Boston Acme Mines Development Co. v. Clawson

240 P. 105, 66 Utah 103, 1925 Utah LEXIS 6
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 12, 1925
DocketNo. 4262.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 240 P. 105 (Boston Acme Mines Development Co. v. Clawson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boston Acme Mines Development Co. v. Clawson, 240 P. 105, 66 Utah 103, 1925 Utah LEXIS 6 (Utah 1925).

Opinion

THURMAN, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment against it in favor of defendant, in a case involving-a controversy *106 concerning' tbe ownership of certain mining machinery and equipment situated on the premises of defendant in the town of Morgan, Morgan county, Utah. Plaintiff .claims title under an alleged purchase from the Boston Acme Mines Company, a Delaware 'corporation, executed in May, 1919. The defendant claims under an alleged judgment against said company in favor of one Hattie Tavener, rendered in June, 1921. It is alleged in the answer that the judgment was assigned to defendant for a valuable consideration in [December of the same year, after the first execution had been issued upon the judgment, and that defendant purchased the property under an alias execution sale in October, 1924.

This is an equitable proceeding to determine the ownership of the property and to' restrain a threatened sale thereof and for other equitable relief.

The case, as tried below, both as to the issues raised by the answer and the conduct of the trial, took a wide range, because of which the record is incumbered with much irrelevant and immaterial matter. The findings of the court are subject to the same criticism,; thus casting upon this court the burden of shifting and weeding out the superfluous matter in order to ascertain the precise questions to be determined. We shall not attempt to follow counsel in their peregrinations as far as the irrelevant and immaterial issues are concerned.

Before stating what we understand to- be the controlling questions, it is necessary to make a brief statement of matters essential to a determination of the questions involved.

The Boston Acme Mines Company, hereinafter called the Boston company, from which both plaintiff and defendant deraign title, acquired title to the property in question some time prior to the month of May, 1919. It had stock interests in mining property in Morgan county, and the mining machinery and equipment in controversy was used or to be used in the development of said property. In the summer of 1918 the company employed one M. K. Tavener to come to Utah to' see that certain moneys it was advancing to mining companies in which it had an interest were be *107 ing properly expended in tbe development of the properties. He was a director and stockholder in the company, and it does not appear from the record that there was any friction between him and the company prior to the beginning of 1921. Quite a large amount of money was raised in the East by the company on sales of its stock, and much of it was forwarded to Tavener to be expended for the purposes hereinbefore stated. His wife kept his books of account with the company, showing the money received and how expended. He applied to his own use sufficient to defray hotel expenses for himself, his wife, and her mother, which amounts the company conceded it had agreed to pay.

Early in 1919 the plaintiff company was organized as an Arizona corporation, under the name of the Boston Acme Mines Development Company. The plaintiff appears to have been organized as a subsidiary company of the Boston company; the purpose being to transfer to plaintiff all of the Utah holdings of the Boston company. The directors of plaintiff company were three in number, all of ■whom were likewise directors of the Boston company. It appears from the minutes kept by plaintiff company that on May 12, 1919, at Baltimore, Md., the company held its first meeting with two directors present, which constituted a quorum. After organizing, by the election of a president, vice president, secretary, and treasurer, the company proceeded to consider an offer, dated May 7, 1919, made by the Boston company to sell all its interest in certain mining property in Morgan county, including mining machinery theretofore used in connection with said mining properties, together with any and all its capital stock in said mining companies, for 10,000 shares of the plaintiff company’s capital stock of the par value of $1 per share. The 10,000 shares was the entire capitalization of the plaintiff company. By resolution, the offer of the Boston company was accepted, and scrip issued and delivered to the Boston company, which scrip constituted an order for delivery of the stock on presentation. It also appears that the Boston company was informed that its offer of sale had been accepted. A deed evidencing the transfer was also presented, accepted *108 by the plaintiff company, and direction given that it be forthwith recorded in the office of the proper public official. The deed, in substance, purports to' convey all of the rights, title, and interest of the Boston company in certain mining claims, mines, and material in Morgan county, and their equipment in said county.

Such, in substance, were the proceedings of the plaintiff and Boston company in respect to- the property in question, as appears from the minutes of the plaintiff company of May 12, 1919. This, together with subsequent proceedings relating to the property, constitutes the transfer of the property from the Boston company to the plaintiff upon which plaintiff relies. The validity of the transfer is challenged by defendant, and is the principal question for determination on this appeal.

There is some controversy between the parties as to wjhether the plaintiff company took over the business of the Boston company thereafter, or whether the latter company continued to carry on the business. The evidence quite clearly shows that checks of the Boston company were periodically forwarded to Tavener for the payment of expenses incident to the development of the properties during the years 1919 and 1920 down to the month of December of that year. It also satisfactorily appears that during 1920 Tavener located for the' plaintiff company numerous mining claims in Morgan county. In December, 1920, the Boston company ceased remitting money to Tavener, and in March following it appears his employment was suspended altogether, but he still retained the office of director. No remittances were sent to Tavener after December, 1920. At the time of his suspension, it appears that he was in arrears for hotel expenses for himself and wife to the defendant, Clawson, as hotel keeper for the months of January, February, and March, 1921. Mrs. Tavener’s mother had died in the latter part of 1919. The usual remittances had not been received from either the Boston company or the plaintiff. Considerable correspondence was carried on during this period between the Taveners and the witness KLem, a common director in both plaintiff and the Boston com *109 pany. As we view tbe ease, tbe correspondence is not material, and we only refer to it as leading np to a material issue.

In June, 1921, Mrs. Tavener instituted an action against the Boston company for tbe sum of $5,569.44, $1,600 'of which was alleged by her to be money belonging to her which the defendant in that case had wrongfully converted to its own use. The remainder of the amount sued for was alleged by her to be money which was owing to M. K. Tavener for money advanced to said defendant upon its request, and for unpaid salary at $50 per week from the 11th day of July, 1918, to and including the 1st day of June, 1921.

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Bluebook (online)
240 P. 105, 66 Utah 103, 1925 Utah LEXIS 6, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-acme-mines-development-co-v-clawson-utah-1925.