Neet v. Holmes

154 P.2d 854, 25 Cal. 2d 447, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 329
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1944
DocketL. A. 18495
StatusPublished
Cited by82 cases

This text of 154 P.2d 854 (Neet v. Holmes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neet v. Holmes, 154 P.2d 854, 25 Cal. 2d 447, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 329 (Cal. 1944).

Opinions

SHENK, J.

The plaintiffs have appealed from a judgment of dismissal following an order- sustaining demurrers to the second amended complaint without leave to amend. The action is to rescind a mining lease and to establish a constructive trust of mining claims on the ground of the alleged fraud of certain of the defendants.

The briginal complaint was filed August 28, 1940. The final amended complaint contained four causes.of action, .The following appears from the allegations thereof:

In 1896 Mary E. Greathouse was the' owner.of the 55/100ths interest in three patented mining claims, known as the Padre, [452]*452Madre and Cargo Muchacho, located in what was then a part of San Diego County but later became Imperial County. She died in the State of Kentucky in 1906. The plaintiffs are her successors and the present owners of said 55/100ths interest.

Kate S. Wright was the owner of the remaining 45/100ths interest* in those patented mines, and later this interest was held by her jointly with her husband, the defendant Sumner B. Wright. On her death in 1938 her husband and his assigns succeeded to her interest. The latter were made defendants in the action because they declined to join in the complaint.

Early in 1935 the defendants Kenneth A. Holmes and Edmund A. Nicholson examined the mining property and the tailings thereon. They communicated with the defendant Ray H. Fitzgerrell, an attorney whose wife is a niece of the Wrights. They advised him of their examination and of their opinion that the mines were valuable, that large sums of money could be made from their operation if possession and permission to work them could be obtained. Fitzgerrell, with the assistance of Sumner B. Wright, inspected the Imperial County records and learned that Mary E. Greathouse was the record owner of the 55/100ths interest in the mines. The expense of the inspection trip to Imperial County was borne by the defendants Holmes and Nicholson. Thereupon the Wrights conveyed their interest to Fitzgerrell without consideration. Fitzgerrell and Nicholson conducted an investigation financed by Holmes and Nicholson to ascertain the whereabouts of Mary E. Greathouse. They learned that she had died in Versailles, Kentucky. At the expense of Holmes and Nicholson, Fitzgerrell journeyed to Kentucky for the purpose of locating the Greathouse heirs and obtaining control of their interest in the mines. On March 1,1935, Fitzgerrell met the plaintiff Thomas Porter Neet, at Versailles, Kentucky. He represented to Neet that the properties in Imperial County, California, were old worked-out mines, of little or problematical value, a mere gamble and of no real or substantial merit; that he did not know of any one interested in the mines, did not have in mind any prospective operators, and that he was making the trip at his own expense on behalf of his relatives, the Wrights, to investigate the possibility for future action; that if a way could be found to consolidate all the interests in the claims he would devote his time to the matter in order to be helpful to [453]*453the Wrights. He suggested that the interests of the various owners be transferred to a corporation to be formed; that Thomas Porter Neet should be one of the directors but that he could sign necessary consents in blank without the necessity of taking active part in the management in California; and that the management could safely be entrusted to him, Fitzgerrell. Fitzgerrell also represented to Neet that he would locate or cause to be located, for the benefit of the owners and the advantageous operation of the mines, certain claims on the contiguous public domain. After the interview with Neet, Fitzgerrell entered into correspondence with the other plaintiffs, Robert Clarence Sehenck and Mary Greathouse Hickman Glenn, who also resided outside the State of California, and made to each of them substantially the same representations.

About March 12, 1935, a corporation known as Rayfitz Company was organized. Costs of incorporations were paid by Holmes and Nicholson. Five directors were elected, consisting of Ray H. Fitzgerrell, his daughter Peggy Fitzgerrell, C. Fuller Peters, Paul R. Peters, and the plaintiff Thomas Porter Neet. Ray H. Fitzgerrell was elected president; C. Fuller Peters, vice-president; Peggy Fitzgerrell, secretary and treasurer; and Jessie B. Fitzgerrell, wife of Fitzgerrell, assistant secretary. Thomas Porter Neet took no active part in the management of the affairs of the company in California.

About May 17, 1935, the plaintiffs conveyed their 55/100ths interest in the patented mines to the Rayfitz Company in return for fifty-five shares of the capital stock, and Fitzgerrell transferred to the company the remaining 45/100ths interest conveyed to him by the Wrights and received forty-five shares of stock. Those one hundred shares were the only shares issued by the company.

On August 7, 1935, the Rayfitz Company leased the patented mines to the defendants Holmes and Nicholson, for a term of five years. The consideration was $700 in cash and royalties of from 10 to 20 per cent of the returns based on the amount of recovery per ton. The plaintiffs were not then advised of the terms of the lease, but were informed by Fitzgerrell that the lease was fair to the company and the stockholders. On those representations the plaintiffs gave their written consent to the transaction.

During the course of examining and operating the mines [454]*454the defendants considered that it would be good mining practice, as well as profitable and advantageous, to mine the surrounding territory in conjunction with the patented claims. They discovered that the veins located on the patented mines extended into the surrounding territory and that the owners of the mines possessed the apex rights with respect thereto. Between April 17,1935, and April 15, 1939, they located nineteen claims in adjoining territory, all of which were taken in the names of Holmes and Nicholson or their agents.

Letters from the plaintiffs to Fitzgerrell remained unanswered and in 1938 the plaintiffs started an investigation. At the February, 1938, meeting of the stockholders they elected new directors and officers and took over the control of the company’s affairs. The investigation terminated in October, 1938, and disclosed to the plaintiffs the following facts: 1. That Fitzgerrell had received funds from Holmes and Nicholson to finance the inspections and trips east. 2. That Fitzgerrell was receiving a salary of $200 a month from the corporation for his services. 3. That operations under the lease were extensive. 4. That outlying property including a mill and millsite had been acquired with corporate funds. 5. That numerous claims had been located in the contiguous outlying territory for the personal benefit of Holmes' and Nicholson. In November, 1938, the Rayfitz Company and the plaintiffs gave notice of rescission of the lease and demanded surrender of the premises and an accounting. In June, 1939, the plaintiffs gave notice to the Rayfitz Company rescinding the conveyances of their 55/100ths interest in the patented mines, and the owners of the remaining 45/100ths interest gave a similar notice. Pursuant to those notices reconveyances of the interests were executed by the Rayfitz Company and delivered to the former owners or their assigns.

The defendants did not comply with the notice of rescission of the lease or the demand for surrender of the premises.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
154 P.2d 854, 25 Cal. 2d 447, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neet-v-holmes-cal-1944.