Henry v. Travelers' Ins.

33 F. 132, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2912
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedDecember 10, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 33 F. 132 (Henry v. Travelers' Ins.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Henry v. Travelers' Ins., 33 F. 132, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2912 (circtdco 1887).

Opinion

Brewer, J.

This is a bill filed by the complainants for the purpose, in brief, of establishing and enforcing a contract, and obtaining an accounting. A large volume of testimony has been taken, very careful abstracts prepared and printed, and full argument, oral and written, presented. I have had the case under advisement for some months, and, from such examination, have been led to the following conclusions: A brief statement of the relations between the parties prior to the time of the alleged contract will help to a clearer understanding of the question, and the weight to be given to the different items of testimony.

[133]*133Defendant is an insurance company located at Hartford, Connecticut, with a large amount of funds for which it is seeking safe investments with the host interest. Prior to 1883 the complainant, T. 0. Henry, had boon for years living at Abilene, Kansas, engaged in the real-estate and loan business. He had established confidential relations with defendant, and for it, as well as others, had loaned large amounts in the state of Kansas. Up to that time his relations with defendant were satisfactory to both parties, and evidently the defendant had great confidence in his ability and judgment. In the spring of 1883 he came to Colorado, and established himself in business here, without, however, wholly abandoning his business in Abilene. One George W. Carpenter, who had been his clerk, was taken into partnership, and under the firm name of T. C. Henry & Co. the Abilene business was continued. On his location in Denver he opened correspondence with defendant, and succeeded in inducing it, to make several real-estate loans in this state. In order, as he supposed, to facilitate the business, he organized the Colorado Loan &. Trust Company, of which he was the president and practically the owner. Indeed, so intimate were the relations of this loan and trust company and T. C. Henry that, for all the purposes of this ease, they may be considered as one; and hereafter, in general, I shall treat the acts of either as the acts of T. C. Henry.

Besides his loan business, Mr. Henry engaged in several enterprises, the earlier of which it is unnecessary to consider. In the fall of 1883 lie became interested in certain irrigating canals or ditch enterprises in different parts of Colorado, and out of this springs this litigation.

The four ditch companies which gave occasion to this controversy, and which are joined as complainants with T. C. Henry, are the Grand Biver Ditoli Company, the Uncompahgro Canal Company, the Citizen’s Ditch & Land Company, and the Del Norte Land & Canal Company. In these companies he became largely Interested by virtue of his purchase of stock, and by engaging as contractor to construct and complete their various ditches and cañáis. Each of these companies had issued bonds, some of which defendant purchased and owned absolutely; others of which were placed among different parties in the east. The moneys received from-these issues of bonds were insufficient for the completion of the work contemplated, and Mr. Henry soon found that the funds of the various companies were exhausted, the work incomplete, and ho was drawing on his own resources and issuing Ins own obligations for the purpose of completing the canals. It is, perhaps, unnecessary to go into details as to the reasons for this condition of affairs. It is enough to say that the estimates of the engineers proved unreliable, the cost of the work was greater than their estimates, and in some cases extensions, not originally contemplated, were finally determined upon. It is enough to say that the work was incomplete, and the funds exhausted.

In this condition of affairs Mr. Ilonry applied to defendant for a loan of 8250,000, some of which ho represented was needed by him for his personal interests, but the major portion for the completion of these several canals. In order to secure this loan he made an exhibit of his finan[134]*134eial condition, of the securities which he had to offer, as well as the purposes for which the money was desired. After some hesitation, defendant voted the loan, taking therefor, among other securities, the obligations of the various ditch companies made to T. C. Henry, and by him indorsed to defendant. This was in the spring of 1884.

'' Before full payment of this loan had been made to him, and in the early part of the summer of 1884, he discovered that, notwithstanding this enormous loan, the necessities of the ditch companies demanded more money, and communicated the fact to defendant. Soon after receiving the news of this unexpected development, Mr. Dennis, the secretary of defendant, came to Colorado to examine the situation. After an examination by him, defendant advanced more money, taking the Obligations of the various ditch companies with Mr. Henry’s indorsement. Things progressed in this way for some time. The situation of affairs was embarrassing to all parties. Mr. Henry’s personal financial condition was one of great embarrassment. The work on the canals was incomplete. Defendant had advanced large sums of money, and felt that its investments in this direction were, to say the least, in an unsatisfactory ^ if not in a critical, condition. Finalty, in the fall, about the first of November, 1884, at the instance of defendant, as he says, Mr. Henry went to Hartford to consult with the officers of defendant, and to see if some plan could not be devised to extricate all parties from the embarrassments which surrounded them. He was there some four or five weeks, engaged in/ consultation, and, as he claims, their consultation culminated in a contract, and the existence and terms of that contract constitute the pivotal facts of this litigation.

There is considerable testimony as to the alleged misconduct, on the part of Henry in his loan business in Kansas, as well as that in Colorado;but in the view I take of the controversy, and the pivotal fact in it, I think it unnecessary for me to comment on that testimony, or to consider whether these charges of misconduct are proven or not. Their existence, or a belief in their existence, is only significant as throwing light upon the negotiations between the parties during the four or five weeks, and at the time of the making of the alleged contract.

• I pass, therefore, to a consideration of the testimony which bears directly upon this contract. Mr. Henry was accompanied by his brother, S. O. Henry, and the negotiations were carried on between the two brothers Henry, and Mr. J. G. Batterson, president, and Mr. Rodney Dennis, secretary, of defendant. At least, they were the principal parties thereto. It is well to remember the situation of the parties at the time of this alleged agreement. As heretofore stated, each of the ditch companies had issued a limited number of bonds, some of which were owned by defendant, others scattered around among various individuals in the east. Besides its investments in these bonds, defendant had advanced tnoney, for which it had obligations of the ditch companies indorsed by Mr. Henry. It had also become the owner of certain mechanics’ liens upon the ditch companies’ properties. The work on the various canals was incomplete. More money was needed for their completion, and [135]*135probably moro money for keeping them iq) until such time as, by the soiling of water-rights or the rental of water privileges, sufficient income would be derived from thorn to pay operating .expenses, as well as the interest on their indebtedness.

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Bluebook (online)
33 F. 132, 1887 U.S. App. LEXIS 2912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henry-v-travelers-ins-circtdco-1887.