Michell v. San Juan Mining Co.

83 P.2d 149, 103 Colo. 16, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 164
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 20, 1938
DocketNo. 14,263.
StatusPublished

This text of 83 P.2d 149 (Michell v. San Juan Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Michell v. San Juan Mining Co., 83 P.2d 149, 103 Colo. 16, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 164 (Colo. 1938).

Opinion

Me. Justice Bouck

delivered the opinion of the court.

The district court judgment now under review is one *17 of dismissal entered when the plaintiff Michell elected to stand on his amended complaint after the latter had been assailed by a motion which was, by agreement of court and counsel, treated as a general demurrer and was sustained.

In somewhat abbreviated form the allegations in the amended complaint are as follows:

First Cause of Action:

The defendant San Juan Mining Company is a Colorado corporation;

The United Operating Trust, Inc. (hereafter referred to as the Trust) is also a Colorado corporation, incorporated February 1, 1927; thereafter, during 1927, certain real property in San Juan county, Colorado—consisting of six patented lode mining claims, seven unpatented lode mining claims, two mill sites, one tunnel site, two water rights, and six lots in the town of Silverton— Avas conveyed, together with all buildings and improvements, to the Trust, and the Trust thus became and remained the owner of said real property and of certain ore, mining machinery, tools and equipment used in connection therewith, in fee simple absolute, free and clear of all liens and encumbrances, except as hereafter set forth;

Between January 12,1932, and January 25,1932, inclusive, four men named Saletto, Curtis, Berkey and Richards commenced separate actions in the county court of San Juan county against the Trust, to recover various sums of money aggregating1 nearly $4,500; attachment Avrits were duly issued in each case and levied upon all the above described property except the six Silverton town lots, the tAvo mill sites, and the tunnel site;

The actions were consolidated, and on March 8, 1932, a consolidated judgment was entered in the aggregate sum of $4,475.48 and costs, awarding a final judgment to each plaintiff for the sum he respectively demanded, and sustaining the attachments and ordering issuance of the usual special execution; on June 2, 1932, writs of special execution Avere accordingly issued, the property thereto- *18 lore levied upon was on June 28 offered for sale by the .‘sheriff thereunder, and sold; the personal property was ¡sold to one May for $800, and the real property to Curtis, one of the attaching plaintiffs, as trustee representing all these plaintiffs, for $4,018.36, and a certificate of purchase was issued to him on said date, no money consideration being paid for any part of the property but the amounts so bid being paid by satisfying the consolidated judgment in full;

Oil November 1, 1932, said Curtis assigned the certificate to one Davis;

The defendant San Juan Mining Company was incorporated February 23, 1933, and five days later said Davis assigned the certificate to this company, pursuant to a written contract, hereafter quoted, a copy being attached to the amended complaint;

The assignments were not recorded and the plaintiff Michell had no knowledge or notice thereof until April 10, 1933, prior to the recording of the sheriff’s certificate of purchase;

On March 7, 1933, the plaintiff commenced in the San Juan county district court an action against the Trust, to recover a money judgment for $13,044.25, interest and costs, and on April 10, 1933, obtained judgment for $14,-769.43 and costs;

On said April 10, 1933, the sheriff executed and delivered to the defendant San Juan Mining Company a sheriff’s deed, conveying to it all the property levied upon under the aforesaid writs of attachment;

On April 17,1933, a writ of execution was issued on the plaintiff Michell’s judgment and was levied on the six town lots, the two mill sites, and the tunnel site, that is, on all the property of the Trust not levied upon under the aforesaid attachments and worth not to exceed $100; the execution was returned wholly unsatisfied and thereunder the plaintiff recovered nothing;

A transcript of the plaintiff’s judgment was filed for record on April 20, 1933 ;

*19 The Trust is and ever since April 10, 1933, has been defunct, inoperative and insolvent, and the owner of no property whatever;

The plaintiff is a stockholder and director of the Trust, and a judgment creditor as aforesaid, and the Trust has failed and refused to set aside the aforesaid conveyance, as demanded by plaintiff;

The sheriff’s deed to the defendant San Juan Mining Company was invalid for certain specified statutory and constitutional reasons [which, however, are “not involved in this appeal,” as the plaintiff in error’s abstract of the record expressly admits] .

Second Cause of Action:

All the foregoing allegations are incorporated by reference ;

The attachment sale and resultant sheriff’s deed sold and conveyed all the property of the Trust, real and personal;

By a sworn statement of the Trust on February 26, 1932, its personal property was valued at $6,355.59 and its real property at $724,844.73;

By a sworn statement of the defendant San Juan Mining Company as of December 31, 1934, said personal property was valued at $6,000 and the mining claims at $300,000;

The real and personal property was at the time of the sheriff’s sale and at all times since and now is worth many times the amount bid therefor at said sale;

May, the purchaser at said sheriff’s sale of the personal property of the Trust, was then and had long been a stockholder and director of the Trust, and an active and interested party in the management of its affairs, and he then stood in a position of trust and confidence with relation to the Trust, and purchased the property for the use and benefit of the Trust, and set it over, transferred and assigned it to the defendant San Juan Mining Company pursuant to the plan and agreements hereafter set forth;

*20 Davis, the aforesaid assignee of the certificate of purchase was, from January 1, 1932, to April 10, 1933, inclusive, a stockholder and officer of and financially interested in the Trust, and during said period actively engaged in mining and operating the properties of the Trust at Silverton, and occupied a position of trust and confidence in the Trust, and was under the duty to preserve and protect its properties and interests for the Trust’s stockholders, and upon incorporation of the defendant San Juan Mining Company said Davis became the manager and director thereof and remained such during its first year;

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Bluebook (online)
83 P.2d 149, 103 Colo. 16, 1938 Colo. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michell-v-san-juan-mining-co-colo-1938.