Holman v. Tjosevig

6 Alaska 690
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedSeptember 9, 1922
DocketNo. 1876-A
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 6 Alaska 690 (Holman v. Tjosevig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holman v. Tjosevig, 6 Alaska 690 (D. Alaska 1922).

Opinion

REED, District Judge.

The plaintiffs, claiming to be tenants in common with defendants in certain mining claims, by this action are seeking to impose a trust on the proceeds of the sale by defendants of the whole of the common property proportionate to their claim of interest in such property. The facts in the case in some respects are similar to those involved in the case of Donohoe and Smith against the defendants, decided by the appellate court and reported in 262 Eed. at page 911, and not a little of the record and testimony of that case has been incorporated in this. Certain facts based upon the same record and adjudicated in that case must be conclusive in this. But there are certain differences in the two actions, which I will endeavor to point out in the course of this review as the bases for my conclusions herein.

The main conceded facts, as shown by the testimony and records, may be chronologically stated as follows:

On April 6, 1911, a decree was rendered by Judge Cushman, •then judge of the district court for the third division of Alaska, in an action therein pending wherein Neis Tjosevig was plaintiff and Christian Tjosevig and Eli Tjosevig, his wife, and Andrew Halvorsen were defendants, and Gust Djarf and [693]*693Charles Garwood were interveners. This decree quieted the title to the certain lode mining claims described as the Tjosevigs Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, and IS, and the Charlotte, Teddy, Nebraska, and Norway No. 2, situated in the Valdez recording district, Third division, of the territory of Alaska.

By this decree it was adjudged that the title to an undivided 21^/4s of all of said claims was vested in the plaintiff Neis Tjosevig, that the title to an undivided 21^/48 was vested in defendant Christian Tjosevig, that title to an undivided V48 of said claims was vested in the intervener Gust Djarf, and that title to an undivided 4/48 interest was vested in intervener Charles Garwood; that the title to all of the Dagny Marie and Carbonate Hill lode claims (except such portions thereof as conflicted with Tjosevig No. 3 and Nebraska lode claims), and the title to all of the New York lode claim (except such portions as conflicted with the Charlotte and Teddy lode claims), was vested in Eli Tjosevig; and that all portions of the Dagny Marie, Carbonate Hill, and New York lode claims so conflicting were void-and of no effect. By this decree 45/<ts of the above-mentioned lode claims were settled and determined by the ,court, leaving 3/48 undetermined. No appeal was taken from this decree, and the same became final, and the title of the several parties to the'45/^ of the mining claims therein described became fixed as in said decree declared as of the date thereof.

The 8/*s, the title to which was not mentioned in said decree, was originally vested in Andrew Holman, John Ekemo, and George C. Hazelet. This appears, not only from the testimony introduced by the plaintiffs, but also from the testi-. -mony of the defendant Tjosevig himself.

On July 1, 1911, Christian Tjosevig, as attorney in fact for Andrew Holman, John Ekemo, and George G. Hazelet, executed a deed of the above-named */48 to one Andrew Halvorsen, one of the defendants in this case.

In March of the; year 1914 Christian Tjosevig and Eli Tjosevig attempted to advertise out the,plaintiffs Gust Djarf and Charles Garwood under section 2324 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (U. S. Comp. St. § 4620), providing for forfeiture of noncontributing co-owners to the annual assessment work required by such section. On the trial of the [694]*694cáse of Donohoe and Smith against the defendants herein, the notice of forfeiture was declared by Judge Jennings to be insufficient to constitute a notice of forfeiture. This finding of Judge Jennings was not assigned as a ground of error by the appellate court, and was apparently abandoned by the defendants in that case on appeal. See Tjosevig et al. v. Donohoe et al., 262 Fed. 911.

On April 6, 1916, Christian- Tjosevig, Eli Tjosevig, his wife, Andrew Halvorsen, and Neis Tjosevig entered into an agreement with one George Francis Rowe to sell to him, the said Rowe, all the Tjosevig claims (Nos. 1 to 15, both inclusive), and the Norway (No. 2), Nebraska, Charlotte, Contact, Carbonate Hill, Dagny Marie lodes and the Consolidated placer mining claim for $150,000 and certain shares of the stock in a corporation thereafter to be formed. Of said consideration, $100,000 was to be paid to Christian and Eli Tjosevig and Andrew Halvorsen at the times in said contract or agree-, ment stated, and $50,000 was to be paid at different periods therein stated to Neis Tjosevig. ' Four thousand dollars appears to have been paid at the signing of the agreement, $3,000 of which went to Christian Tjosevig and $1,000 to'Nels Tjosevig. This agreement further provided that the whole of said claims (being all interests) should be sold to the purchaser. This agreement became forfeited by the failure of the vendee to comply with its terms as to payment.

On June 6, 1916, Christian Tjosevig, Eli Tjosevig, his wife, and Andrew Halvorsen, as first parties, entered into an agreement with the Tjosevig-Kennecott Copper Company, a corporation, as second -party. This agreement, in effect, set forth that first parties are the owners of the Tjosevigs Nos. 1 to 15, inclusive, Nebraska, Norway No. 2, Charlotte, Contact, Carbonate Hill, and Dagny Marie lode mining claims, and the Consolidated placer claim, and that in consideration of a deed of all the right, title, and interest of first parties therein, second party agrees: (1) To limit its capitalization to 2,500,000 shares of stock, of a par value of $1 each; (2) to deliver 2,499,995 shares of its capital stock to the Scandinavian-American Bank, made out to the First Bank of Cordova as trustee and as owner; (3) to make the sale of its capital stock at certain prices not less than the prices in said agreement specified; (4) to pay the money received from sales of stock to the Scan[695]*695dinavian-American Bank of Seattle upon receipt of properly assigned stock .transfers of the shares issued to the trustee, the First Bank of Cordova; (5) to assent to the transfer of $117,000 of the first money received from such sales to the First Bank of Cordova as trustee for the first parties; (6) to pay to the Scandinavian-American Bank at least certain amounts of money at certain stated times therein specified; (7) to pay certain costs pertaining to the transfer, and (8) to do the annual assessment work on the claims and record the same, and to give a bond indemnifying the first parties against incumbering or alienating any of the property described.

The first parties therein agreed to the delivery of the 2,499,-995 shares of stock to the Scandinavian-American Bank for the First Bank of Cordova as trustee; to instruct the trustee to deliver such of the shares as may be sold to the party purchasing the same, upon the request of George Francis Rowe, and the payment of the price designated in the agreement; that $2,000 of the first moneys from such stock sales should be paid to Neis Tjosevig; to instruct the First Bank of Cordova to deliver to Christian Tjosevig a certificate for 125,000 shares of the capital stock of the company, and to Neis Tjosevig a certificate for 10,000 shares; and to deliver the unsold shares of stock (less the 135,000 shares delivered to the Tjosevigs) to the second party when Christian Tjosevig shall have received $117,000 and Neis Tjosevig shall have received $58,000 under an agreement concurrently executed.

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Bluebook (online)
6 Alaska 690, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holman-v-tjosevig-akd-1922.