Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co.

71 A. 153, 74 N.J. Eq. 457, 4 Buchanan 457, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedAugust 8, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 71 A. 153 (Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bigelow v. Old Dominion Copper Mining & Smelting Co., 71 A. 153, 74 N.J. Eq. 457, 4 Buchanan 457, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Pitney, Chancellor.

This is a motion, made under rule 213, to strike out and dismiss the bill of complaint upon grounds that may be summarized thus: (a) want of equity, (b) res adjudicóla, (c) laches.

The general object of the bill is to restrain the defendant, a corporation of the State of New Jersey, from prosecuting two actions in equity heretofore brought by it against the complainant, a resident and citizen of Massachusetts, in the supreme judicial court of that commonwealth, in which the complainant has answered and a hearing has been had upon the merits, resulting in certain findings of facts upon which money decrees have been entered against him, and from these decrees both parties have appealed to the full bench of the supreme judicial court, which is the court of last resort in the commonwealth.

Upon the filing of the present bill, and before the making of this motion, the bill, with accompanying affidavits, was presented to Yiee-Chancellor Walker upon an application for a temporary injunction. After hearing argument, the vice-chancellor, without undertaking to decide the merits, but leaving the [462]*462questions involved to be deliberately decided upon full hearing, held that a case was made which should move this, court to grant a preliminary injunction and thus preserve the status. The injunction accordingly issued.

The present motion is in effect a demurrer to the bill, and affords a proper opportunity to deliberately determine the merits. Grey v. Greenville and Hudson Railway Co., 59 N. J. Eq. (14 Dick.) 372, 377; Stevenson v. Morgan, 63 N. J. Eq. (18 Dick.) 707. Vice-Chancellor Walker sat with me upon the argument, and has received and considered copies of the very elaborate and voluminous printed arguments that were submitted to me. I have had the benefit of conferences with him before reaching a conclusion, and he concurs in the result now reached and in the grounds of. decision.

Shortly stated, the object of the Massachusetts actions is to recover certain large profits (aggregating, with interest, about $2,000,000) alleged to have been secretly and improperly acquired from the company by Mr. Bigeíow and one Leonard Lewisohn, since deceased, who resided in the State of New York, while they were jointly acting as promoters and fiduciary agents of the defendant company.

Manifestly, the only ground upon which this court can properly be asked to restrain these actions must be that tire defendant is acting contrary to equity and good conscience in prosecuting them.

The present bill first sets forth what complainant avers xo be the true history of the matters out of which the Massachusetts litigation arises. It then sets out the actions instituted against him by defendant company in Massachusetts, shows that after-wards similar actions were instituted against the executors of Lewisohn in the circuit court of the United States for the southern district of New York, and gives the history of these litigations. Copies of the record in the Massachusetts suits are annexed to the bill as part thereof, and we are thus informed of the facts alleged by the present defendant against Bigelow, -the findings of fact of Justice Sheldon, before whom the actions were tried, the decrees thereupon made against Bigelow, and the grounds of the appeals taken by the present defendant from [463]*463those decrees to the court of last resort. The present complainant has likewise appealed, upon what grounds does not appear.

It is clear that the fate of the present bill must depend not upon the question which party has the right of the controversy pending in Massachusetts, but upon the question whether there is any sufficient occasion for this court to interfere in that controversy. For this reason, in summarizing the historical statement contained in the. bill, I shall endeavor to place in juxtaposition what the present defendant has alleged in the Massachusetts actions concerning the same transactions, and what Mr. Justice Sheldon has found the facts to be.

The present bill alleges that in the spring and- early summer of the year 1895 Mr. Bigelow, acting in conjunction, with Leonard Lewisohn, of the city of New York, procured options, one from the Simpson estate (of Boston), and one from a Mr. Keyser (of Baltimore) for the purchase of all the capital stock of a Maryland corporation known as the Old Dominion Copper Company of Baltimore City (otherwise referred to as the Baltimore company). This company was the owner o'f mines and mining claims in Arizona. The par value of its stock was $500,000; the purchase price was $1,000,000. By agreement between Bigelow and Lewisohn, their interests in the several stock purchases were so arranged that, as between themselves, the former was to have twenty-three forty-seconds, and the latter nineteen forty-seconds of the benefit of the entire purchase. The purchase was completed on or about June 20th, and the control of the Baltimore company was turned over to Bigelow and Lewisohn on that day, a new board of directors being chosen in their interest, of which they were members. Meanwhile, having ascertained that Keyser held the legal title to four mining claims and a certain parcel of land in Arizona (which may for convenience be called the “outside properties”) in trust for the Baltimore company, Bigelow and Lewisohn insisted that these properties should follow the ownership of the stock. This was assented to by Keyser, the Simpson executors and the Baltimore company, and for this purpose Keyser subsequently made a deed conveying the “outside properties” to Lewisohn (but, [464]*464of course, in trust for the parties entitled to the stock of the Baltimore company).

The narrative portion of the bill, without expressly alleging the fact, leaves it to be understood that the price of the Simpson and Keyser stock was paid by Bigelow and Lewisohn with their own funds, and that the purchase was made for their sole benefit.

In the Massachusetts suits, however, the present defendant averred in its bills of complaint that the purchase was made with moneys subscribed and contributed by a syndicate organized for the purpose by Bigelow, either alone or in conjunction with Lewisohn; that it was known as the “Old Dominion Syndicate,” and contributed approximately $1,000,000 to purchase the Baltimore stock. Bigelow’s answers in Massachusetts admit such a syndicate was formed about May 24th, 1895, and afterwards enlarged, but aver that it was the understanding and agreement of all parties that Bigelow and Lewisohn, having purchased and paid for the shares of the Baltimore company with the money thus subscribed, and holding them in their own names, should deal with them as to them should seem best,

“and that the associates in the syndicate should receive so much only of the profit realized in the enterprise as Bigelow might deem it fair and proper to distribute among them, and that the remaining profit should be retained by Bigelow to his own use.”

This statement as to the understanding with the syndicate members is negatived by the findings of Mr. Justice Sheldon, as will appear hereafter.

The bill herein avers that at the time they acquired the stock of the Baltimore company, and obtained control of that company, Bigelow and Lewisohn had no definite plan with respect to the disposition thereof, and that it was not until afterwards that the formation -of a new company was determined upon.

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Bluebook (online)
71 A. 153, 74 N.J. Eq. 457, 4 Buchanan 457, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bigelow-v-old-dominion-copper-mining-smelting-co-njch-1908.