Nemec v. United States Dawson v. United States

178 F.2d 656
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 16, 1950
Docket11975, 12012
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 178 F.2d 656 (Nemec v. United States Dawson v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nemec v. United States Dawson v. United States, 178 F.2d 656 (9th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

POPE, Circuit Judge.

By an indictment found against them, Nemec and Dawson were charged with devising a scheme to defraud investors in contracts and profit sharing agreements relating to the location and operation of mining claims. The indictment listed 19 sepa- . rate alleged false and fraudulent pretenses, representations and promises. Fifteen overt acts were alleged to have been committed in carrying out the scheme.

Count 1 charged that the defendants conspired to violate the Act relating to the use of the mails to defraud, 1 and the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. 2 Count 2 charged Nemec and Dawson with violation of the Mail Fraud Act through the same scheme to defraud, and charged that for the purpose of executing the scheme they mailed a certain letter, etc. Counts 4 and 5 charged Nemec and Dawson with employing the same scheme to defraud investors, and that they, for the purpose of executing the scheme, caused certain matters to be mailed to persons named in the indictment.

Count 3 was dismissed, but Nemec and Dawson were convicted on the other four counts mentioned. Each of the appellants asserts that the evidence is insufficient to support the verdict, and they assign error in the admission and rejection of evidence, in certain instructions to the jury, and in other rulings mentioned hereafter.

The evidence, viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, disclosed that Nemec and Dawson were associated in an alleged mining enterprise which had sev *658 eral phases and proceeded under a number of different names. Nemec handled the sales end of the enterprise, arranged for the employment of salesmen and the solicitation of investors, furnishing salesmen with brochures containing literature and exhibits to be displayed to the prospective investors, while Dawson acted as a mining scout, looking for mining property to be used in the enterprise, located claims, undertook to acquire certain mining property for the enterprise, employed men to operate the properties, and assisted in arranging for some of the newspaper publicity which was procured. Some $180,000 was collected from investors as a result of the operations of the enterprise.

The plan in its initial phase involved the sale, for the sum of $280 each, of interests in a contract with the Northwest Mining and Engineering Company, a Washington partnership composed of Nemec and his wife, whereby the company was employed to locate 20-acre placer mining claims near Sierra City, California, such claims to be grouped together into 160 acre “association” placer claims. The employment contract provided, and the investors were assured, that when a large area of such claims had been blocked up, the claims would be leased by the company which would then work them in a large scale hydraulic mining operation, claim holders to be paid on a pro-rata basis from the profits derived from the operation. It was represented to the investors that the company had obtained control of valuable placer property at Sierra City and had discovered that large areas of public land in the vicinity of this property were open for location of placer claims. To explain the reason why the promoters were adopting their system of procuring numerous individual locators and soliciting them largely in the State of Washington, the investors were told that under the law one person could locate but one 20 acre claim and therefore numerous locators must be procured in order to acquire an extensive area for large scale operations. It was explained that investors were sought in the State of Washington as it was feared that if persons in California near Sierra City were to learn of the plan, they would start a gold rush to the area and locate the ground before the Northwest Mining and Engineering Company and its associates could acquire the area under the proposed plan.

While the sale of placer claim contracts was under way, the second phase of the scheme was developed. It was claimed that valuable lode veins had been discovered in the same area and some of the old investors, as well as some additional ones, were sold contracts whereby they were to become holders of lode claims to be located by the company, for a fee of $480 per claim.

The next phase of the enterprise involved the organization of the Sierra City Mining Company, a limited partnership. It was to be the operating company at Sierra City to work the' proposed lode and placer claims. Interests' in the limited partnership were offered for sale to investors at the rate of $1200 for a one percent interest in the earnings.

Meanwhile Dawson called Nemec’s attention to some additional ground in Butte County, California, commonly known as the Mammoth Channel. This was an ancient river bed which through geological upheavals had been covered by a very deep lava overcapping. It was not susceptible to placer mining by any of the ordinary methods. This property was listed in the advertising and brochures furnished by the associates as a place where additional placer mining claims might be located pursuant to contracts similar- to those being sold, all fo the end that after the channel had been blanketed by some 40 different association placer claims it could be operated as a single unit by using a plan of underground sluicing through a tunnel along the ancient river channel commencing at a place where Big Butte Creek had cut through the lavá overcapping to expose the channel.

Contracts for the making of locations on the Mammoth Channel were'sold at a fee of $385 per 20 acre claim. It was represented that the company had acquired the ground and locations necessary for tunnei sites and for obtaining access to the ■ old stream bed. It was of the essence of the enterprise that the claims were to be located in a continuous body along the course *659 of the channel so that the gold-bearing gravel could be removed without trespass upon any other ground.

All of these sales campaigns extended over a period of months during which those who had invested their money were continually being assured that the various enterprises were to begin to pay returns on the investment. The government’s evidence tended to show that about the time when the investors were likely to become impatient with continued delays, Nemec and Dawson would turn up with some new or additional mining enterprise in which the investors were to be allowed to share and which would be calculated to appeal to their cupidity.

The final development of a phase of the enterprise of that character had to do with the formation of a new partnership known as the Crescent City Mining Company with operating headquarters at Crescent City, California. Investors and prospective investors were advised that an eminent atomic scientist from the Hanford Atomic Energy Plant, a Dr. Rector, had become associated with the original Northwest Mining and Engineering Company and that he, by application of some of the revolutionary new theories of nuclear science, had developed means of recovering gold from black sand which was present in large quantities in the Crescent City area. Rector was a doctor but he was only a chiropractic doctor and the only connection he had with the Hanford enterprise had been as a water tester.

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178 F.2d 656, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nemec-v-united-states-dawson-v-united-states-ca9-1950.