Hansen v. Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Co.

86 F. 832, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2994
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota
DecidedApril 30, 1898
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 86 F. 832 (Hansen v. Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hansen v. Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Co., 86 F. 832, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2994 (circtdmn 1898).

Opinion

LOCHREN, District Judge.

Complainant seeks the rescission of a contract expressed in two writings made and dated on the 11th day of September, 1895, whereby he purchased, nominally, of the defendants Edward T. Le Clair and John F. Locke, using the firm name and style of the “Reid Fish Company,” one-half interest in the business, plant, and property of the said Reid Fish Company, of all kinds, at Rat Portage, and other places in the district of Rainy river, for the sum of $15,000, payable as stated in said writings; and whereby, further, the parties to said writings agreed that they would form a Canadian corporation, to be called the “Rat Portage Fish Company, Limited,” for the purpose of carrying on general fish business in said district of Rainy river, and would transfer to such new corporation the whole of their stock in trade, plant, outfit, and real and personal property, at Rat Portage, and else-' where in said district, used in the fish business; and that one-half of the stock of such Canadian corporation, when formed, should be allotted to said Ferdinand Hansen, or such person as he might designate, and the other half to the other parties to said contract; and that the Rat Portage Fish Company, when incorporated', should carry on the fish business in said district; and that said Ferdinand Hansen should purchase all caviar manufactured by it, at the price of $35 per standard keg, paying also the cost of the kegs and of making the caviar, and that the other parties to said writings should purchase all fish which the same company should have for sale at the price of three cents per pound; and that agreements [833]*833for such purchase of caviar and fish should be made with the Rat Portage Fish Company, when incorporated.

At the time of said transaction the defendant Locke was, and has since been, the president of the defendant the Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Company, a Minnesota corporation, doing business at Minneapolis, in the state of Minnesota, and elsewhere, and the defendant Le Clair then was, and since has been, the manager of the same corporation, and the same corporation was the real owner of the business, jdant, and property of all kinds of the Reid Fish Company aforesaid, the title to which was held for its use by said Locke and Le Clair, and the said sale to Ferdinand Hansen, and the agreements with him connected with said sale, were, on behalf of the same corporation, negotiated and made by said Le Clair as its manager, although in his own name and that of said Locke, and in the name of the Reid Fish Company; and all the consideration paid therefor by said Ferdinand Hansen was received by the said Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Company, to its own use. Ferdinand Hansen, the complainant, was the son of the senior member of the firm of Hansen & Dieckmaun, dealers in fish and caviar at Hamburg, and nephew of the senior member of the firm of Dieckmann & Hansen, engaged in the same business at New York. He -was a German, and in 1895 was 26 years of age, and had never been engaged in business for himself, but for some two years had been buying, for the said New York and Hamburg firms, caviar- and some fish, upon the Delaware river, Lake of the Woods, and upon the Pacific coast, and at other places in the United States and dominion of Canada. In the spring of 1895 ihe complainant, then engaged in the purchase of caviar for said Hamburg and New York firms, called upon said Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Company, at Minneapolis, and conferred with said Le Clair, its manager, about the purchase of its caviar made at the Lake of the Woods; and was informed that the caviar for that year had been contracted to Neilson Bros., of Sandusky, Ohio, who were connected with said Baltimore Packing & Cold-Storage Company in Ashing plants on the American side of said lake; and, upon the statement by said Hansen of his desire to arrange for the purchase of caviar to be made in the following year, he was informed by said Le Clair that he had a plan in view for a company to operate a fishing plant on the Canadian side of that lake, but was not then prepared to state the details, as licenses to fish, which would only be granted to Canadian subjects, must be obtained from the Canadian government, and that any connection of other persons with the enterprise must be kept secret, but tba.t Hansen could obtain the caviar that .would be made by that company by becoming an owner of its stock, nansen arranged with said Le Clair to be kept informed of the progress of the enterprise, and while he was at the Lake of the Woods, and in Manitoba and in Oregon, up to the beginning of September, 1895, letters and telegrams passed between Le Clair and Hansen relative to said project; and on September 6, 1895, by appointment, Le Clair and Hansen met at Winnipeg, and Hansen was informed by Le Clair that a Canadian eorpora[834]*834tion could Tbe formed to carry on the business of fishing at the Lake of the Woods, in the Rainy Lake district, and licenses for such fishing obtained from the Canadian government, and Le Clair offered and proposed to sell to said Hansen, to be lay him put into such new corporation, the business, plant, real and personal property, ■and outfit of every kind of said Reid Pish Company at Rat Portage, and elsewhere in said district, for the sum of §30,000, and represented that he had paid one Reid, for the same plant, property, business, and outfit, the sum of $22,500, and had added to the property, so that it was worth $30,000, and, at the request of said Hansen, gave him a rough statement, or inventory, of the articles of property to be included in the proposed sale. And said parties discussed the proposed enterprise at length, and the number of licenses and nets that might be used, and said Le Clair expressed a confident belief that the proposed company would obtain in a season 1,000,000 pounds of fish, and 400 kegs of caviar, and desired to have a contract connection with the new company in respect to the fish. Hansen was then given an option of four days to consider the offer of Le Clair, during which time he proposed to go again to Rat Portage, where the real estate and most of the property of the Reid Pish Company was situated; and it was discussed and understood between the parties that Hansen should not, by speech or act, give rise to suspicion that he intended to obtain any interest in the property, as that might defeat the entire enterprise, by making it impossible to obtain the fishing licenses, which would be granted only to Canadian subjects. Hansen and Le Clair then went to Rat Portage together, and remained there, much of the time together, until the night of September 1Í, 1895. They saw the real estate and buildings upon the same, though no careful examination of the interior of the buildings was made, and also saw or could see the steamboat and barge; and together went over the Lake of the Woods, in a steamboat, from which they saw the buildings of the Reid Pish Company at Stevens Point, and also saw and discussed that portion of the lake in which Le Clair proposed to obtain fishing rights for the next year’s fishing. After this examination, the contract of September 11, 1895, was made, as first above stated, and the complainant paid the full consideration for the purchase, at the times and in the manner stated in the bill of complaint.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

International Harvester Co. of America v. Eaton Circuit Judge
127 N.W. 695 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
86 F. 832, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 2994, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hansen-v-baltimore-packing-cold-storage-co-circtdmn-1898.