Goodstein v. Silver Plume Mines Co.

245 P. 714, 79 Colo. 269, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 5, 1926
DocketNo. 11,252.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 245 P. 714 (Goodstein v. Silver Plume Mines Co.) 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
Goodstein v. Silver Plume Mines Co., 245 P. 714, 79 Colo. 269, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 334 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action by the plaintiffs Goldstein and Whitehead is one to recover from the The Silver Plume Mines Company, a corporation, and Cole, its president, the balance of a commission claimed to be due plaintiffs as brokers for negotiating a sale and transfer of the mining property of the defendant company. It seems that Cole was not served and did not appear and his individual rights were not determined. At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence the defendants’ motion for a nonsuit was granted and the action was dismissed, to review which is the object of this writ.

It is a recognized rule in this and other jurisdictions that in passing upon a motion for nonsuit it is the duty of the court to grant it if there is not sufficient legal and competent evidence to justify a verdict or judgment for the plaintiff. Otherwise expressed, if the trial court is convinced that, if the jury returned a verdict for plaintiff, it would be set aside for insufficiency of the evidence, it should take the case from the jury at the close of plaintiff’s evidence, if the defendant requests it, or on its own initiative should nonsuit the plaintiff. Trial courts however should, and they usually do, act cautiously, and carefully scrutinize the evidence before exercising their *271 unquestioned power in such cases. The case as made by the complaint is that plaintiffs were employed by defendants to procure a purchaser for the mining property of defendant Silver Plume Company at the price of $150,000, or to make a lease and option or other satisfactory disposition thereof, in consideration whereof defendants agreed to pay plaintiffs 10 per cent of all the money received by defendants thereon. In pursuance of the employment plaintiffs procured a purchaser who was able and ready and willing to buy, and with whom a satisfactory disposition thereof could be and was made, in that the East Butte Copper Mining Company, so procured, entered into a lease and option agreement with the Silver Plume Mines Company and thereafter paid the sum of $38,000 thereon and the defendant company paid to the plaintiffs the proper proportionate amount of such sum received, as compensation for their services. Thereafter, while negotiations were pending for the acquisition of the property by defendant option holder, the Butte Company, the Silver Plume Mines Company, through connivance and collusion with the option holder, effected a transfer of the property by a transfer, made by the owner to the Butte Company of all of the capital stock of defendant Silver Plume Mines Company, accepting in payment therefor the balance of the purchase price as originally agreed upon, which arrangement was a ruse and subterfuge and adopted and intended for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs of the balance due them as compensation for their services and for no other purpose. It is further alleged that this transfer and arrangement of transferring the stock instead of the title of the property, was brought about solely through the efforts and services of the plaintiffs, for which they claim a balance due of $5,600.

We have thus stated the substance of the allegations of the complaint chiefly because the plaintiffs strenuously insist, as contrary to the conclusion of the trial court, *272 that the cause of action in the complaint was one on contract and not on a fraud growing out of the contract. We think the trial court was right in saying that the frauds alleged constitute the gravamen of the action. It was proper for plaintiffs, as they did, to set out the contract as matter of inducement to the alleged fraud which arose out of the same, but the specific allegations of the complaint are that the transfer to the East Butte Company of the entire capital stock of the Silver Plume Company, made by the president thereof, the sole owner, save one or two qualifying shares for'other directors, was a ruse and subterfuge by the parties and that these two corporations connived and colluded together for the purpose of defrauding plaintiffs out of the balance due them as compensation for their services. There could not well be a more precise statement of a fraud than that here made by the pleader. The distinction is important here because the plaintiffs, in order to recover, must establish the fraud which they pleaded. The answer specifically denies the alleged fraud and the other material allegations of the complaint upon which reliance is had. If, as the trial court held, there was no evidence at all from which a legitimate inference could be drawn that the fraud alleged was perpetrated the decision of the trial court was right. To determine this matter recourse must be had to the evidence. '

The plaintiffs, in a separate or companion case to this had previously recovered a judgment against the defendants for the brokers’ commission which they earned under this contract up to that time, based upon the total sum received by the Silver Plume Company owner. Upon the trial of the instant case the plaintiffs called only two witnesses: one, Mr. Crow; the other plaintiff Whitehead. The testimony that was elicited from Crow is merely to the effect that after the claimed surrender of the option by the Butte Company and its refusal to consummate the deal, the Butte Company for a short time, through its *273 agent, was still in possession of the property and doing some work upon the same. Whitehead, one of the plaintiffs, testifies that after the alleged surrender of the lease and option he had a conversation with Mr. Bohn, manager in charge for the Bntte Company at the mine, in which Bohn said that he had a couple of men doing a little work on the property, although his company had given the matter up and surrendered the lease. In response to a question by Whitehead if the option had been abandoned for good, Bohn said that he would not say that, but there had got to be some changes, for he had had a lot of trouble with Mr. Cole, the president of the defendant mining company, and could not get along with him, and he would have no further negotiations with him. Bohn said that a good grade of ore had been developed in working the mine. Upon cross-examination of Whitehead it was developed that in a conversation with the attorney for the Silver Plume Mines Company he said to Whitehead that his company had taken over the property on the surrender of the lease and option by the Butte Company and Wrhitehead asked the attorney if that meant that the Butte Company had abandoned it and the answer was that if they went ahead with it, it would be under a reorganization, if anything further was done, to which Whitehead answered that he was glad to hear of it because that would give the brokers a chance for the balance of their commission, and the attorney replied that it would not as it would be so fixed that they would not get any more commission. Upon further cross-examination Whitehead admits that the attorney told him that the option deal was off, but Whitehead said that the attorney added that it would be a reorganization. There was testimony upon which some reliance is placed that Cole, the president of the company, as has been stated, owned practically all the capital stock and, therefore, in considering this motion for a nonsuit he must be considered as the company itself or, at least, that the rule to be applied here should be the same as if the de *274

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 P. 714, 79 Colo. 269, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goodstein-v-silver-plume-mines-co-colo-1926.