Eldridge v. Young America & Cliff Consolidated Mining Co.

67 P. 703, 27 Wash. 297, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 392, 27 Wash. 291
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1902
DocketNo. 4049
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 67 P. 703 (Eldridge v. Young America & Cliff Consolidated Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eldridge v. Young America & Cliff Consolidated Mining Co., 67 P. 703, 27 Wash. 297, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 392, 27 Wash. 291 (Wash. 1902).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mount, J.

This Action was brought by respondent against appellant in the court below to rescind an executed contract for the purchase of 40,000 shares of the capital stock of appellant company, and for the return of $10,000 paid therefor, on the ground of false and fraudulent representations made by the agent of appellant in inducing respondent to purchase the stock. These fraudulent repre[298]*298sentations are enumerated in the amended complaint substantially as follows: (1) That there were 25,000 tons of concentrating ore on the dump of the company, of the average value of $27 per ton; (2) that there were from 25.000 to 30,000 cubic yards of ore in sight, of a value in excess of the capital stock of the company, towit, $1,000,000; (3) that the actual market value of the stock was twenty-five cents per share; (4) that a dividend of one cent per share would be paid the stockholders on February 15, 1899, and at regular monthly intervals thereafter; (5) that all sums of money derived from sales of stock should be converted into the treasury of the company and expended on the company’s property. At the trial of the case, and over the objection of appellant, the court permitted an amendment to the complaint, making another ground, viz., (6) that one Ehlers and one Chamberlain had each purchased 25.000 shares of the stock of. the company, paying $6,000 therefor, all of which representations were false, and known to be such at the time they were made. Appellant, in its answer to the amended complaint, admitted the purchase of the stock at twenty-five cents per share by the respondent; denied the agency of Baker, who had-sold the stock, denied the fraudulent representations; and alleged a ratification of the purchase by plaintiff after the purchaser had knowledge of all the facts alleged as fraud. The cause was tried by the court without a jury. The evidence in the case was principally taken upon depositions. The court found all the facts in favor of plaintiff below (respondent here), and entered a decree rescinding the contract and giving judgment in favor of plaintiff for $10,-000 against the defendant company. Defendant appeals, and the cause is here for trial de novo.

[299]*299The undisputed facts are substantially as follows: In the spring of 1898 J. E. Baker and others purchased a majority of the stock of the Young America & Cliff Consolidated Mining Company, a corporation, which had a capital stock of $1,000,000, divided into 1,000,000 shares. Eight hundred thousand of these shares were outstanding and 200,000 thereof were in the treasury of the company. The company was the owner of four mining claims situated near Bossburg, in Stevens county, Washington. At the first meeting of, the stockholders after the above named purchase of stock by Baker and others, Baker was elected president, and became ‘manager in fact without salary. The company thereupon began the construction of an air compressor plant and a concentrating plant, for the purpose of mining and reducing the ores of said properties. Money was needed by the company to carry on this work. Thereupon Baker was authorized by the company to sell the treasury stock at six cents per share, and in September, 1898, went to Mew York in order to sell this stock and purchase machinery for the mine. Learning that the company would not have money enough at six cents per share, he voluntarily informed the company that he would make the shares ten cents to the company. In New York city, Baker entered into an arrangement with W. S. Chamberlain, a broker, to sell the stock for him, and agreed to pay Chamberlain one-half of all money received over ten cents per share, and, in addition, one share of stock from Baker’s own personal stock for each two shares sold. He also entered into a similar arrangement with R. J. Ehlers and Jacob Colonel of New York. The corporation had no dealings with these brokers. Baker turned into the treasury of the company ten cents for each share sold. There was sold during September, 1898, about 100,000 shares at 12 J- cents a share; during October and November, [300]*30060,000 shares at twenty-five cents a share; 40,000 -of these shares wei’e sold to respondent herein. Thereafter ahont 40,000 shares were sold at from twenty-five to fifty cents per share. The company received from Baker something over $19,000 for the sales of treasury stock. There was spent on the mine altogether some $28,000, of which Baker contributed out of his own private funds some $9,000. Early in November, 1898, Chamberlain sold stock to one H. G. Rommel of Newark, New Jersey, and introduced Baker to Rommel. Rommel introduced several parties to Baker and Chamberlain, among them the plaintiff, Eldridge. At the first meeting of Baker and Eldridge there was some talk concerning the mine. Subsequently Baker showed Eldridge samples of ore from the mine; the report of a Mr. Hamer, the mining expert upon whose representations Baker had purchased the property; the returns of a carload of ore shipped from the mine to the Tacoma smelter; a telegram from the editor of the Bossburg Journal that the mine was able to pay dividends; a telegram from the secretary of state of Washington that the company was organized under the state laws; some assay certificates; and photographs of the mines and buildings in course of construction. Baker also told Eldridge that he was not an expert miner, but that he had been a bank cashier in Illinois, had lost his health and money and gone to Puget Sound, where for the last couple of years he had been engaged in selling mines. At this time Baker told Eldridge that there was 25,000 tons of concentrating ore on the dump which would average $27 to the ton; that there was also in the mines 25,000 or 30,000 tons of concentrating ore not knocked down, and that the value of the ore “in sight” and on the dumps was in excess of the capitalization of the company; that he had been selling the stock at twenty-five cents per share; that a divi[301]*301dend of one cent per share would he paid on February 15, 1899, and regularly thereafter; that the money realized on the sales of stock was to- be expended for machinery for the mine. He also gave Eldridge a list of persons to whom he had sold stock, among them Ehlers, who upon inquiry by Eldridge, confirmed Baker’s statements. Eldridge at this time did not know that Ehlers was a broker. Eldridge was not experienced in mining affairs, but expressed a willingness to invest $15,000 in the stock, at twenty-five cents a share; if he could go to Bossburg and see the property. Baker, being unwilling to wait for such a time, agreed to give Eldridge an affidavit- containing the main facts, and accordingly made an affidavit (1) that he was president of the company; (2) that the company owned four mining claims at Bossburg; (3) that there was 25,-000 tons of ore on the dump and 25,000 to 30,000 cubic yards of ore in sight in the mine; that a concentrator, etc., were being erected on the property. Of these statements all were correct, except the third, and Baker at the time believed that to be true. Hpon this affidavit being delivered to Eldridge, he paid Baker cash for 40,000 shares of the stock. A few days later Baker left for the mine, and Eldridge and Ehlers came on a few days after, arriving at Bossburg on December 22, 1898. They were met by Baker, who showed them the outside works and. machinery. The ground being covered with snow, Eldridge could not see the ore in the dump. Baker also introduced Eldridge and Ehlers to Hamer, the expert who had made the report on the mine; and he, at Baker’s request, showed Eldridge and Ehlers through the underground workings of the mine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P. 703, 27 Wash. 297, 1902 Wash. LEXIS 392, 27 Wash. 291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eldridge-v-young-america-cliff-consolidated-mining-co-wash-1902.