Gumaer v. Colorado Oil Co.

152 U.S. 88, 14 S. Ct. 480, 38 L. Ed. 365, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2097
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 5, 1894
Docket50
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 U.S. 88 (Gumaer v. Colorado Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gumaer v. Colorado Oil Co., 152 U.S. 88, 14 S. Ct. 480, 38 L. Ed. 365, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2097 (1894).

Opinion

*90 Mr. Justice Shiras,

after stating the case, delivered the opinion of the court.

The Colorado Oil Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of New York, and whose purpose was to mine, produce, refine, and deal in petroleum and its products, procured from the owners of lands, situated in the county of Fremont and State of Colorado, leases authorizing said company to sink wells on such lands and to extract oil therefrom. On or about the 13th day of July, 1886, the company appointed Augustus It. Gumaer, then a resident of Cañón City, Colorado, its general manager in that State. •

Gumaer acted as general manager of the company until December 21, 1886, when his resignation was accepted by the company, through its vice-president, in a letter containing the following terms: “ In accepting your resignation as general manager of the Colorado Oil Company for Colorado, I beg to express to you the regrets of the company and myself in losing ybur valuable services. You accepted the position when the' company was in a precarious condition. Under your able management, its affairs to-day are in a much different condition, and prospects brighter than ever. I beg to express to you, for the company and myself, our thanks for the interest which you have taken in our affairs; and I beg to express the wish that our friendly relations may always continue.”

On the 15th day of June, 1887, the Colorado Oil Company filed a bill of complaint against Gumaer and the Florence Oil Company, in which it sought to have Gumaer declared a trustee for it as to a certain lease for oil lands in Fremont County, which had been granted by one Stephen J. Tanner to Gumaer in his own name, but in such circumstances as that in equity it was the property of the company. The bill further alleged that certain leases' of portions of the Tanner tract, subsequently executed by Gumaer to the Colorado Oil Company, were in fraud of the company’s rights in the entire tract, and intended to operate as a fraud and deceit. It was also alleged that the Florence Oil Company, organized and controlled by Gumaer, had entered into possession of a part of the tract.

*91 A decree fro confesso was taken against the Florence Oil Company. Gumaer answered, averring that the lease by Tanner to him was in his own right, and not as trustee, and that the leases of portions of the tract to the complainant had been made in good faith, and were binding, and that the rights of the complainant in the Tanner tract were limited and defined by those leases.

The cause was put at issue, and a large amount of evidence was put in by both parties. The result in the court below was a decree in favor of the complainant, declaring that Gumaer had taken the Tanner lease in trust for the complainant company, and commanding the defendant to surrender and assign the same to the complainant, and also to surrender the leases made by Gumaer, of portions of said tract, to be cancelled.

We are compelled to pass upon this case without the assistance of any opinion or findings of facts by the court below, and hence it has been necessary for us to consider all the evidence. The bill is definite and precise in its allegations, and waives answer under oath. The answer, although without weight as evidence, is also precise and specific in its allegations denying the equity of the bill.

There is no view that, we can take of the evidence that enables us to reconcile the conflicting testimony of the witnesses respectively examined in behalf of the parties.

The principal witnesses who testified in behalf of the complainant were Jacob Wallace, president; Isaiah Josephi, vice-president, and Simeon E. Josephi, brother of Isaiah, and who succeeded Gumaer as manager of the company. Their testimony sustained in substance the allegations of the bill.

These witnesses were confronted by Stephen J. Tanner, the owner of the tract in question; by Samuel H. Baker, who had acted as attorney for Gumaer, and also, for a part of the time, as attorney for the company, and by Gumaer himself; and their testimony is, in essential particulars, directly contradictory to that given by the complainant’s witnesses.

The principal matter in controversy is, whether Gumaer took the lease from Tanner for himself, or whether he took it *92 in circumstanóes that, in equity, prevent him from asserting his personal ownership of it against the company.

It was shown that the lease of Tanner to Gumaer was dated October 6, 1886, and when the latter was acting as general manager of the company, and it was claimed that he procured the lease by representing to Tanner that he was taking it for the company. It was testified by Wallace that he had, as president, directed Gumaer to procure additional leases, and particularly of the Tanner tract. . He denied that Gumaer had informed him, before he agreed ■ to become manager, that he had a contract of any kind with Tanner, and he denied that Gumaer had ever pretended to own a lease from Tanner. He also denied that Isaiah Josephi, the vice-president, had been authorized by the company to accept leases from Gumaer of portions of the Tanner tract.

Simeon Josephi testified that Tanner had told him that he had given Gumaer a lease, knowing him to be the general manager of the Colorado Oil Company, and believing that the company would carry out the conditions of the lease; that when Isaiah Josephi came to Colorado in December, 1886, and had learned that Gumaer held a lease from Tanner, he demanded that it be turned over to the company; and that, on Gumaer’s refusal to turn over the Tanner lease, Josephi had, in order to avoid jeoparding the fixtures and property of the company that were on certain portions of the Tanner tract, accepted leases from Gumaer of such portions.

Isaiah Josephi testified that he had accepted the leases from Gumaer under protest.

On behalf of the defendants it was shown that while it was true that the lease from Tanner to Gumaer was executed on October 6, 1886, after he had been appointed manager, yet ■ that it was given in pursuance of a contract in writing between Tanner and Gumaer, dated December 10, 1885, long before he had any connection with the company, which contract gave an option to Gumaer to purchase the tract.

Tanner testified to the existence of the contract of December 10, 1885, between himself and Gumaer, and also that he made the lease of October 6, 1886, to Gumaer directly, with *93 out any reference to the Colorado Oil Company, believing that he was able to execute the terms of the lease which required him to enter upon the land and commence operations within ten days.

Gumaer testified that he had a contract with Tanner, and also with other parties, before he was appointed manager of the Colorado Company; that he had informed Wallace, the president, of his option for the Tanner tract before he was so appointed ; that he subsequently offered to give an interest in the tract to the company on certain terms. He denied that he had ever received any instructions, either orally or in writing, from the company to get for it any interest in the Tanner lands.

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4 App. D.C. 213 (D.C. Circuit, 1894)

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Bluebook (online)
152 U.S. 88, 14 S. Ct. 480, 38 L. Ed. 365, 1894 U.S. LEXIS 2097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gumaer-v-colorado-oil-co-scotus-1894.