer dam and diversion works, which were also destroyed, defendant Penrose provided the money necessary for the reconstruction work, advancing approximately $87,000 thereof prior to July 19,1922, when the so-called Penrose agreement was executed, and the balance thereafter.

The Penrose agreement, executed by the land company, the water company, and Spencer Penrose, provided in substance that the land company and the water company convey and assign to Penrose or his nominees all of their property and assets and a new corporation be created to which said property be conveyed, 60 per cent of the capital stock thereof to be retained by Penrose and 40 per cent to be delivered to the land company. Penrose assumed the payment of all sums expended by the land company for the water company and the land company and water company agreed to deliver their bonds in the sum of $225,000. Penrose agreed to construct a reservoir and to furnish an additional sum not to exceed $213,750. Pursuant to this agreement, the new company (the Beaver Park Company) was formed and to it was conveyed all property of both the land company and the water company. The land company received 40 per cent of the new company’s stock, consisting of 4,800 shares, ■of which it delivered 1,600 shares, or 33% per cent, to the water company. The amount provided for in the Pen-rose agreement was insufficient to complete the work and it therefore became necessary to arrange for more funds and a mortgage by the new company securing a bond *562 issue of $400,000 subject to tbe $225,000 mortgage was executed. ,

On January 17 and March 11,1922, certain land owners in the Beaver Park district brought suits in the district court of Fremont county against the water company . seeking damages to their properties caused by the breaking of the Schaeffer reservoir. • ■. ,

On March 13, 1922, the water company instituted an action against the Southern Colorado Power Company, which operated the Skagway reservoir above the Schaeffer reservoir, claiming damages for the destruction of the Schaeffer reservoir caused by water released by. the Skagway reservoir. The rights in this suit were duly assigned on August 24, 1922, to .the new company, which thereafter prosecuted the same in its own name; The $400,000 mortgage executed subsequent to the assignment to the new company by the water company of all of its rights in the Skagway suit contains the following provisions as part of the property conveyed to the trustee: “All claims, demands, choses in action, suits, at law or equity, whether now pending or' hereinafter instituted, and all the proceeds thereof. ”

After the execution of the $400,000 mortgage the new company was without funds and retained in its treasury $72,000 par value of said issue. On October 27, 1924,. the Skagway suit was settled for $114,000. Prior thereto defendant Penrose had advanced $20,250 more and had taken as security therefor. said treasury bonds. . The settlement amount was distributed during November, 1924, as follows: $50,231.75 was applied to expenses in.curred in preparation for and during the trial of the suit; $19,131.10 was,paid to defendant Penrose on account of advances made by him for current expenses in the new company; and the balance was used to retire, pro rata, bonds of the $225,000 issue which' were a lien upon the proceeds of this action. No question was raised as to the .payment of the expenses incident to the suit, leaving only .$64,001.68, which, as a matter of fact, was distributed *563 among the bondholders, pro rata, bnt which the court found was received by Spencer Penrose.

None of the original issue of $225,000 taken over by Penrose under the Penrose agreement was sold except $8,600 subscribed for by the citizens of Fremont county, and the defendants Blackmer, $10,000; Tutt, $10,000; Chas. F. Ayer, $3,000; James C. and Frederick Ayer, Jr., Trustees, $12,000. Thereafter the sole stockholders of the new company consisted of the land company, Spencer Penrose, H. M. Blackmer, C. L. Tutt, Chas. F. Ayer, and James C. and Frederick Ayer, Jr., trustees, together with directors who held only qualifying shares.

Of the various damage suits of farmers heretofore mentioned, that of Emerson v. Beaver Water and Irrigation Company was prosecuted to judgment. An appeal was taken to the Supreme Court, which on July 7, 1924, affirmed the judgment in favor of Emerson against the water company (75 Colo. 513, 227 Pac. 547).

The parties in all of said damage cases stipulated that the judgment of the Supreme Court in the Emerson case would be conclusive of the rights of the parties in each of the cases so filed. Judgment in the Emerson case was entered in the district court on February 1, 1923, on which date judgments were also entered in the other cases pursuant to said stipulation staying execution thereof pending determination of the Emerson case in the Supreme Court. The decision of the Supreme Court in the Emerson case became effective July 7, 1924.

Thereafter transcripts of said judgments were filed in the counties of their origin, execution issued thereon and returned nulla bona. Said judgments were all transferred to W. A. Hobson, who instituted this action on February 13, 1926, in the district court of Fremont county against the Beaver Park Company, the Beaver Park Land and Water Company, the Beaver Water and Irrigation Company, Spencer Penrose, Chas.. L. Tutt, H.' M. Blackmer, J. D. Hawkins and the First National Bank of Colorado Springs, a corporation, as trustee.

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Bluebook (online)
283 P. 772, 86 Colo. 559, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beaver-park-co-v-hobson-colo-1929.