Graff v. Portland Town & Mineral Co.

12 Colo. App. 106
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1898
DocketNo. 1473
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 Colo. App. 106 (Graff v. Portland Town & Mineral Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graff v. Portland Town & Mineral Co., 12 Colo. App. 106 (Colo. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinion

Wilson, J.

This litigation grows out of transactions connected with, the purchase of the town site of the town of Goldfield in the Cripple Creek mining district. These transactions took place chiefly between the plaintiffs and defendant Bellows of the one part, and defendants Zang, Sigel, Sturm and Heath of the other part, and as these latter are of the defendants really the main parties in interest, we shall for convenience and brevity in [108]*108this opinion speak of them as the defendants. ” The facts material to a proper understanding of the history of the case, and to a determination of the issues involved, are substantially as follows, as we gather them from the admissions in the pleadings, testimony, and exhibits contained in a very voluminous record. It seems that defendant Bellows first conceived the idea that it might be profitable to secure the necessary ground and establish a town about the locality where Goldfield was afterwards located. Realizing that it was necessary to have considerable financial aid to make successful an enterprise of this character, he applied to the plaintiffs to assist him in securing the co-operation and support of parties who would furnish this assistance. Thereafter, but through whose efforts this was brought about does not clearly appear, the defendants named were interested, and on May 14, 1894, they entered into a written contract and agreement with the plaintiffs and Bellows. The purpose of this agreement, as expressed in it, was to purchase or otherwise obtain title to certain real estate thereinafter described, or so much thereof as might be thought advisible by the defendants, for the purpose of platting the same into a town, selling and disposing of lots, etc. The plaintiffs and Bellows agreed without other compensation than that thereinafter particularly stated, to give up and devote their time and efforts to the obtaining of title to the said lands by purchase or otherwise, under the direction of said defendants, or a majority of them. The defendants agreed to contribute in equal proportion such sums of money, not to exceed $12,000, as they, or a majority of them, the defendants, might deem necessary to obtain the lands and to improve the same. All options were to run to, and title to be taken in the name of, the defendants. When title to such lands as designated by defendants, was secured, they, these defendants, would have the right to plat and subdivide the same into lots, streets, alleys, etc., and to sell the same upon such terms and conditions and for such sums as they might see fit. When all moneys advanced by them should have been paid back to them from [109]*109the sales of lots, then the plaintiffs and Bellows were to receive a conveyance of an undivided three eighths of all lands remaining unsold, or three eighths of the proceeds of the same, of which amount Bellows was to receive three sixteenths, and each of the plaintiffs one sixteenth. The four defendants were also authorized, if they saw fit, to transfer all of said lands to a corporation to be organized under the laws of Colorado with a certain capital stock, and if this was done, the plaintiffs and Bellows should receive, after the defendants had been reimbursed for their expenditures, the same proportion of the remaining capital stock, except a certain amount to be reserved for treasury stock. Nothing very material seems to have been effected under this contract. No option appears to have been secured in the names of the defendants, unless it be probably a small one for which the sum of $50.00, advanced by defendants, was paid. Title to no lands was obtained. About June 10, following, the defendants became dissatisfied, and notified the plaintiffs and Bellows of their desire to draw out, and quit the enterprise. Various reasons were assigned, among others, that the German National Bank had failed, and that thereby moneys of Zang had been tied up, and also that what was known and designated as the Cripple Creek war or strike had broken out and was then raging, thereby rendering the prospects of a successful carrying out of the town enterprise improbable. In pursuance of this, on June 11, the following was indorsed in writing upon the contract of May 14, and subscribed by each of the parties thereto, to wit: “This contract is hereby declared null and void by the mutual consent of all the parties thereto. Witness our hands this 11th of June, 1894.” At this time the defendants agreed to assume all expenses and obligations incurred under the May contract, and agreeably thereto they paid to the plaintiffs and Bellows various sums of money, and remitted certain sums which they were owing to the defendants, amounting in the aggregate to more than $500. At this meeting, the prospect of going on with the enterprise seems to have been discussed between Bellows and the plain[110]*110tiffs, and Bellows stated to tliem that he thought he could get one H. A. McIntyre to go into the deal in the place of the retiring parties, and that he intended to make the effort. Thereupon plaintiffs requested him to give them a little time to see if they could find any one who was willing to furnish the financial backing, and it was agreed between them that they should have twenty-four hours to do this, if possible. They failed in this, and within a few days thereafter, Bellows closed a deal with one H. A. McIntyre as trustee, — the cestui que trust not being designated, — and a contract was drawn up between them substantially to the same effect as that of May 14, between the other parties, except that to this McIntyre as trustee and Bellows alone were parties. Some time thereafter, the precise time not being definitely fixed, but apparently between the middle and last of August, the defendants Zang, Sigel, Sturm and Heath with some other parties, claimed to have purchased and succeeded to the interest of McIntyre, the larger part of such interest passing to those defendants. In pursuance of this agreement, title to lands was secured and conveyed to defendant, the Portland Town and Mineral Company, a corporation organized for the purpose by defendants Bellows, Nagel, Frazer, Coffin, Campion and Charpiot, and of which defendants Zang, Sigel, Sturm and Heath were the largest stockholders. Under the ownership of tins corporation, defendant Zang being president, the town of Goldfield was laid out, and a large number of lots were sold. For the furtherance of the enterprise, the defendants Zang, Sigel, Sturm and Heath had up to the time of the institution of this suit, advanced or become responsible for about $70,000, and there had been received back from the sale of lots by the company about $21,000. On December 26, 1895, the plaintiffs filed their bill of complaint in this action, in which they alleged a fraudulent combination and conspiracy between defendants Bellows, Zang, Sigel, Sturm and Heath, to defraud them of their interest in the enterprise; that they had proceeded and were proceeding secretly to carry out for their own exclusive benefit the en[111]*111terprise contemplated by the contract of May 14; that without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiffs, they procured the incorporation of the defendant corporation by the defendants Nagel, Frazer, Coffin, Campion and Charpiot, but the real incorporators and parties in interest in said company were at all times the defendants Zang, Sigel, Sturm, Heath and Bellows, and that their object in having the company incorporated and directed by the other defendants was in furtherance of their wrongful scheme to mislead and defraud these plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Colo. App. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-v-portland-town-mineral-co-coloctapp-1898.