Morgan v. . Skiddy

62 N.Y. 319, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 509
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 22, 1875
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 62 N.Y. 319 (Morgan v. . Skiddy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. . Skiddy, 62 N.Y. 319, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 509 (N.Y. 1875).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

In determining whether the trial court correctly granted a nonsuit, the plaintiff is entitled to the benefit of every inference from the evidence in support of his case, which the jury, if the case had been submitted to them, would have been entitled to draw.

The general facts are, that a corporation called “ The Central Mining Company of Colorado ” was formed on the 21st day of December, 1863, by the filing of a certificate under the general law of this State authorizing the formation of corporations for mining and other purposes. It stated that the capital stock should be $1,000,000, divided into 50,000 shares of twenty dollars each, but that it was not to consist of money, “ but is to be represented by the minéS and other property necessary for the business of the company, to be purchased by the trustees thereof, and to be paid for by the issue of stock of the company.” The objects of the company were declared to be “ the mining and separating of gold and other ores;” and the defendants, except Ashmore, were named as trustees for the first year. On the 20th day of January, 1864, a meeting of the board *322 of trustees was held in the city of New York; and, after it was organized by the appointment of a chairman and secretary, the defendant Gaylord, as the minutes state, “ offered to the company a property in Colorado, of which a particular description was presented, to be paid for by the issue of 50,000 shares of the company’s stock; ” and, after an examination of the papers, a motion was carried to purchase the property upon the terms proposed by Hr. Gaylord. The defendant McYickar was elected pi'esident of the company. A code of by-laws was adopted, and the meeting adjourned ; and this, so far as the case shows, was the only meeting of the board of trustees which was ever held. On the twenty-second of January, the defendant Gaylord, by deed, reciting a money consideration of ten dollars, and the receipt of 50,000 shares of the stock of the company, conveyed to the company two pieces of land in Gilpin county, Colorado, one of which is described as follows : “ Fourteen hundred feet on the Bates extension quartz lode, being and including claims numbei’S nine, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen, seventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, twenty-one and twenty-two, north-east from the discovery of said Bates extension.”

Gaylord derived title to the property conveyed to the company by two deeds, one from Theodoi’e H. Beckei’, eznbraeing the property above described, dated May 5, 1860 (but in fact executed in 1863), in which the consideration was stated to be $30,000; and one from Harvey L. Graham, embracing the other property conveyed to the company, dated January 12, 1864, reciting a consideration of $5,000. The actual consideration paid by Gaylord for both pieces of pz-opez-ty did not exceed $10,000. The whole stock of the company :(50,000 shaz-es), was issued to Gaylord January 21, 1864. On the same day, he transferred to the company 2,500 shares of the stock, and to H. S. Feaiing, one of the firm of Dalton & Fearing, stock brokers, 10,000 shares m trust, but the persons beneficially interested in the trust are not named in the transfer.

The next step was the preparation of a prospectus by the *323 defendant Ashmore, upon the suggestion of the defendants McVickar and Gaylord. It was promptly prepared, and was printed on or before the 23d day of January, 1864. The name of the company and of the trustees appeared upon the title page; and it commenced by stating the fact of the organization of the company with 50,000 shares of stock, “ and with a working capital of $50,000, viz., $25,000 in cash and $25,000 in stock.” The prospectus then sets forth as follows: The objects of the company are to purchase and work two properties in Colorado Territory, hereinafter described, viz.: One property on Worth Clear creek, as shown by the accompanying maps, at or near Black Hawk Point in Gregory Region, Gilpin county, Colorado, embracing 1,400 feet on the celebrated Bates lode; at this point the vein has already been explored by seven shafts, sunk at intervals of about fifty feet, and varying in depth from twenty to forty feet, exposing a vein varying from one and a half to four feet in width. Considerable quantities of ore have been taken from these openings, yielding gold equal in quantity to any yet mined from this old and well i&nown lode; ” and again: “ The Bates lode is one of the oldest discoveries in Colorado, and has been profitably worked by many shafts, in some instances 300 feet in depth.” The prospectus contains letters from various individuals giving most encouraging accounts of the Bates lode. One of them, purporting to be written to Gaylord by one B. F. Dalton, states that the writer has been in the mining region of Colorado ever since the discovery of gold in that Territory, and that the Bates lode “has proved very rich, more so than any other lode in the mountain,” Another writes, that from the working of the claims by a Mr. Baxter on this lode with a small force, his “net profit is $100 a day,” and that “ his property on this lode which two months since was only valued at $40,000, lie now holds three-fourths of it at $100,000.” The result of an assay of ore taken from this lode is given, showing it to be very rich in gold; and the prospectus, after describing the other property of the company, concludes: “ From *324 the foregoing statements, and from the developements on our 1,400 feet .on the Bates lode, we are justified in saying our supply of ore will be inexhaustible, it having been proved, by the experience of other companies, that the deeper the workings, the richer and more productive the veins become.”

The plaintiff was the first purchaser of the stock of the company. He received a letter from Mr. Dalton, of the firm of Dalton & Fearing, a trustee of the company, calling his attention to the stock, and recommending it; ” and thereupon, on the twenty-third of January, two days after the organization of the board of trustees, he went to the office of Dalton & Fearing and was shown the prospectus and map. The plaintiff, in his testimony, says: “ One of the prospectuses was handed to me; I looked at it; I told Mr. Dalton 1 knew nothing at all about it. He says, ‘It is all right,’ and upon that I gave him my check for $5,000, in payment for 500 shares at ten dollars a share.” Again he says, on cross-examination: “ Mr. Dalton said to me It is all right,’ and I gave him my check. I was handed that prospectus to read, and my attention was called to the map that hung on the wall; I read the prospectus, I ran my eye over it, and afterwards took it home with me, and read it over afterwards; I looked through it casually before I paid; I cannot tell whether I looked at the map before I completed the purchase of the stock, it was so long ago; I read the prospectus before I bought the stock; I did not read every word, though I looked more particularly to the property and the names that were in the company. I thought that was a sufficient guarantee of its being worth something. I did not think the men whose names I saw would be connected with a fraud.”

The sale to the plaintiff was followed by sales through Dalton &

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Bluebook (online)
62 N.Y. 319, 1875 N.Y. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-skiddy-ny-1875.