Bell v. Cascaden

6 Alaska 35
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJanuary 17, 1918
DocketNo. 2313
StatusPublished

This text of 6 Alaska 35 (Bell v. Cascaden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Cascaden, 6 Alaska 35 (D. Alaska 1918).

Opinion

BUNNELL, District Judge.

In considering the evidence in the case, I have kept in mind the fact that much of it was admitted for limited purposes, and that on the important points it has been highly contradictory. It has therefore been weighed and considered with due regard to all the safeguards under which a case must be submitted to a jury under the provisions of the statute, and it has in addition been subjected to such tests as experience naturally suggests to the trier. No particular difficulty has been experienced in arriving at the facts in the case.

On the 14th day of March, 1915, the plaintiff entered into a written agreement, called by the parties, thereto an option, [37]*37with D. G. McCarty, whereby he granted unto the said McCarty, for the consideration of $1, the exclusive right to purchase all of his (plaintiff’s) rights and title in and to certain placer mining claims, including a one-half interest in and to the Totem Fraction, all being located in the Fairbanks (now Tolovana) recording precinct, Fourth judicial division, territory of Alaska. The purchase price was fixed at $10,000, of which $200 was paid upon the signing of the instrument, and $9,800 was to be paid bn or before the 1st day of October, 1916. The agreement was quite inartificially drawn, but it seems to have been considered as an option contract by 'the parties thereto. It was acknowledged before a notary public on the 21st day of April, 1915.

The Leitrim Association placer mining claim, off which the Totem Fraction was staked by the plaintiff,' was located on or about the 30th day of November, 1914, by the defendant and Joe Sherry, under a prospecting agreement whereby the plaintiff owned an equal interest with the defendant, and Pat O’Connor owned an equal interest with Joe Sherry. By agreement with defendant, December 16, 1914, the plaintiff entered into a prospecting venture for the period of one year, under which agreement all properties acquired were to be equally divided. While this agreement was in force and effect, plaintiff, with the consent of the defendant — both believing the Leitrim to be in excess of 40 acres — staked the Totem Fraction, and it was an undivided one-half interest in this Totem Fraction that the plaintiff included in his option agreement with McCarty. In listing the properties to be the subject of the option contract to McCarty, plaintiff contended that he owned a quarter interest in the Leitrim. Defendant stated to McCarty that plaintiff was entitled to a quarter interest in the Leitrim, and that he (defendant) would try to get it from Sherry, and that if he (defendant) did not get this'interest from Sherry he (defendant) would make it good to McCarty. It also appears that plaintiff failed to do the required development work on the Totem Fraction and the same was relocated by McCarty. The evidence also discloses the fact that the development work done by plaintiff and defendant for the Leitrim claim was actually performed on the Triangle Fraction, located prior to the location of the Leitrim and overlapped in part by the Leitrim. Other reasons [38]*38for complications developed, by finding that the Leitrim as originally staked was not excessive in area; that McCarty was relocating it, and desisted at the request of O’Connor, and allowed O’Connor to do development work and make a discovery by driving a tunnel into the Leitrim from a shaft off the Leitrim.

O’Connor testified that he saw McCarty placing stakes on the Leitrim; that he went to him and protested against the “jumping” of the Leitrim and the staking of the Totem Fraction; and that about two hours later he had a conversation with the defendant. In reply to this question, “Just tell when you saw him [the defendant], and where, and who was present, and what was said as regards anything about the Leitrim claim or the Totem Fraction,” he answered:

“Dave and I were alone when we had the conversation. I saw Caseaden [the defendant], and told him about the stakes being moved, and Caseaden told me that he told Bell to stake a fraction, and thought there was a fraction there when he told Bell to stake it. I told Caseaden there was not a fraction there; that the stakes would have to be moved back; and that McCarty demanded $5,000 knocked off the purchase price of the property that he bought from Bell if he moved the stakes back. And Caseaden said: ‘I will see Bell and fix that up all right. You leave that to me. I will handle Bell.’ So I said: ‘All right, I would.’ ”

The plaintiff, after testifying that he had a conversation with the defendant in the month of May, 1915, in his tent on Discovery, at the time the defendant came there one night with two other parties and wanted plaintiff to prepare a lunch, said:

“I went outside to get cooled off, as it was hot in the tent, and Caseaden came out and put his arm around my shoulder, and he says, ‘Albert, I want you to be good to me.’ I says, ‘What is it, Dave?’ He says, ‘The Leitrim has been jumped.’ I says, ‘Why was the Leitrim jumped?’ He says,' ‘Dan McCarty has jumped the Leitrim.’ I says, ‘On what ground did he jump the Leitrim?’ He says, ‘The drill hole they put down was on a little fraction outside of the Leitrim.’ He says, ‘The only way we can save the Leitrim is for you to give up the fraction and $5,000 on the option price.’ And Mr. Caseaden said he would make the deficiency good to me as soon as Dan' McCarty paid him what he owed him. I asked him: ‘How much does he owe you?’ He says, ‘He owes me eleven thousand dollars.’ ”
“Q. Was^ there any other agreement between you that night, [39]*39when he told you that he wanted you to knock $5,000 off your price to McCarty? A. He said he would fix up and give mo $1,000.
“Q. When and how was that $1,000 to be paid? A. It was to be paid by a note, and the proceeds were to come out oí the royalties out of the clean-ups on the Leitrim.”

The so-called note referred to was introduced in evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibit D. It is poorly written in pencil, signed by defendant and Pat O’Connor, and is in the nature of an order for the payment to the plaintiff of royalties from the Leitrim in the sum of $1,000. This instrument reads:

“We the undersigned hereby assign and deliver to one Albert . Bell twelve and one-half per cent, of all royalties [Note. — The word ‘royalty’ has an ink line run through it, and the words interlined over it in ink — ‘gross mineral output,’ with the marginal initals, ‘D. H. C.’] in all one thousand dollars [the next word cannot be deciphered] accruing from the Leatram association claim on Liven-good Creek as recompense for the Abanbanment of one fraction sold to Ban McCarty on option and now in controversy between Bell & McCarty the same to be delivered to said Bell on and after the first day of May, 1916, the same to be delivered to said Bell without any contention and on demand at the clean-up, said royalties to the amount of one thousand dollars payment in full of consideration. David H. Cascaden.
“Pat O’Connor.”

The words “said royalties to the amount of one thousand dollars payment in full consideration” are partially above the signature of Cascaden, apparently crowded in and partly to one side at the left of the signature of Cascaden. They are written either by a different pencil or by the same pencil in a different condition. O’Connor swears they were not there when he signed the instrument.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Alaska 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-cascaden-akd-1918.