Hopkins v. Roseclare Lead Co.

72 Ill. 373
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 72 Ill. 373 (Hopkins v. Roseclare Lead Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Roseclare Lead Co., 72 Ill. 373 (Ill. 1874).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the Court:

In the year 1850, William Pell leased to Heir Valle certain lands in sec. 32, town. 12 south, range 8 east, in Hardin county, for the period of fifty years. The lands were supposed to contain minerals. Yalle, with others whom he had associated with him, sunk a number of shafts and ran various tunnels, at a large expense, and had taken out a large amount of lead ore, and proved the land to be valuable for the mineral it contained. The lease still continued in force in 1864, when Yalle transferred the lease to Anthony LaGrave, who transferred it to the Boseclare Lead Company, appellee.

In the spring of the year 1864, the company entered upon the land with a la^ge amount of machinery, went to work, but some months afterwards it was discovered that there was a mistake in the description of the land in the lease. It was described as being in township 13, when it was, in fact, in township 12; thereupon the owners of the fee brought ejectment to recover the land. On a trial they recovered a judgment. The defendant paid the costs, and took a new trial under the statute.

The company thereupon filed a bill in equity to correct the mistake, and to enjoin further proceedings in the ejectment suit until a hearing should be had on the bill. At the first term after the bill was exhibited, a demurrer was filed, which was sustained, and the relief sought was refused. Thereupon ' another judgment of recovery was had in the ejectment suit. The complainants in the bill removed that case to the Supreme Court, where, on a trial, the decree of the court below, refusing the relief asked in the bill, was reversed and the cause remanded. Thereupon complainants, filed a supplemental bill, praying a restitution of the possession of the premises.

Afterwards, on the 15th day of January, 1872, LaGrave, a large stockholder in the company, executed instruments in writing, transferring the lease on the lands upon which the company claim they were operating their mining franchises, to one Lewis C. Hopkins, and delivered the lease to him, and sold and gave to him the right to control the suit then pending, in which the validity of the lease was involved, and an agreement was executed by the respective attorneys of the parties to dismiss the suit, and that the relief sought by the cross-bill might be granted.

On the next day another instrument was executed, by which LaGrave agreed to convey to Hopkins a 20 and a 40-acre tract of land, supposed to contain mineral. The agreement states, that Hopkins was to pay therefor $21,775, within thirty days after LaGrave should prepare proper deeds therefor. The deeds were prepared, but Hopkins’ attorney refusing to advise that the title was good, he refused to receive them and pay the money under the agreement.

It is contended by the company, that these two agreements, although bearing different dates, constitute but one indivisible contract, and that they can not be separated; that the payment of $25,000 was indispensable to the passing of title to any portion of the matters contracted to be sold. On the other hand, it is claimed that the two agreements related to separate and distinct matters, and were entirely disconnected from each other, and were not intended to be nor were they in anywise connected with each other; that each agreement was independent of the other, and that when the $3225 was paid, and the agreement and other papers were executed and delivered on the 15th of January, that transaction was closed and entirely consummated; and that a failure to pay the money on the purchase of the land in nowise affected the title to the lease, or any benefit that might accrue to Hopkins by having the right to control and have any benefit resulting from the suit.

It is charged in the bill, that the statement in the contract “that the true consideration for the 20 and 40 acres of land is $21,775,” was inserted without being noticed by LaGrave, and was intended as a cheat and a fraud on him, expressing what was never intended by LaGrave, and which was wholly foreign to the contract.

It is likewise alleged, that LaGrave was overreached by Hopkins, who represented himself as being wealthy and able to pay the balance of the money on the land, and also that it was of great importance to him that he should have the control of the suit on that day, thereby inducing LaGrave to surrender the leases and make the transfers. It is also charged, that it was the purpose of Hopkins to get the suit out of the way, and not to acquire title to the land; that Hopkins was in embarrassed circumstances, and a suit against him at law would have been of doubtful result. The bill further charges, that LaGrave had no authority whatever to sell the lease, or to give the control of the suit to Hopkins or any other person, but only had the leases in his possession to enable him to prosecute the suit. There seems to be no question that the transfer of the lease to the company was not recorded when these several transactions occurred.

In an amended answer, Hopkins alleges that, on the 1st day of March, 1872, by agreement in writing, he sold to Hugh Mc-Birney, and a number of others, 175 shares of the Eoseclare Lead and Spar Mining Company, and other mining stocks in companies being operated in Hardin county; that he transferred to McBirney and the others all of his interest in the lease purchased of LaGrave, and all of his rights in the suit then pending, involving the validity of the lease, and for the correction of the description of the lands embraced in the lease; that the consideration for such transfer was $40,000, all of which had been paid to him in cash; and that McBirney, and those associated with him, knew nothing of any difficulty or trouble growing out of the non-payment of the $21,775, or that LaGrave imputed any fraud to Hopkins in the transaction. The bill in this case was filed on the 25th day of April, 1872, after the purchase by McBirney and the others.

We are unable to discover, from this record, the precise nature of the suit that was pending, or the cross-bill to which reference is made in the various agreements. The bill simply recites that a bill was pending, in which the company was complainant and John T. Madden and others were defendants, but we assume that it was to correct the mistake in the lease.

On a hearing in the court below, the relief prayed was granted, and the court decreed that the parties be restrained from using the agreement to dismiss the suit for that or any other purpose, and the agreements to sell the suit and the two tracts of land, and the assignment of the lease, he surrendered up to he canceled, as fraudulent and void, and that the original leases he delivered to the company—from which defendants appeal to this court, and ask a reversal.

It is first urged hy appellants, that the suit is defective for the want of necessary parties. It appears, from the amended answer of Hopkins, and evidence in the case uncontradicted, that Hopkins had transferred his 175 shares of stock in the company, together with the assignment of the lease and the written agreement that he might control the suit, to Hugh Hc-Birney and a number of others, before this suit was brought. And the uncontradicted evidence in the case shows that they purchased in good faith, and without notice that it was claimed by LaGrave or the company that Hopkins had perpetrated a fraud on LaGrave.

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Bluebook (online)
72 Ill. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-roseclare-lead-co-ill-1874.