Gas Securities Co. v. Antero & Lost Park Reservoir Co.

259 F. 423, 170 C.C.A. 399, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1652
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 13, 1919
DocketNo. 5158
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 259 F. 423 (Gas Securities Co. v. Antero & Lost Park Reservoir Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gas Securities Co. v. Antero & Lost Park Reservoir Co., 259 F. 423, 170 C.C.A. 399, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1652 (8th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

This is an action in equity by appellant, owner of bonds of the East Denver Municipal Irrigation District, against the Antero & Lost Park Reservoir Company, the Antero Land ¿c Irrigation Company, the East Denver Municipal Irrigation Dis[425]*425trict, the Interstate Trust Company, the Colorado National Bank, and the members of the board of directors of the irrigation district, as such and individually. To this bill two separate, but identical, motions to dismiss were filed, one by the Reservoir Company, and the other by the irrigation district and the members of the board of directors of the district. These motions were sustained, and the bill dismissed generally. From this order the Gas Company appeals. The question thus presented is the vulnerability of the bill to the attack of the motions to dismiss.

The cause of action alleged by the bill is as follows: That prior to October, 1909, the Reservoir Company was the owner of an irrigation system consisting of the Antero reservoir, having a maximum storage capacity of 85,600 acre feet, with a feeder ditch and (through ownership of the entire capital stock of the Northern Colorado Irrigation Company) of the Highline Canal, about 70 miles long, with certain priority water rights; that for the purpose of effecting a sale of this property the Reservoir Company during that year conceived the plan of having formed an irrigation district to which the property might be sold for the bonds of such district; that in pursuance of that plan it brought into being the Land Company, a corporation, which it thereafter procured to organize the irrigation district, and to make with the district a contract by which the above property, together with such work as might be necessary to complete the same for the uses of the district, was to be exchanged for bonds of the district; that the district was so organized; that on August '30, 1910, the Land Company, with the approval and on behalf of the Reservoir Company, for the purpose of making a sale of the above property of the Reservoir Company, contracted with the district to deliver to it a complete irrigation system for .$3,000,000 of the • bonds of the district; this system, as required by this contract, consisted of the Antero reservoir, which was to be improved by increasing its storage capacity to 71,000 acre feet, and by facing its dam with concrete; the Highline Canal, which was to be enlarged and extended; construction of a system of distributing laterals (including rights of way therefor), and construction of a system of two distributing reservoirs within certain survey sections, with a capacity of 9,000 and 4,000 acre feet, respectively. As to the method, time, and conditions of payments, the contract provided that upon filing by the Land Company of a bond for $100,000, securing the performance of its contract, the entire bond issue of $3,000,000 would be deposited with the Continental Trust Company as trustee, to be paid out by it as follows: $1,125,000 (less amount required to improve the Antero reservoir under the contract) upon delivery to the trustee of a warranty deed conveying the Antero reservoir, $675,000 upon delivery to the trustee of the entire capital stock of the Northern Colorado Irrigation Company, $32,500 upon delivery to trustee of warranty deed conveying the Irondale reservoir; all of the above three payments being subject to deduction of 10 per cent., to be withheld until the entire system be completed, and accepted; the balance to be paid on estimates of the construction work, except, apparently, certain retained percentages, all final sums to be [426]*426paid 90 days after completion of the work. There was also a provision fixing, for estimation purposes, the values of- facing the Antero reservoir and constructing the Abbott and Terminal distributing reservoirs, and providing that, if either of these distributing reservoirs should not be completed and conveyed according to the specifications, the estimated cost of such completion, with 15 per cent, retained, should be returned by the trustee to the district, but that the district should still have a right to damages on the bond. The bill further alleges that the bonds were authorized to be payable in series from 1921 to 1930; that during the negotiation of this contract, upon demand of the board of the district, the Reservoir Company, by two resolutions which it delivered to the district, approved said contract, and agreed to carry out the contract in so far as it related to things to be done or not to be done by it, and that it would negotiate a contract with the directors of the district for the carriage of water storage in the Tollgate reservoir ; that, in accordance with the contract, the bonds were delivered to the Interstate Trust Company (substituted for the Continental); that no bond was made by the Rand Company; that thereafter, because of difficulties in placing the bonds, as represented by the officers of the Reservoir and Rand Companies, the contract was altered by another dated August 29, 1912, whereby $250,000 in bonds were delivered in payment of certain rights of way, water rights, and filings .for the purpose of completing by January 1, 1913, the extension of the High-line Canal and laterals, as provided in the earlier contract, so that water might be rented by the district and used upon the lands during the completion of the system, and an extension for completing the entire system was made to. January 1, 1914; that the work provided for by the contracts was not done by the Reservoir or Rand Companies, but that they induced one Fred R. Rucas to undertake the completion, on their behalf, of the contracts; that pursuant to this arrangement three contracts of different date, but forming part of the same transaction, were made: one (December 14, 1912) between Rucas and the Reservoir Company, by which he was to pay $250,000 cash and $1,000,000 of district bonds for warranty deed to the district of the Antero reservoir and all the capital stock of the Northern Colorado Irrigation Company ($50,000 cash on or before January 15, 1913, when the deed and stock would be placed in escrow until the irrigation system as contracted for should be accepted by the district, and the remaining $200,000, due on or before January 15, 1915, and the stock paid over); another (December 30, 1912) between Rucas and the Rand Company, assigning to him the two contracts with the district, and obligating him to complete the work with any modifications thereafter entered into; a third (February 4, 1913) between Rucas and the district (as represented by the board of directors), consenting to the above assignment, and modifying the prior construction contracts by providing that in lieu of the Abbott and Terminal reservoirs (combined capacity 13,000 acre feet), he should increase the contracted capacity of the Antero' reservoir by 14,600 acre feet; that these contracts between Rucas and the district and Rucas and the Rand Company were known to and agreed to by the Reservoir Company; that [427]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
259 F. 423, 170 C.C.A. 399, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 1652, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gas-securities-co-v-antero-lost-park-reservoir-co-ca8-1919.