Marlin v. Drury

228 P.2d 803, 124 Mont. 576, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 17
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1951
Docket9007
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 228 P.2d 803 (Marlin v. Drury) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marlin v. Drury, 228 P.2d 803, 124 Mont. 576, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 17 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE ADAIR:

This is an action by the plaintiff Lewis J. Marlin to recover money which he paid to the defendant R. P. Drury for an interest in a lease on certain placer mining property. The action is based solely on three alleged fraudulent representations charged to have been made in negotiating the deal.

The action was instituted November 18, 1949. The complaint charges that four months previous, to-wit, on or about July 18, 1949, the defendant Drury and one Peter M. Mosier exhibited to plaintiff certain gold nuggets and dust and fraudulently and falsely represented to plaintiff: (1) That the gold nuggets and dust so exhibited came from certain leased placer mining claims in Deer Lodge county; (2) that they were about to organize a corporation to work such placer ground, and (3) that such placer mining venture would return vast profits to plaintiff through stock dividends in the proposed or intended corporation.

The complaint further avers that, relying upon the aforesaid representations, plaintiff paid to the defendant Drury, *578 sums aggregating $1,000; that plaintiff received no consideration for the money so paid in the way of preincorporation subscription, receipt or any other evidence of payment except he has his cancelled checks showing the payments so made; that any property which defendant owns or leases for mining purposes is worthless; that defendant did not organize the corporation as he had promised; that all the alleged representations were made for the purpose of deceiving and frahdulently taking plaintiff’s money; that plaintiff demanded the return of his money and that defendant refuses to pay back any part of it.

The answer of the defendant Drury admits: That he and Mosier exhibited gold nuggets and dust to plaintiff; that plaintiff made payments to defendant aggregating $1,000; that plaintiff received no receipts for such payments other than his cancelled checks; that no corporation has been organized for the working and mining of the placer property; that plaintiff demanded the sum of $1,000 from defendant and that defendant has refused to pay same or any part thereof. The answer denies all other allegations of the complaint and, for a separate affirmative defense, alleges the defendant Drury, having acquired a lease on the placer mining property, was in need of capital to work same; that Peter M. Mosier suggested that the plaintiff Marlin might be interested in buying in on the deal; that defendant and Mosier contacted plaintiff and defendant offered plaintiff a 1% interest in the lease for $1,000; that plaintiff accepted such offer and gave defendant a check for $750; that defendant agreed to and that he did hold such check until plaintiff had an opportunity to examine such mining property; that some two or three days later plaintiff personally examined the placer property in the absence of defendant and thereafter plaintiff stated his willingness to go in on the' deal and then gave defendant a further check for $250, whereupon defendant cashed both checks; that it was agreed that thereafter the various persons contributing capital to such mining venture would get together and form a corporation, partnership or syndicate as the majority of such contributors should agree *579 upon; that no false or fraudulent representations of any kind were made to plaintiff and that he freely and voluntarily paid his money into such placer mining venture.

The plaintiff filed a reply placing in issue the new matter pleaded in the answer. Thereafter the issues were tried to a jury resulting in verdict and judgment for plaintiff from which judgment the defendant has appealed.

Defendant’s motion for nonsuit made at the close of plaintiff’s case in chief was denied as was defendant’s motion for a directed verdict made at the close of all the evidence in the case.

There is no evidence whatever to sustain the charge that defendant falsely represented that the gold nuggets and dust exhibited to plaintiff came from the aforesaid placer mining property. Both the defendant Drury and the witness Peter Mosier testified that the gold so exhibited came from such leased placer mining property and their testimony stands uncontroverted and in his brief on this appeal the plaintiff Marlin admits “that the exhibition of the nuggets was not proven fraudulent” and states that he would not argue such contention.

There is likewise no evidence to sustain the charge that the leased placer mining property is worthless and again in his brief herein the defendant admits “that it was not proven that the property was valueless” and again did he state that he would not argue such contention here. The property was leased from William R. Allen, former Lieutenant Governor of Montana who testified that the ground was valuable for placer mining operations and that while the mining operations in the summer of 1949 were most limited, he had received therefrom as his 10 % royalty under the lease the sum of $400.00.

The evidence shows: That the defendant Drury first tested the placer mining ground here involved for some 30 days with a “Long Tom” and a rocker and that by such means he had recovered considerable gold; that about July 18, 1949, and following such testing, he commenced placer mining operations on the property; that for such mining operations he purchased *580 one dragline and rented another; that he also obtained a 'washing plant to be operated in connection with the dragline; that in such placer mining he employed eight men,- — four of whom worked on the draglines and four on the washing plant; that the dragline which he purchased was found to be defective and that he experienced continual breakdowns with the machine; that it could not be made to operate properly and efficiently; that upon the seller’s refusal to make the machine work defendant declined to make further payments thereon and the seller thereupon repossessed it; that after he had acquired his lease defendant excavated about 5,000 yards of earth on the property about 50% of which was “overburden” or top soil; that because of the repeated breakdowns and the unsatisfactory eondi- . tion of the machinery defendant was able to get in but about 10 days of actual operation with the" draglines and washing plant that season, but that from such limited operations he recovered and sold about $3,800 worth of gold and that defendant’s cost of operation ran about $4,800 so that the 1949 mining operations were conducted at a loss. However, it would appear that with proper machinery, equipment and operation the property would produce substantial profit and that defendant was justified in anticipating that a profit would result to him and to the others associated with him in the venture had it not been for the repeated machinery breakdowns and the expense and delays occasioned.

The evidence shows that Peter M. Mosier was a mining engineer and a mutual friend of both the plaintiff Marlin and the defendant Drury; that Mosier had no interest in the placer mining property nor in the lease thereon; that on different occasions both prior and subsequent to World War II and for a period of about three or more years the plaintiff Marlin had worked for Mosier in a mine at Radersburg, Montana; that such mine was closed by the government and that thereafter Mosier was employed by the defendant Drury on a salary basis examining, testing and checking various mining properties in Western Montana.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P.2d 803, 124 Mont. 576, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marlin-v-drury-mont-1951.