Livingston v. Proprietors of Ore Bed

15 F. Cas. 691, 16 Blatchf. 549, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639

This text of 15 F. Cas. 691 (Livingston v. Proprietors of Ore Bed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Livingston v. Proprietors of Ore Bed, 15 F. Cas. 691, 16 Blatchf. 549, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639 (circtdct 1879).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, District Judge.

This is a bill in equity to compel the defendant, a corporation established by the general assembly of Connecticut, to issue to the plaintiff, a resident and citizen of the state of New York, fifty shares of the stock of said corporation, which are alleged to belong to the plaintiff, and to pay the amount of the dividends which may have become due upon said ■stock, or for such other and further relief as the nature of the circumstances may require, and as may be just and equitable. In 1735, the governor and company of the colony of Connecticut, granted in fee to John Ashley an undivided fourth, and to each one of six other persons an undivided eighth, of a tract of land containing one hundred acres, situated in the town of Salisbury, and subsequently known as the “Ore Bed Ground,” or the “Salisbury Ore Bed,” and which contained valuable iron ore. In 1784, the proprietors of this tract were incorporated by the general assembly of this state under the name of “the Proprietors of the Ore Bed in Salisbury.” The powers conferred were, in general, “to adopt, ordain and make such rules, regulations and by-laws as they shall judge reasonable and right for employing miners to raise said ore and promote the increase thereof, to appoint a committee or agent to order, direct and superintend the same, according to such rules and orders as he or they shall receive from the proprietors in their said annual meeting, and that such committee or agent shall have, and hereby are vested with, full power and authority, in his or their name, for and in behalf of the proprietors of said ore bed, to sue and prosecute to final judgment and execution any person or persons, whether proprietors or others, who shall, without his or their consent, dig or raise any ore in said bed, contrary to the rules or by-laws so adopted by said proprietors, or shall, in any wise, trespass upon the said common, interest of the' proprietors, the avails whereof they or he shall hold for the use and benefit of the common interest, and all cost and expenses attending the same shall be by such committee or agent paid out of the common treasury of said proprietors,” and “to make and ordain all and every such rules, ordinances and by-laws concerning their common interest and the management of the same, that they shall judge necessary, so as the same be not repugnant to the general law of this state.” About 1790, Robert Livingston, the last proprietor of the manor of Livingston, died seized and possessed in his own right, in fee, of an undivided four-eighths of said ore bed. He was, also, the owner of the Aneram furnace, in the state of New York. This furnace was about five miles from the ore bed, and was supplied with ore from his share of the bed. By his last will, duly proved and approved December 8th, 1790, before the surrogate’s court for the county of Columbia, in the state of New York, his sons, Walter, Robert Cambridge, Henry, (subsequently known as “General Henry,”) and John were made residuary devisees of all the real estate not specifically devised. His interest in the ore bed was a part of the residuary devise. He also devised to said four sons a large part of the manor of Livingston. After his father’s death, Walter conveyed his estate in the part of the manor so devised, to his brother Henry. This part having been divided into four great lots, numbered one to four inclusive, by a deed of partition between Robert, John and Henry, dated October 4th, 1792, Robert took title to No. 2, John to No. ,4, and Henry to Nos. 1 and 3. The Aneram furnace was in lot No. 3. Walter also conveyed his one-eighth of the ore bed to Henry, by deed of October 6th, 1792. General Henry, upon the organization of the corporation in 17S4, was appointed its agent, and so continued until his death in [692]*6921823. Each proprietor was in the habit of receiving whatever ore he desired for his own purposes, of which an account was kept by an officer called “clerk of the hill;” and ore was sold to non-proprietors. Annually, or oftener, the accounts were adjusted and settled, and the amount due to each proprietor, by way of dividend or net profits, was paid. It is apparent, from the treasurer’s accounts, which are preserved to the year 1802, that, up to that time, General Henry received the dividend or profits upon four-eighths of the ore bed business; and it is not doubted that he paid one-eighth to Robert Cambridge, or to his children. The book containing the treasurer's accounts from 1802 to 1835, has been lost, but memo-randa of dividends, and drafts of accounts, for parts of eleven years, between 1820 and 1835, have been preserved. It does not appear when this payment of four-eighths to General Henry ceased, or when the payment of one-eighth directly to Robert’s children commenced; but, in the years 1820 and 1821, General Henry received three-eighths, and thereafter the payments to him and to his devisee, and -to his devisee’s devisee, seem to have been, uniformly, the last named fractional part, while Robert’s representatives took directly one-eighth. General Henry died in 1823, unmarried, and, by his last will, devised in fee to his nephew, Henry Livingston, afterwards called Henry of Cla-verack, son of John Livingston, “all my right, interest and estate of and in the ore bed and its appurtenances, situated in the town of Salisbury,” and also devised to him one undivided half of great lot No. 3. John Livingston had died in October, 1822, aged 74, and, by his will, it appears that his son’s inheritance of a share in his bachelor uncle’s estate was not unexpected. John’s will recites, that, “Whereas, my brother Henry Livingston has frequently and solemnly engaged that he will, by his last will and testament, or otherwise, give and devise to my said son Henry, his heirs and assigns, the one equal moiety of all that portion of the Manor of Livingston, * * * known and' distinguished by the name of great lot No. 3, now,” &c. General Henry and John lived within five miles of each other, and were reputed to be on very intimate terms. John’s residuary devisee was his son Herman, who was thirty years old when his father died. Henry of Claverack was immediately appointed agent of the corporation, in place of his deceased uncle, and so continued until his death in the year 1828. He devised to his son Henry, (called “Dock,”) the Ancram property, and all his right in the ore bed. The widow of Henry of Claverack claimed her dower in his estate, and, upon her petition, the court of probate for the district of Sharon set out to her a life estate in one undivided third part of three undivided eighth parts of the ore bed. Henry Livingston, (called “Dock,”) and his wife conveyed, in 1S43, to his brother Herman Livingston, and to his brothers-in-law, Alonzo Bogardus and James S. Talbot, the Ancram property, and his right and title in the ore bed. On March 5th, 1844, these three grantees, by a deed reciting, that, whereas, “General Henry Livingston, of the town of * * * was owner of three equal undivided eighth parts of the Salisbury ore bed, situate m the state of Connecticut,” and by his will devised the same to Henry Livingston, of Claverack, who, by his will, devised the same to his son Henry, who, with his wife, had, on July 8th, 1843, by deed, conveyed all their right, title and interest of, in, or to the same Salisbury ore bed to them, the said Herman Livingston, Alonzo Bogardus and James S. Talbot, by whidh deed they became seized in fee, as tenants in common, of %ths of the ore bed, and were desirous of severing their joint interest in the ore bed, released and conveyed to each other an undivided eighth thereof. These three-eighths, subsequently, and prior to 1847, were conveyed as follows: %th by Herman to Timothy Chittenden; %th to Maria S. Bogardus; and %th to Orsamus Bushnell, trustee for Catherine L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 F. Cas. 691, 16 Blatchf. 549, 1879 U.S. App. LEXIS 1639, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/livingston-v-proprietors-of-ore-bed-circtdct-1879.