New Blue Point Mining Co. v. Weissbein

244 P. 325, 198 Cal. 261, 45 A.L.R. 781, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 361
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1926
DocketDocket No. Sac. 3622.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 244 P. 325 (New Blue Point Mining Co. v. Weissbein) 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
New Blue Point Mining Co. v. Weissbein, 244 P. 325, 198 Cal. 261, 45 A.L.R. 781, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 361 (Cal. 1926).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

This is an appeal by The New Blue Point Mining Company, a corporation, from the judgment of the superior court of Yuba County, made and entered in two actions which were consolidated by consent and tried together in one action by the trial court. In case No. 4264 appellant appeared as plaintiff and in case No. 4486 the appellant appeared as defendant and cross-complainant.

The facts of the case succinctly stated are these: On the twenty-first day of March, 1902, the New Blue Point Mining Company, the owner in fee of certain mining properties and *264 rights in Yuba and Nevada Counties, under its corporate seal, executed a deed of trust, designating Joseph Weissbein and Jacob Weissbein as trustees, to secure the payment of an indebtedness due and owing certain creditors. The trust deed specified the uses and purposes of the trust to be (1) the sale of the mining property for a sum not less than $100,000 within a period of five years, and if said property could not be sold for that sum within the designated time, then for such sum as the holders of two-thirds of the amount of the indebtedness against said corporation might agree upon in writing; (2) to pay to one Charles Kitts, a preferred creditor, the sum of $5,130, together with interest thereon; (3) to pay the remaining ten creditors of the mining company various sums, together with interest thereon, which, with the preferred claim of Kitts, aggregated $45,000; (4) to pay the taxes and all other expenses connected with the property, and (5) to repay to the corporation any balance remaining in the hands of the trustees after the payment of all claims and expenses, and to reconvey to the corporation the mining property in the event that said claims should be satisfied by the corporation. This trust deed was signed “New Blue Point Mining Company by P. Campbell, President, Edward Fitzsimmons, Secretary; A. McShane, by his Att’y in Fact, P. Campbell; P. Campbell; Edward P. Fitzsimmons; Albert Rigby.” The seal of the corporation was affixed thereto.

There was attached to this trust deed a resolution which authorized the execution of the trust deed. It was passed at a special meeting, regularly called, of the directors and was unanimously passed by the directors present, P. Campbell, Edward Fitzsimmons and Albert Rigby.

A ratification of stockholders was attached to the resolution, which ratification was signed by P. Campbell; A. McShane by his attorney in fact, P. Campbell; Edward Fitzsimmons and Albert Rigby. A. McShane was the holder of 99,988 shares of stock and P. Campbell, Edward Fitzsimmons and Albert Rigby were each holders of five shares. The acknowledgment of the ratification was taken before Charles Kitts, who, it will be remembered, was" by the terms of the trust deed a preferred creditor.

*265 Attached to the resolution also were releases of the creditors named in the trust deed of their claims in exchange for the security of the trust deed.

On the same day a deed of grant, bargain, and sale was made and executed to Joseph and Jacob Weissbein, conveying to them all of the real and personal property of the corporation, together with the right to receive the rents, issues, and profits thereof. This deed contained the express provisions that the grantees should hold said property in trust for the uses and purposes specified in said trust deed of even date, which was specially referred to and made a part thereof. This grant deed was recorded in both Nevada and Yuba Counties.

No sale of the property was made within the five years specified in said trust deed. In November, 1909, the Tarr Mining Company, which had entered into possession of the property under an option of purchase for $225,000, paid to the trustees on the purchase price $6,187.50. This amount was distributed by the trustees pro rata among the creditors; $18,000 was also advanced by the Tarr Mining Company to finance litigation which had arisen over the title to the water rights belonging to the property. And in 1911 $6,500 more was paid by the Tarr Mining Company to the trustees, which sum was distributed among the creditors. Prior to the last-named payment an agreement was entered into on the thirty-first day of October, 1911, between the trustees, as parties of the first part, New Blue Point Mining Company, as party of the second part, and the Tarr Mining Company, as party of the third part, wherein it was agreed that the Tarr Mining Company should pay the $6,500 immediately and an extension of time for future payments should be made. This agreement also recited the purpose for which the $18,000 had been advanced by the Tarr Mining Company, the fact that the trust deed had been duly made and executed to the trustees and that the New Blue Point Mining Company was indebted on that date to the creditors named in the trust deed in the sum of $60,458.75. This agreement was signed by the trustees, by the New Blue Point Mining Company per Edward Fitzsimmons, secretary, with the seal of the corporation attached, and the Tarr Mining Company, by its president and secre *266 tory, and also by the creditors named in said trust deed or by their successors in interest.

The option to purchase was abandoned by the Tarr Mining Company. Thereafter the property remained idle for several years.

In February, 1917, an agreement was entered into between the trustees and Sidney B. Wood for the purchase of the property by Wood for the sum of $75,000. - Under this agreement Wood was to go into possession and operate the mine and make payments upon the purchase price at certain specified dates. Subsequent to this agreement the time of the first payment was extended in consideration of the payment by Wood of back taxes on the property amounting to approximately $1,300. Wood operated under his bond for a period of about two years. Receipts from the San Francisco mint show approximately $30,000 in ore was extracted from the mine. Wood testified that the cost of extraction approximated $80,000. In 1919 Wood informed Jacob Weissbein, the surviving trustee, that he could not continue under the agreement, but that he would purchase the property as agent for Warren Delano, a resident of New York, if he could get it for $20,000. Weissbein agreed to the sale of the property at this figure providing two-thirds of the creditors would consent to the sale as provided in the trust deed and provided further that any litigation in which the property was involved should be taken care of by Wood.

Wood proceeded to buy up, as eotenant with one C. M. Schwerin, assignments of some of the claims of the creditors and presented to Weissbein a written consent to- the sale of the property for $20,000, with the signature of himself and Schwerin thereon as assignees of certain claims. The claim of J. W. Relley was represented in said written consent by the signature “John Mulroy, att’y in fact for Relley heirs.” Weissbein also joined in said written consent, signing “Weissbein Bros. & Co. by Jacob Weissbein.” These signatures to the consent represented two-thirds of the amount of the indebtedness against said corporation. Wood having entered into an agreement to indemnify Weissbein against all claims arising from litigation with respect to the property, the latter proceeded with the sale of the property to Warren Delano for $20,000.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 325, 198 Cal. 261, 45 A.L.R. 781, 1926 Cal. LEXIS 361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-blue-point-mining-co-v-weissbein-cal-1926.