Kelley v. Boettcher

89 F. 125, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 28, 1898
DocketNos. 3,265 and 3,298
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 F. 125 (Kelley v. Boettcher) 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
Kelley v. Boettcher, 89 F. 125, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029 (circtdco 1898).

Opinion

THAYER, Circuit Judge.

The application which has been made in each of the above-entitled cases for an injunction and the appointment of a receiver for the Little Johnny lode mining claim is based upon bills of c'omplaint which contain collectively the following allegations: About the year 1880, Thomas J. Kelley and others located the Little Johnny mining claim, on Breece Hill, near Leadville, Colo. Thereafter, in November, 1886, Thomas J. Kelley died, seised of an undivided one-sixth interest in said claim, which interest, upon his death, became the property of the complainants in case No. 3,265, who were his heirs at law. John Curran was also one of the locators of said mining claim, and he also died on August 19, 1890, seised of another undivided one-sixth interest in said claim, which became the property of the complainants in case No. 3,298, who were his heirs at law. The defendants Boettcher, Campion, Hunter, and some other persons wrongfully acquired possession of said Little Johnny mine in January, 1883, and retained such possession until March, 1891, during which period they worked said mine successfully, and appropriated all the net proceeds thereof, which amounted to not less than $5,000,000, over and above all operating expenses. In January, 1891, the defendants Boettcher, Campion, Hunter, and others organized the Ibex Mining Company, and thereupon turned over the possession of the aforesaid mine to said mining company, of which they, were directors and managers. When the mine was thus turned over to /the Ibex Mining Company, it was a valuable gold mine, worth from $25,-000,000 to $50,000,000, which had already yielded gold ore worth $5,000,000; and, since it has been in the possession of the Ibex Mining Company, it has continued to produce not less than $300,000 per month, all of which the defendants, including said Ibex Mining Company, have wrongfully and fraudulently appropriated to their own use. The Ibex Mining Company was organized by the individual defendants above named, not in good faith, but for the sole purpose of using the same as a means of defrauding the heirs of Kelley and Curran, and depriving them of their rightful interests in the Little Johnny mining claim. In execution of such fraudulent purpose, the defendants, in November, 1892, employed one Charles C. Reger as their agent, to negotiate for the purchase of the interest of the Kelley heirs in said claim. Reger visited Galena, 111., where said Kelley heirs resided, and succeeded in buying all the right, title, and interest of said heirs in and to said mining claim for the sum of $1,000. The conveyance of said interest was made by the Kelley heirs to the defendant Boettcher on January 16, 1893, and was induced by false and fraudulent representations of said Reger, to the effect that the Little Johnny mining claim was of no value; that no ore of any consequence had ever been discovered in the claim; that the shafts which had been sunk thereon were then filled with water; that no one could examine the mine because of the water; that it would cost an immense sum to drain the property; and that the property had never paid expenses. When these representations were. made, the mine was in fact of [127]*127immense value, as the defendants were well aware, and they had already received about $1,000,000 for ores previously extracted therefrom, which sum in fact belonged to the complainants, as the heirs of said Thomas J. Kelley. The purchase price of the mine was paid out of the previous products of (lie mine, which belonged to the complainants, and other portions thereof had been invested by the defendants in the purchase of several adjoining mining claims, which were also of great value. About the month of August, 1893, the defendants employed Edward Dale and Citarles O. Keger to purchase the one-sixth interest of John Curran (who was then deceased) in the Little Johnny mine; and through the joint efforts of said Dale and Reger, and by means of false and fraudulent representations similar to. those last above described, they succeeded, on September 7, 1893, in obtaining from the heirs of said John Curran (who are the complainants in case No. 3,298), a conveyance of all their right, title, and interest in and to said mine, including a relinquishment of all their claims on account of ore previously extracted therefrom, for the price and sum of $3,500. The conveyance by the Curran heirs was made to the defendant, A. V. Hunter, but eventually Boettcher and Hunter conveyed the interests in the mine which they had respectively acquired to the Ibex Mining Company. Such, in substance, are the material allegations contained in the hills of complaint, and the relief prayed for is the cancellation of the respective conveyances by the heirs of Kelley and Curran to Boettcher and Hunter, and the cancellation of the conveyances subsequently made by them to the Tbex Mining-Company. The hills also seek an accounting and general relief.

■The defendants have each filed lengthy answers to the respective bills, in wdiich they deny, under oatli and in detail, all charges of fraud and collusion therein contained. In support of the bills and answers, numerous affidavits have been read by the parties, all of which have received careful attention. As a. result of such examination of Ihe moving papers, one general conclusion may be announced at the outset, namely, that the allegations made by the complainants in their respective bills touching the output and value of the Little Johnny mine are grossly exaggerated and misleading, and that other statements therein .contained concerning the time and manner in which the defendants first acquired possession of the property in controversy are without foundation in fact. The testimony heard in support of the motions satisfies the court that none of the defendants had any connection with the Little Johnny mine, or interest therein, until about March 15, 1891. The evidence shows, and there is no proof to the contrary, that Thomas J. Kelley, John Curran, and other locators of the Little Johnny claim, entered into a contract for the sale of a five-sixths interest therein to one Henry M. Dunning and others, some time in the year 1880; that the purchase price was to he paid by Dunning and his associates only out of the net profits which they might derive from working and developing the claim; that Kelley and Curran and the other locators of the claim turned over fhe possession thereof to Dunning and his associates when the contract of sale was executed, by whom and their successors in interest the mine was worked at intervals until about March 15, 1891; and [128]*128that during said period there was a net loss of about $110,000, in attempts made to find ore and work the mine at a profit. In March, 1891, the defendant John F. Campion and others were employed by the then owners of the Dunning contract, to wit, by F. F. Jeffrey and John Harvey, to further develop and work the mining claim in question, under an agreement whereby Campion and others were to work and develop it at their own expense, and were to receive for their services 85 per cent, of the net smelter returns of all ore yielding less than $20 per ton, and 80 per cent, of all ore yielding more than $20 per ton. This contract of employment was transferred by Campion and his associates to the Ibex Mining Company, which was organized in March, 1891; and under the provisions thereof the mining company continued to develop and work the mine until some time in the year 1895, when the interests of the Kelley and Curran heirs, and some other interests which had then been purchased, were conveyed to it.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
89 F. 125, 1898 U.S. App. LEXIS 3029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-boettcher-circtdco-1898.