Beshoar v. Chappell

6 Colo. App. 323
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 6 Colo. App. 323 (Beshoar v. Chappell) 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
Beshoar v. Chappell, 6 Colo. App. 323 (Colo. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

Bissell, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the statement of what is requisite to an apprehension of the suit and to an application of the law which we conclude [324]*324must control its decision, we shall very closely adhere to the fkcts recited in the findings of the court. They may be occasionally supplemented by our own conclusions respecting some matters, but in no instance will there be any departure from what the trial court has stated. The force and effect of these findings are thoroughly settled. As a general proposition, parties are not entitled to attack a judgment on the claim that it is unsupported by the evidence. Wherever the controversy, in its important and essential features, rests on conflicting testimony, the appellant must be able to demonstrate error of law to maintain his appeal. Nevertheless, we have read this very voluminous record, and while we are compelled to affirm the judgment, notwithstanding our conclusion that there is enough in the case to show that, under some circumstances and with proper parties, what was done by the appellee, Chappell, would subject him to legal responsibility, we are satisfied the trial court did not err in its conclusions respecting some facts which we deem decisive of the action.

In 1887, The Cincinnati-Colorado Coal, Coke and Iron Company, which is designated in the evidence and will be hereafter referred to as the Four C Company, was the owner of some lands in Las Animas county. They were coal lands, and apparently had been somewhat developed by that corporation. The company had not reached a paying basis and was without sufficient capital to proceed with the satisfactory development of the mines. At this time, the appellant, Beshoar, with some other persons, was the owner of the capital stock of the Four C Company. On behalf of his company he entered into negotiations with Chappell which looked to the organization of a new corporation on a basis which would permit funds to be raised to open up the property. The parties concluded the thing was feasible, and Chappell organized a new company called The Grey Creek Coal and Coking Company. The capital stock of this latter corporation was two thousand shares of one hundred dollars each. This new company was organized by the election of officers and a board [325]*325of directors, and then received from Beshoar, on behalf of himself and the stockholders of the Four C Company, a written proposition which substantially was that the Four C Company would sell to the Grey Creek Coal and Coking Company their real estate, which was described in the proposition, for one thousand shares of the capital stock of the company. In the proposition nothing whatever was said in regard to the remaining thousand shares. The evidence, however, discloses that it was in the contemplation of the parties that the thousand shares of stock should be sold at sixty cents on the dollar to produce a development fund of sixty thousand dollars, which should be devoted to opening up the property. Evidently the stockholders of the Four C Company were willing to surrender one half of their holdings for this purpose, and in place of cancelling, transferring or surrendering any of the Four C Company’s stock, pursued this plan. There were some limitations of time which were to control Chappell in his scheme to float the new company, but this is not important to the dispute. This proposition was submitted at a directors’ meeting, held on the 22d of September, 1887. It was accepted, and what was done by the Grey Creek Company will be assumed to be enough to secure them in their legal rights. The project was carried out by the Four C Company, which conveyed the lands to the other corporation. The capital stock of the Grej1- Creek Company was issued, nine hundred shares of it went to Beshoar, according to the arrangement, one hundred which he had agreed to give Chappell for his services in the premises were turned over to him, and the remaining thousand shares were left for sale to raise the development fund. The trial court finds that this thousand shares of stock was sold by Chappell for sixty thousand dollars in cash, which went into the treasury of the company, and was applied by its officers and directory to the development of the lands which had been transferred. In stating this fact, we do not express our opinion concerning its just-mess. We expressly decline to yield our assent to the result respecting this matter, for we desire that the affirmance shall [326]*326not extend so far as to conclude anjr parties in any subsequent litigation which may be instituted regarding it. The stock was deposited in the First National Bank of Trinidad, subject to sale and payment of the subscription price, and when the whole sum of sixty thousand dollars was paid in and properly applied, the stock was turned over to the purchasers. The court finds the money was actually put into the development of the property. To illustrate the animus and modus, we must now state what is really the occasion of the suits. On the 26th of September, a written agreement was entered into between The Colorado Coal and Iron Company and Chappell, which need only be stated to disclose the hidden motives. It was recited therein that Chappell had procured from Beshoar and others an option on a controlling interest in the stock of the Grey Creek Company, and he undertook to obtain from that company a lease of the estate for a term of twenty years on sundry conditions. The only one of importance is that which looked to the expenditure of money for the development of the property. The Colorado Coal and Iron Company undertook to spend sixty thousand dollars for this purpose. It will be observed there was a very strange coincidence between the amount which The C. C. & I. Co. agreed to spend and the sum for which Chappell undertook to sell the Grey Creek Company’s stock. The evidence likewise disclosed that as fast as money was disbursed by him as an officer of the Grey Creek Company in payment of the bills which were incurred in the development, these vouchers were turned over to the manager of The C. C. & I. Co., who honored them by checks of that corporation for their face value. It thus resulted that what Chappell paid out with bis right hand for the Grey Creek Company he instantly got back in his left from The C. C. & I. Co. On the 27th of September, which was the day following the execution of the agreement between Chappell and The C. C. & I. Co., the Grey Creek Company and The C. C. & I. Co. made an agreement of a lease which contained the provisions and various conditions specified in the agreement bet ween. Chappell and [327]*327that corporation. It was executed by the lessors, through Chappell, the vice president, and by the proper officers on behalf of The C. C. & I. Co. Under the provisions of this lease, The C. C. & I. Co. spent sixty thousand dollars, opened up the property, paid royalties from time to time, but in the end suspended operations.

The transaction concerning this stock is not creditable to the appellee, Chappell, and we cannot close our mental vision to what is so evident from the record that the scheme was one cunningly devised for the appropriation without cost to.him of one half of the capital stock of the Grey Creek Company. This in no wise militates against what we said at the outset concerning the force of the court’s conclusion on matters of fact, because our.opinion in no wise affects the legal result which we have reached.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Colo. App. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beshoar-v-chappell-coloctapp-1895.