Boston & Colorado Smelting Co. v. Reed

23 Colo. 523
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 5, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 Colo. 523 (Boston & Colorado Smelting Co. v. Reed) 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
Boston & Colorado Smelting Co. v. Reed, 23 Colo. 523 (Colo. 1897).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

A large number of errors have been assigned, but these may be grouped for discussion here as in the argument of counsel.

1. The first point made is that it is contrary to the recognized practice in trial courts for the plaintiff to proceed against *529 the appellant company by a petition in the original case after final judgment. His proper course in such a case, as it is said, would have been to bring an independent action against the Smelting Company as a debtor.

Whether, had seasonable objection been properly made by the appellant to the jurisdiction of the district court thus to entertain appellee’s petition in the original case, such objection should have been sustained, we are relieved of the necessity for determining; for when the appellant, as the respondent below, in obedience to the petitioner’s notice of July 19,1890, voluntarily entered its general appearance, and complied with the order of July 30th and filed its account in the original case and paid into court the petitioner’s share of the proceeds of ore bought by it, this unquestionably constituted a waiver of the jurisdictional question here urged, as the subject-matter was clearly within the court’s jurisdiction. Having thus once subjected itself to the court’s jurisdiction, it could not, upon the second .application claiming profits, object that the procedure adopted by petitioner was irregular. N. Y. & B. Mining Co. v. Gill, 7 Colo. l00; U. P. Ry. Co. v. DeBusk, 12 Colo. 294.

2. Another position taken by the appellant is that since the plaintiff, by his first application to the district court, elected to claim only the proceeds of the ore, and did not specifically ask for profits, he may not thereafter demand interest or profits, for the latter might properly be awarded upon the first application. The points made are: first, the issue concerning profits might have been litigated under the first application, but was not, hence, such issue was res adjudicata upon the second application, both as to the original fund and profits ; second, that the election to ask only for the proceeds of the sale was a waiver of profits; third, to permit this second application would be to sanction a splitting up of the same cause of action into several suits.

If the rules invoked have any application to the facts of this case, appellant has waived its right thereto, for these objections were not taken below, and are now urged for the *530 first time upon this appeal. It was the duty of the Smelting Company, if it desired to take advantage of the objection now urged, specially to plead res adjudicata, to set up the estoppel, and that the same cause of action was being split up. It did not below plead such matters; but confined its objection solely to the jurisdiction of the court over its person. Mills’ Ann. Code, pp. 170-177, and cases cited; De Votie v. McGerr, 15 Colo. 467; Prewitt v. Lambert, 19 Colo. 7; 1 Ency. Pl. & Pr., 821, 836, 843.

3. It is also asserted that while the petitioner’s claim grows out of the relation of the respondent as a receiver, the petition apparently proceeds against the company personally, and fails to show, either in the title of the pleading or in its statement, such representative capacity.

If such contention is true and such requirements are contemplated by our practice, the alleged defects cannot now be urged as ground for reversal. Advantage of what, at most, was but an irregularity, was not taken below, and we repeat here what was said as to the other questions already considered, it is too late to do so for the first time upon appeal.

In connection with this assignment it is proper to notice the further point made that inasmuch as the appellant was sought to be charged as a receiver, and it appearing from the face of the petition that no such relation existed, a recovery should not have been permitted. As to this we say the mere fact that the petitioner alleges that the order of the court permitting ores to be sold to the respondent, and its purchase thereof, and its holding of the proceeds subject to the order of the court, constituted it a receiver, is not controlling. If the Smelting Company, as a matter of fact, or as a matter of law, did not, under the various orders of the court, become a receiver, that, of itself, does not relieve it from liability with respect to the funds in its hands which belonged to the plaintiff in the case, if, in other respects, he states and proves a cause of action against it. The averment that respondent was a receiver is but a conclusion of law drawn by the pleader from the facts alleged.

*531 We incline to the opinion that appellant was not technically a receiver, but, after its receipt and purchase of the ores under the order of the court and its voluntary retention of the proceeds subject to the court’s order, a bailment arose, and the holder’s relation with respect to this fund was no longer that of a mere purchaser, but rather that of a depositary or bailee without recompense, and the fund a deposit in the custody of an officer of the court. But whether the appellant was a receiver, or a trustee, or a depositary or bailee, without hire, or a mere holder, as an officer of the court, of funds over which the court had control, or whether the relation was one having no technical name, we think is quite immaterial. In either case a trust relation between the parties was created, and the holder may be charged with duties and liabilities concerning the deposit other than its return to the owner. This leads us directly to the determination of the duty and liability of such a holder to the owner with respect to the deposit, and this is the principal question in the case.

4. Briefly restating the agreed facts, it appears that under an order of the district court the appellant bought ores belonging to the appellee; that for several years it held, subject at any time to the court’s orders, the moneys which were the equivalent in value of said ores; that these moneys it mingled with its own funds and used them indiscriminately in its own business of buying and smelting ores, which business yielded a profit of five per cent per annum on the capital employed, of which the funds in question were a part, and which were used by the Smelting Company in the same manner as it used its own capital and general funds, from whatever source acquired; that these moneys were not paid out by the company at the time of purchase solely because of the court’s order directing that they be retained; that at all times the company had in its treasury more than the amount of the plaintiff’s share in the proceeds of the ores, and was ready and prepared to pay on demand.

The appellant strenuously contends that its whole duty as *532 a holder of this money subject to the court’s order was discharged when it paid the same into court on demand. On the other hand, the appellee claims the profits upon his money which it earned, and which were received by the appellant during the time the latter retained it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Patterson v. BP America Production Co.
2015 COA 28 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2015)
Sands v. Superior Buildings Co.
358 P.2d 445 (Montana Supreme Court, 1960)
Slay v. Burnett Trust
187 S.W.2d 377 (Texas Supreme Court, 1945)
People Ex Rel. Ruybalid v. Espinoza
254 P. 778 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1927)
In re Estate of Thomas
26 Colo. 110 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 Colo. 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boston-colorado-smelting-co-v-reed-colo-1897.