Mantle v. Jack Waite Mining Co.

135 P. 854, 24 Idaho 613, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 187
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 135 P. 854 (Mantle v. Jack Waite Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mantle v. Jack Waite Mining Co., 135 P. 854, 24 Idaho 613, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 187 (Idaho 1913).

Opinions

STEWART, J.

This action was commenced on December 6, 1911, in the district court of Shoshone county by the respondent, Lee Mantle, against the appellant, Jack Waite Mining Company, Limited, to restrain and enjoin the appellant company from selling 75,750 shares of stock of- the respondent for the amount of an assessment of two cents per share, levied October 14, 1911, and made payable November 18, 1911, and providing for the sale of delinquent stock on the 7th of December, 1911, to pay delinquent assessments.

Issues were formed and trial was had and on April 3, 1913, judgment was entered for plaintiff setting aside the sale of said stock and declaring the sale null and void, and decreeing a certain so-called promoters’ contract to be a valid and binding agreement upon the defendant corporation.

The facts as found by the trial court are as follows: Prior to November 1, 1909, Lee Mantle, of Butte, Montana, was the owner of the Bullion, the Croesus, seven-eighths of the Mantlé Fraction and thirteen forty-eighths of the Lucky Boy mining claim, known as the Jack Y7aite property, in Shoshone county. On November 1, 1909, Mantle entered into a lease and agreement giving to Patrick Burke an option to purchase for the sum of $187,000, which said sum was [617]*617to be paid by said second party in the amounts and upon the dates following: On or before November 1, 1909, $11,500; on or before January 21, 1910, $15,000; on or before March 21, 1910, $30,000; on or before August 21, 1910, $60,000; on or before February 21, 1911, $70,500. It was provided that the deed should be placed in escrow with the First National Bank of Butte to be delivered upon the full payment of the purchase price. The option contained a provision as to making time the essence of the agreement. This is as follows:

“Time is the essence of this agreement and any failure on the part of the said second party to do or perform any term, covenant or agreement, to be by him kept or performed under the terms of the above and foregoing lease, or any failure of the said second party to pay the said purchase price for the said mining interests hereinabove described in the lease and option hereinbefore contained within the time and in the amounts hereinabove stated, shall at once terminate said lease and said option and all the rights of said second party hereunder, it being expressly understood that the lease and option are to be taken together as parts and portions of one single contract, and that the termination of the lease, otherwise than by purchase under the option, shall terminate said option and the said first party shall no longer be bound thereby.”
“It is expressly understood and agreed that a failure on the part of the second party to make any of the payments herein provided for, in the amount and within the time hereinabove set forth, shall, in addition to terminating this lease and option, also forfeit all prior payments to the said first party; and in the event of this option being terminated through the failure of said second party to make any one of the payments herein provided for, he shall not be held liable for the payments remaining unpaid, except as herein provided. ’ ’

After the execution of this written lease and agreement, Patrick Burke, Fritz Marsehante, Robert Sheffels, Louis Adams and other persons joined together for the purpose [618]*618of promoting and organizing a corporation to acquire the mining property of Mantle, together with other interests therein, and pursuant to arrangements and agreements made between the promoters the Jack Waite Mining Company, Limited, was incorporated under the laws of the state of Idaho, with a capital stock of $1,500,000. At this time Burke represented to the promoters who joined him in the organization that the purchase price of the entire property, both the interests of Mantle and other outstanding interests, was the sum of $250,000. About the time of the promotion and organization of the company, the promoters subscribed for 1,000,000 shares of the capital stock of the corporation then being formed, and at that time the agreement between the promoters was that they would advance the sum of seven and one-half cents per share for the 1,000,000 shares, and that thereafter they would pay the difference between the seven and one-half cents per share and 25 cents per share. Or, in other words, that the promoters should pay sufficient money to equal the cost of the mining property.

Thereafter, in the month of October, 1910, the promoters, or a large number of them, reduced to writing the agreement in words and figures as follows:

“PROMOTERS’ CONTRACT.
“We, the undersigned subscribers, for seven and a half cent promotion stock in the Jack Waite Mining Company, Ltd., hereby agree that the stock issued to us shall be subject to assessment up to twenty-five cents per share prior to any assessment on any other stock issued by the aforementioned company, until we have paid a total twenty-five cents per share, when all the stock of the company will be subject to the assessment at the same time and on the same basis. We agree to accept certificates bearing this provision on them.”

This agreement was in substance, as reduced to writing, the same as the agreement made between the promoters at the time of the organization of the corporation. At the time the said agreement had been reduced to writing none of the [619]*6191,000,000 shares of the stock had been issued to the promoters of the corporation.

Subsequent to the organization of the corporation and prior to the time the property was paid for and the deed secured the corporation, acting through its board of directors, all of whom, or practically all of whom, were among the promoters, sold large amounts, approximately 400,000- shares, of the capital stock of the company, which had theretofore been placed in the treasury, at prices from 50 cents to 70 cents per share. All the stock so sold netted the company 50 cents per share. The sales were made for the greatest part by the promoters, who themselves received as a commission for the sale of the stock the difference between the 50 cents per share and the price at which the same was sold, and Burke, president of the company, Sheffels, vice-president, Marschante and Davidson, directors, and all of the other directors, received personal commissions from-the sales of said treasury stock, either in cash or stock, and that until approximately 400,000 shares of said stock was paid the company did not have title to any property whatsoever, but only an option thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 P. 854, 24 Idaho 613, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mantle-v-jack-waite-mining-co-idaho-1913.