Fox v. Hale & Norcross Silver Mining Co.

108 Cal. 369
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1895
DocketNo. 15301
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 108 Cal. 369 (Fox v. Hale & Norcross Silver Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fox v. Hale & Norcross Silver Mining Co., 108 Cal. 369 (Cal. 1895).

Opinions

Beatty, C. J.

The Hale & Norcross Silver Mining Company is a corporation, organized under the laws of California, with its principal place of business at the city of San Francisco. It is the owner of one of the mining claims on the Comstock lode, in the state of Nevada, where for many years it has been' engaged in the business of mining gold and silver bearing ores.

The plaintiff, M. W. Fox, since the year 1887, has been at all times a stockholder of said corporation. In August and September, 1890, he addressed communications to its board of directors, and to the individual members of the board, charging, in substance, that for three years the corporation and its stockholders had been systematically plundered, and its property stolen, to the amount of more than $2,000,000, by means of a fraudulent conspiracy and combination between said directors and the owners or lessees of the mills employed in the reduction of the ores extracted from the company’s mine; that the devices resorted to in furtherance of the object of this conspiracy were the mixture of worthless rock with high-grade ores so as to obscure their value, and at the same time increase the quantity of material to be put through the mills; the concealment from the stockholders of the average value of the ores, as thus reduced; a fraudulent system of milling by which only a small portion of the precious metals contained in the ores was returned to the company; and a disposition of the stolen bullion in a manner intended to conceal the theft. He further stated in his communication to the board that he was prepared to furnish sufficient evidence of the truth of his charges, and demanded that the directors should institute an action in the proper court, in the name of the company, [378]*378to recover from the conspirators the full amount of its losses.

Nothing having been done by the directors in response to this demand, the plaintiff commenced this action, in which he joined as defendants the corporation, all the individuals who had served as its directors from 1887 to 1890 inclusive, and the owners of the several mills in which its ores had been reduced during the same period — these last being sued by fictitious names. The summons does not appear to have been served on any of the mill-owners, but the other defendants filed their answer to an amended complaint, and on the issues so made the cause was brought to trial November 18,189 L. During the progress of the trial the complaint was further amended by the insertion of the true names of the mill-owners sued by fictitious names, and by the addition of some new allegations; and on March 6, 1892, at the close of the trial, a final amended complaint was filed, for the purpose, as stated, of conforming the pleadings to the proofs.

All the material allegations of these amended complaints were either denied by the answers of the several defendants, or were by the court treated as denied. On June 11, 1893, the superior court filed its findings and conclusions, and entered its decree in favor of the plaintiff for the benefit of the corporation defendant, and against the other defendants (except Hobart, a mill-owner, who had died on June 2d, and as to whose estate all proceedings were continued) severally for various sums. As against Hayward and the Nevada Mill & Mining Company (a corporation)—mill-owners—and Levy, who had been president of the Hale & Norcross company during the whole period from 1887 to 1890 inclusive, there were several judgments for the entire amount of the company’s losses, estimated at $1,011,-835. As against the other defendants—directors of the corporation—there were several judgments in smaller and varying amounts, corresponding, as it is claimed, to the losses sustained by the corporation during their [379]*379respective terms of office from overpayments to the mill-owners for the crushing and reduction of ores.

Execution was directed to issue upon these judgments, but it was provided that no more should be collected thereon than said sum of $1,011,835, with accruing interest and costs. And a receiver was appointed, to whom the amount so collected was to be paid, and who was authorized and directed by the judgment to pay over to the attorneys for the plaintiff—as compensation for their services—25 per cent of all sums collected. In due time all of the defendants against whom judgment had been rendered moved for a new trial upon a settled statement of the case, and, their motion having been denied, they have taken this appeal from said order and from the judgment.

The large amount involved in the controversy, the difficulties presented by the subjects of investigation, the great length of the trial, the immense mass of evidence, consisting largely of closely printed columns of figures, and the ability, industry, and ingenuity of counsel have combined to raise an unusual number of difficult questions for our decision, in the discussion of which it will be necessary to state in considerable detail many of the matters contained in the record. It will be more convenient to make a particular statement of these matters in connection with the several assignments of error to which they relate, but it will facilitate the discussion to state at the outset the general nature of the issues presented by the pleadings, and the facts as found by the superior court.

In his last amended complaint, filed" as above stated, after the evidence was all in, and for the declared purpose of conforming the pleadings to the proofs, the plaintiff alleges, among other things: That between the 1st of January, 1887, and the 1st of July, 1890, the Hale & Norcross Silver Mining Company delivered to the Chollar or Nevada mill, and to the Vivian and Mexican mills, at or near Virginia City, in the state of Nevada, not less than 80,000 tons of gold and silver bearing ore, [380]*380the property of said company, to be by said mills crushed and milled. That said ores were crushed and milled at said mills, and were of the value of not less than $3,250,-000. That said Chollar or Nevada mill was the property of the Nevada Mill & Mining Company, a Nevada corporation, organized under the laws of that state for the purpose of owning, leasing, and operating mills for crushing gold and silver bearing ores, and of which the defendants, Hayward and Hobart, were large stockholders. That the said Hayward and Hobart, acting with other persons in a conspiracy to defraud the Hale & Nor-cross Silver Mining Company, controlled and directed all the affairs of said Nevada Mill & Mining Company and of the Mexican mill during all the times mentioned in the complaint, and that all the fruits of said conspiracy Paine to the hands of said Hayward and Hobart. That said persons and corporations (owners, stockholders, and managers of mills) were at all times mentioned in the complaint also the owners of a large number of shares of the capital stock of the said mining company» and fraudulently and unlawfully, in aid of said conspiracy, procured a sufficient number of proxies of other persons in whose names stock was standing, but who were not the real owners thereof, to elect all the directors of said mining company at the annual elections, held March 9, 1887, March 14,1888, March 13,1889, and March 12, 1890. That said directors, so chosen, were at all times controlled by, and acted in subserviency to and conspired with, said mill-owners and managers in all their official acts and proceedings, and in all matters connected with" the management and business of the mining corporation and its mine.

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Bluebook (online)
108 Cal. 369, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-hale-norcross-silver-mining-co-cal-1895.