Johnston v. Standard Mining Co.

148 U.S. 360, 13 S. Ct. 585, 37 L. Ed. 480, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2236
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 27, 1893
Docket133
StatusPublished
Cited by205 cases

This text of 148 U.S. 360 (Johnston v. Standard Mining 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
Johnston v. Standard Mining Co., 148 U.S. 360, 13 S. Ct. 585, 37 L. Ed. 480, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2236 (1893).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Brown,

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

The bill was dismissed in the court below upon the ground of laches, and the correctness of its ruling in that particular is the first question presented for our consideration.

The gist of the plaintiff’s’bill is the alleged fraud of Chat-field in failing to carry out his contract of October 12, 1880, wherein he agreed, that in the event of succeeding in certain legal proceedings to be instituted by him for vesting the legal title to the Johnston claim in the plaintiff, he would convey to plaintiff an undivided one-eighth .interest in the lode free and clear of all expenses incidental to the litigation ; plaintiff upon his part agreeing to pay an undivided one-eighth of the expenses which should accrue in the developing and opening of the lode. The lode in question had been located on the preceding 4th of August by Johnston as owner of one-half, Joseph W. Adair as owner of one-fourth, and George A. Crittenden as owner of the remaining fourth. It seems there was a conflict between this and another mining claim known as Smuggler No. 2, and the agreement with Chatfield was made for the purpose of contesting this claim.

It also appeared that plaintiff was one of the parties who bad located the Smuggler No. 2 claim; that early in the year *365 1880 plaintiff had entered into what is known as a grub-stake contract with one Acheson individually and as agent and attornóy-in-fact of Edward Dunseomb and James E. Seaver, whereby plaintiff agreed to locate mining claims on behalf of himself and these parties, in consideration of which they agreed to furnish all the supplies and pay all the expenses' which should be required in prospecting, locating and devel-. oping such mining claims; that, in pursuance of, such agreement, plaintiff found indications of a silver-bearing lode on Smuggler Mountain, in the Roaring Fork Mining District, and on April 15, 1880, located Smuggler No. 2 mining claim upon this vein; that such location was made in the joint names of plaintiff, owner of one-fourth, and the wives of Dunseomb and Seaver, each claiming three-eighths; that, after such -location and before the discovery of any vein within the limits of the Smuggler claim, the other parties abandoned such claim, failed to furnish the necessary supplies and money to the plaintiff, who continued to develop and work the ground on his own account and at his own expense ; that, on August 4, 1880, plaintiff discovered within the limits of said Smuggler claim a vein or lode, and thereupon duly located the same as the “ J. C. Johnston lode” mining claim for the use of himself, Crittenden and Adair, as above stated; that, upon learning of such discovery and location, Acheson, Duns-comb and Seaver negotiated with Crittenden and Adair for the purchase of their interests in the Johnston claim, and on August 10, 1880, purchased the same for $1000; that at'the same time they negotiated with plaintiff and agreed to purchase his one-fourth interest, but failed to do so.

Plaintiff further contended that these facts respecting the location of the two claims, and the negotiations with Acheson, Dunseomb and Seaver, were known to Chatfield, Thomson and Sayre, who still insisted that there were certain parties who, as grantees of Dunseomb and Seaver, claimed title under the Smuggler location adversely to plaintiff’s interest in the Johnston claim, and that legal proceedings had already been, or were about to-be, commenced to enforce said claims; that Chatfield, Thomson and Sayre represented that it was desirable *366 to perfect the title of the Johnston claim by obtaining a patent therefor, and to this end they had secured or would secure a conveyance from the owners of the other half of the Johnston claim. They further represented to him that, for the better management of the property, they proposed to organize a stock coriipany, and to that end they had secured the other half interest in the'Johnston claim; and that the defendants were then associated together, and had agreed to organize, a stock company for that purpose, and that the Fulton Mining Company was shortly thereafter incorporated by them. These conflicting claims with regard to'the ownership of the property nothin the limits of! these two claims were evidently the foundation of the agreement of October 12, 1880, whereby Chatfieid agreed-to clear up the title to the property, and to convey one-eighth to the plaintiff.

Most of the testimony was directed to the relative merits of the .Smuggler. No. 2 and the J. C. Johnston locations, apparently upon the assumption by the defendant that the plaintiff was bound to prove that the owners of the Johnston lode had the better title. Plaintiff, however, contends, that the contract of October 12, 1880, and the other conveyances made about the same time, when read in the light of -the surrounding circumstances, are conclusive evidence of the following: First, that the interest actually purchased by Chatfieid in the Johnston mine was a quarter interest, and that the remaining fourth of Johnston’s interest in the property, which he deeded to . Chatfieid, was in trust; second, that this fourth interest was the interest referred to in the contract as being claimed adversely to Chatfieid by certain persons; third, that the defendants Thomson and Sayre were employed to institute the “legal proceedings” mentioned in the contract, and were to' receive as a contingent fee Tor their services in that behalf an eighth of the Johnston'mine, in case those proceedings were, successful; fourth, that in such case Johnston was to receive the remaining eighth of this contested quarter; fifth, that the “legal proceedings” mentioned contemplated and included an application for letters patent and the acquisition of the government title, as well as a suit of some kind.

*367 Upon the basis of the fifth and last proposition above stated the plaintiff contends that it would follow that a cause of action did not accrue to him until a patent had been issued by the government, which did not take place until July,'1884, and that as the plaintiff was not informed of this fact until some time in 1885, and as he filed his first' bill against Chatfield in the United States coupt on -August 1, 1885, he insists that he fulfilled all the requirements of the law with respect to diligence, and that the defence of laches is not sustained. ~We think this position, however, is founded upon a somewhat strained interpretation of the contract in question. It provides, that “in the event of the party of the first part,” '(Chatfield,) “ prevailing and succeeding in certain legal proceedings about to be instituted'and commenced by the party of the first part for- the vesting of the legal title in the party of the first part, against persons who claim adversely to him an interest in the following-described property, . . . that the party of the first part, upon so acquiring the title legal and equitable to the said mine, by means of fhe legal proceedings so about to be commenced, doth hereby covenant and agree to and with the said party of the second part,” (Johnston,) “to convey to the said party of the second part an undivided one-eighth interest in and to the said above-described lode, which shall be free and clear from all expense incidental to the litigation incident to said contemplatecUsi-flt.”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 U.S. 360, 13 S. Ct. 585, 37 L. Ed. 480, 1893 U.S. LEXIS 2236, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnston-v-standard-mining-co-scotus-1893.