Nielsen v. Steinfeld

224 U.S. 534, 32 S. Ct. 609, 56 L. Ed. 872, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2321
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 13, 1912
Docket218
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 224 U.S. 534 (Nielsen v. Steinfeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nielsen v. Steinfeld, 224 U.S. 534, 32 S. Ct. 609, 56 L. Ed. 872, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2321 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

Mary Nielsen, individually and as administratrix of the estate of her deceased husband, Carl S. Nielsen, commenced this action in 1905 in the District Court of *535 Pima County, in the then Territory of Arizona. Albert Steinfeld and the Nielsen Mining & Smelting Co., now the Silver Bell Copper Company, were named as defendants. The relief sought was the setting aside of a transfer made by Nielsen to Steinfeld of three hundred shares of stock in the Nielsen Company and for a decree adjudging Mary Nielsen (who is the appellant), as administratrix of her husband’s estate, to be the legal owner of the stock. An accounting from Steinfeld of moneys received by him as dividends on the stock was also prayed.

The cause was tried by the court, without a jury, and evidence both oral and documentary was introduced on behalf of the plaintiff and defendants. The trial court made elaborate findings of fact upon which it entered judgment against Steinfeld for $23,300.00 with interest, and the shares of stock in controversy were decreed to be the property of the administratrix. The defendants appealed to the Supreme Court of the Territory. With the judgment roll there was filed in the office of the clerk of that court. various exhibits of both plaintiff and defendants and the reporter’s transcript of evidence, copies of which papers so filed, it was recited, were omitted from the transcript by direction of the attorneys for appellants. {Steinfeld et al.)

What errors were assigned on the appeal to the Supreme Court of the Territory do not appear in the transcript of record. It' was conceded, however, in the argument at bar by the counsel of both parties that in the Supreme Court of the Territory it was insisted, on behalf of the appellants {Steinfeld et al.), that the decree of the trial court should be reversed, not only because there was no evidence sustaining various findings of the trial court which were material to its decree, but also because, taking the findings to be sufficiently supported by proof, they were nevertheless inadequate to. sustain the decree which had been based on them. It therefore may be assumed *536 that the errors thus admitted to have been assigned in the Supreme Court are those referred to in the minute entry contained in the record, stating that a “motion and objection of the appellee to the consideration of assignments of error set forth and specified in appellants’ brief ” were denied by the'Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court reversed the judgment of the trial court and remanded the cause with directions to enter judgment for the defendants. (12 Arizona, 381.) The opinion is preceded by what is denominated in the body of the opinion a statement of the facts. The statement begins with a brief recital of the nature of the controversy, the entry of judgment in the trial court and the taking of the appeal; and after the declaration that “the court (trial court) found the facts as follows,” there appears a literal copy of the findings made by the trial court. In the opinion which next follows it is first declared that it was “contended by the appellants that the facts found do not constitute legal fraud, and that therefore the court erred in not so finding, and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff and against the defendants, based thereon.” A summary is then made of what were styled “the facts upon which the court predicated fraud in the purchase of the shares of stock of Nielsen,” followed by the statement that “unless these facts constituted legal fraud, the judgment of the trial court cannot be sustained.” The court then considers whether the facts so found amounted to legal fraud, and concludes its consideration of the .subject by saying (p. 405): “In our judgment the findings do not support the legal conclusion made by the trial court that such fraud was perpetrated by Steinfeld in the purchase of the stock as to warrant the rescission of the contract,, and the recovery of the stock and of the dividends which have been received by Steinfeld thereon.” It is then stated that “for this reason the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, and the case remanded, *537 with directions to the trial court to enter judgment for the-defendant.” The Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory dissented in the following words:

“I dissent from the conclusion and the result reached by my associates in the foregoing opinion. I think the judgment of the trial court was correct.”

A motion for a rehearing was denied on May 1, 1909, and on the same day the appeal now under consideration was allowed by the Chief Justice of the court.

On June 10, 1909, there was filed nunc pro tunc as of May 1, 1909, what was styled in the Journal entry “a certain Statement of Facts,” in which, under the title of the cause, it was recited as follows:

“I, Edward Kent, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona, do hereby certify that the Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona, having adjudged that the facts as found by the District Court in this cause did not sustain the conclusions of law or the judgment of the District Court, did, without passing in this court upon the corrections (correctness?) of the facts as found by the District Court, remand this cause to the District Court with directions to that court to enter judgment absolute for the defendants.
“And on behalf of the said Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona, I do hereby certify to the Supreme Court of the United States upon the appeal herein, that the following were the facts as found by the District Court upon which the said judgment of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona was based.”

This certificate was followed by a reproduction of the findings made by the trial court and the certificate concluded with the date of May 1, 1909, and the signature of the Chief Justice.

On June 12, 1909, a bond on appeal was duly filed. Five months afterwards, viz., on-November 12, 1909, the ' following order was entered in the court below:

*538 “At this day, it is ordered by the Court that all former Statements of Facts filed in this cause in this court, be, and the same are hereby, withdrawn, and a Certificate of the Chief Justice in regard to Statement of facts, filed.”

The certificate referred to appears in the transcript of record following a recital of the entry of an order enlarging the time for preparing and filing such transcript. Omitting the title of the cause, date, and signature of the Chief Justice, the certificate reads as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
224 U.S. 534, 32 S. Ct. 609, 56 L. Ed. 872, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielsen-v-steinfeld-scotus-1912.