Magma Extension Mining Co. v. Kinard

106 F. Supp. 362, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3717
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Georgia
DecidedJune 27, 1951
DocketCiv. A. 3807
StatusPublished

This text of 106 F. Supp. 362 (Magma Extension Mining Co. v. Kinard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magma Extension Mining Co. v. Kinard, 106 F. Supp. 362, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3717 (N.D. Ga. 1951).

Opinion

HOOPER, Chief Justice.

This action was brought by Magma Extension Mining Company to enforce the payment of twelve checks, each in the amount of $500, drawn by L. H. Kinard, the defendant, on the Citizens and Southern National Bank, Atlanta, Georgia. The pleadings, stipulations of the parties and other portions of the record disclose the following facts:

On August 22, 1946 Magma Extension Mining Company, plaintiff in this action, entered into a contract under which it leased one hundred twenty (120) mining claims located in Arizona to P. M. Barton. The contract (sometimes referred to below as the “Barton contract”) provided for the payment by lessee of royalties on all ore mined on the leased property and, beginning on July 1, 1947, lessee was required to pay a minimum royalty of $500 per month for the property. All royalties were to be paid into an account, designated the Magma Extension Trust account, in the Valley National Bank, Phoenix, Arizona. It was further agreed that Magma Extension Mining Company would sell and convey such mining property to Barton for $350,000, $10,000 of which was paid in cash at the time the contract was executed, and the remainder was to be paid by the royalties provided in the contract to be paid into the Magma Extension Trust account for the benefit of Magma Extension Mining Company. The contract contained, among others, the following paragraph:

“Party of the first part (Magma Extension Mining Company), upon payment of the above mentioned purchase price in full, agrees to and will convey said property to the party of the second part (Barton) by a good and sufficient mining deed, said deed to be forthwith placed in escrow in the Valley National Bank at Phoenix, Arizona, to be delivered to the party of the second part upon the payment of said remainder of said purchase price in full into said Magma Extension Trust Account; and the party of the first part will forthwith, furnish and deliver to party of the second part, or his order, such abstract or abstracts of title, or title reports as to said premises as will show good and valid mining title to said premises in party of the first part free and clear of all incumbrances and subject only to the paramount title of the United States of America, under the mining location laws of the said United States of America, and the State of Arizona; provided specially, however, that in the event that party of the first part shall be unable to furnish and deliver merchantable title to any of said mining claims, the total purchase price provided herein shall be reduced in the proportion that the number of claim or claims with defective title bears to the whole number of claims covered by this agreement.”

Time was made of the essence of the contract. Subsequently, in March 1948, that contract was assigned to George Lee and by him on May 18, 1948 to New Magma Mines, Inc., an Arizona corporation organized by Kinard, the defendant, George Lee and others for the purpose of taking the assignment of the contract. Kinard raised, through his own contributions and from others, about $70,000 that was used for pre-incorporation and other expenses involved in the organization of that corporation.

Sometime after the assignment of the contract to New Magma Mines, Inc. Kinard, [364]*364president and owner of at least one share of the capital stock of New Magma Mines, Inc., as a result of a telephone conversation between him and George Lee, started in June 1948 mailing his personal checks for $500 at approximately monthly intervals to Magma Extension Mining Company, in care of Ralph J. Pomeroy, an officer of plaintiff corporation, to satisfy the minimum monthly rental and royalty payment required by the Barton contract. The checks were held by plaintiff until June 27, 1949 when eleven of them were presented for payment. The twelfth check in question, dated July 1, 1949, was presented for payment on July 13, 1949. All of the checks were dishonored.

In his pleadings and in other parts of the record defendant set up the following defenses :

(1) That the checks were issued after an oral agreement had been made between George Lee, on behalf of defendant, and Ralph J. Pomeroy, an officer of plaintiff corporation, that plaintiff would hold them and not present them for payment until plaintiff had obtained good title to all the mining claims described in the Barton contract and had placed a deed thereto in escrow. Thereafter, according to the defendant’s allegations, the checks “would not operate as an obligation of (Kinard) and would not be presented for payment until such a time as (defendant) and other stockholders of New Magma Mines, * * * could make payment in the same amount as said checks * * * and have said checks returned to (defendant).”

(2) That plaintiff did not at the time the Barton contract was executed or at any time thereafter have good title to the mining claims in question.

(3) That, no deed to the mining property was ever placed in escrow by the plaintiff as required by the contract.

(4) That no account, designated as tue Magma Extension Trust account, was ever created as required by the contract and that, instead, checks were mailed directly to an .officer of the plaintiff corporation.

(5) That the transaction did not give rise to any consideration to support the checks.

(6) That the checks were executed as a promise to pay a debt of New Magma Mines, Inc., which was in default at the time they were executed and delivered.

(7) That the checks did not meet the requirments of the Statute of Frauds.

The plaintiff, alleging that there is no dispute as to any fact material to the disposition of this action, made a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56, F.R.C.P., 28 U.S.C.A.

1. The plaintiff denies the existence'of the oral agreement set up by the defendant in the first of his defenses listed above and contends, moreover, that defendant cannot vary or contradict the plain, unambiguous terms of the written instrument (checks) by parol evidence of any such agreement. Defendant seeks to prove that under the alleged oral agreement he was not obligated to pay the checks under any condition, that the amounts represented by such checks were to be paid by New Magma Mines, Inc. after it had obtained the money with which to do so and after the plaintiff had obtained good title to all of the mining claims and deposited a deed thereto in escrow. It is clearly implied that if, for any reason, New Magma Mines, Inc. never obtained enough money to pay the checks, there would he no obligation on anyone to pay such amounts.

2. ' The second of defendant’s contentions set out above, that there was an absence or failure of consideration to support the checks for the reason that plaintiff did not at any time have good title to all of the mining claims (except to the extent this defense overlaps a part of the defense discussed in 1, above), is overcome by the express terms of the Barton contract and the stipulations of fact made by the parties at the pre-trial hearing. The contract provides in part that if Magma Extension Mining Company “shall be unable to furnish and deliver merchantable title to any of said mining claims, the total purchase price provided herein shall be reduced in the [365]

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106 F. Supp. 362, 1951 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3717, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magma-extension-mining-co-v-kinard-gand-1951.