Brown v. Keegan

32 Colo. 463
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1904
DocketNo. 4421
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 32 Colo. 463 (Brown v. Keegan) 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
Brown v. Keegan, 32 Colo. 463 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Chief Justice Gabbert

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was originally brought in this court by The Gordon-Tiger Mining & Reduction Company, and entitled: “The Gordon-Tiger Mining & Reduction Company, Plaintiff in Error, v. John T. Keegan et al., Defendants in Error.” Thereafter the death of S. P. Brown, one of the defendants in error, was suggested, and motion made that his administrator be substituted in his stead, and that such administrator, as well as the other defendants in error, except Keegan, be permitted to be made plaintiffs in error. The motion substituting the administrator in place of the deceased, and to allow him to be made a plaintiff in error, was sustained, but no order seems to have been entered permitting the others to be made plaintiffs in error, as requested in the motion. Subsequently the parties filing this motion filed an abstract of record based in part upon a transcript of record other than that originally lodged by the Gordon-Tiger company. By this abstract those who had been designated defendants in error, except Keegan, were named as plaintiffs in error, except that the administrator was substituted in place of S. P. Brown, deceased. This abstract also contained what purported to be a copy of the assignment of errors on the part of those then appearing as additional [465]*465plaintiffs in error. It also referred repeatedly to a “second transcript” npon which they relied in part to support the errors so assigned. At the oral argument counsel for defendant in error, Keegan, called attention to the fact that this transcript did not bear the filing mark of the clerk; that no assignment of errors had ever been filed except by the Gordon-Tiger company, and that the record upon which the other plaintiffs in error relied had never been certified by the clerk of the trial conrt. The plaintiffs in error other than the Gordon-Tiger company then moved for an order, directing the clerk of this court to mark their transcript filed as of the date their abstract of record was filed. This motion is resisted by the defendant in error, Keegan, because, it is said, that the motion comes too late; that the record has never been certified properly; that the plaintiffs in error have been guilty of laches, and that to now allow this record to be filed would work a great hardship upon him. In support of this motion it is urged that no new writ of error was sued out by the plaintiffs in error, and that the writ sued out by the original plaintiff in error, the Gordon-Tiger company, only brought here for review the judgment rendered against that company in its capacity as garnishee, and therefore only the proceedings which led up to the judgment against the garnishee can be reviewed.

Prom affidavits and other facts called to our attention in support of the motion for leave to file the supplemental or amended transcript, we are convinced that it was, in fact, lodged with the clerk of this court not later than the date the plaintiffs in error filed their printed abstract of record and assignment of errors, and that through some oversight the clerk neglected to mark the same filed, or note the filing on the docket. It has been in the office of the clerk ever since that date. The abstract of [466]*466record, ab'ove referred to, referred to this transcript. From this source it must have been known to counsel for defendant in error that the plaintiffs in error relied upon this transcript, and considered it as having been properly filed. The defendant in error has joined in error as against those who subsequently appeared as additional plaintiffs in error, and the only objection urged by him until the time of the oral argument as to the non-filing .of this transcript appears in his brief, where it is stated, substantially, that the records do not disclose that these plaintiffs in error ever filed any transcript or assignment of errors, and that the bill of exceptions upon which their abstract is for the most part founded was signed at the instance of the Gordon-Tiger company. In view of the fact that the amended transcript was actually lodged with the clerk at that time, and that counsel for defendant in error must have been cognizant of this fact, the objection thus urged was not sufficient, neither did it raise any question as to the certification of the transcript. By joining in error, the defendant in error has waived the suing out of a writ of error by the new plaintiffs in error. In looking through the additional transcript, we find an assignment of errors signed by counsel; and from appearances, written at or about the time when the transcript itself was lodged with the clerk. The motion of plaintiffs in error to have their transcript of record and assignment of error marked filed, and noted upon the docket as of the date the abstract of record was filed, is sustained.

Defendant in error brought an action against the plaintiffs in error, except the Gordon-Tiger company and the administrator of the deceased, S. P. Brown, to recover brokerage commission. He supplemented this action by suing out an attachment under which The Gordon-Tiger Mining & Reduction Com[467]*467pany was garnisheed. In his complaint he charged substantially that the defendants employed him to procure a purchaser for their certain mining property, and agreed and promised, if he would procure a purchaser therefor, to pay him the sum of $25,000; that pursuant to this agreement he did procure a purchaser to whom the property was sold by the defendants. The issues joined were found in favor of the plaintiff and judgment rendered in the sum of. $25,-000 and interest against the defendants. The court further found that the Gordon-Tiger company was indebted to the defendants in something like ten thousand dollars, and rendered judgment against it in the garnishment proceedings in favor of plaintiff.

Plaintiff testified that the property had been placed in his hands for sale at the price of $250,000; $75,000 of which was to be paid in cash, and the remainder in installments at certain fixed periods. Out of the first payment he was to receive his commission of $25,000. He procured one Daniel C. Murphy, with whom S. P. Brown entered into a contract, which provided that Brown was to convey the property to Murphy, or such corporation as he might designate, upon the following terms: Murphy, or the corporation, by a date designated, was to discharge certain liens against the property, approximating the sum of $60,000, the remainder of that sum, if any, after the liens were discharged, to be paid over to Brown. Possession of the property' was to vest in Murphy or the corporation. From the operation of this property a certain percentage of the profits was to be paid Brown until the sum thus paid, in connection with the $60,000, equalled $200,000. When this sum was thus paid, conveyances were to be delivered. It was also provided that if Murphy or the corporation, after working the property, should determine that it could not be operated at a profit, then the prop[468]*468erty might be surrendered back to Brown, in which event the contract should be void, and neither Murphy nor his assigns liable for damages; but the moneys paid and all machinery, betterments, and improvements added to the property should be forfeited to Brown as fixed and liquidated damages. Under this agreement deeds were to be placed in escrow, to be delivered when payment for the property was completed. Conveyances seem to have been made subsequently, for the purpose of simplifying the transfer of the title, but the obligations as assumed by the respective parties were not changed.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Colo. 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-keegan-colo-1904.