Page v. Walser

213 P. 107, 46 Nev. 390
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1923
DocketNo. 2546
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 213 P. 107 (Page v. Walser) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Page v. Walser, 213 P. 107, 46 Nev. 390 (Neb. 1923).

Opinions

[396]*396By the Court,

Sanders, J.:

This case has twice reached this court; once by way of an original proceeding in prohibition, instituted by the present appellants to have the lower court prohibited from proceeding to try the case upon its merits by reason of misjoinder of causes of action, in violation of an express inhibition of the civil practice act. On rehearing, the demurrer .to the petition for the writ was sustained and the proceeding dismissed, for the reason that, while separate causes of action were stated in the complaint, they were a part of one cause of action. 42 Nev. 111, 173 Pac. 1149, 190 Pac. 492. The case was again appealed from an order denying the present appellants’ application for a change of venue, which said order was affirmed. 43 Nev. 422, 187 Pac. 509. The case is now before us on appeal from a joint and several judgment, and also from an order denying and overruling the defendants’ joint and separate motion made for a new trial.

The pleadings as amended purport to narrow the issues to but two causes of action, instead of five, as contained in the original complaint. The case was tried without the assistance of a jury, and the court decided the facts to be as stated in the first nineteen paragraphs of the complaint. Its decision is supplemented by formal findings of fact and conclusions of law, upon which the joint and several judgment, sounding in damages, was rendered in favor of plaintiffs and against the defendants, and each of them, for the sum of $10,200, with interest on $833.33 thereof from the 11th day of March, 1913, and for costs of suit, taxed at $307.55.

[397]*397While it is obvious from the pleadings and course of the litigation that the object most sought to be accomplished by this action was to recover judgment against the defendants for 281,250 shares of the capital stock of the Nevada Packard Mines Company, or its value, to wit, $140,625, together with the sum of $25,312.50 received as dividends thereon, by reason of the findings and conclusions, limiting and confining plaintiffs’ recovery to a judgment, sounding in damages, for the loss of plaintiffs’ interest in 281,000 shares of the capital stock of the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company, all questions of law and fact that bear upon the issue as to the capital stock of the Nevada Packard Mines Company disappear on this appeal.

Referring to the parties as they stood in the court below, it is conceded that the action is grounded upon two agreements. The first or primary agreement bears date on December 21, 1912, between the defendant Mark Walser and plaintiffs. The second agreement, dated December 27, 1912, is between the two defendants, in which the primary agreement is referred to and made a part. We shall not recite the agreements, but for clearness -\yill state their pertinent terms.

The defendant Walser agreed with the Pages, as an attorney at law, that in consideration of their sale and assignment outright to him of an undivided two-thirds interest of plaintiffs, vested or prospective, in their stock holdings and claims of whatever nature in the corporations named in the contract, to wit, the Indian Consolidated Mines Company of South Dakota, the Indian Consolidated Mines Company of Nevada, the Limerick Mining Company, and the Limerick Townsite Company, he would commence and maintain at his own expense, all actions at law necessary to clear the title to the interests that the Pages (plaintiffs) may have or be entitled to in said corporations, and defend at his own expense, and without charge, all actions that might be brought against them because of their connections with [398]*398said corporations, and that he would in addition advance and pay all moneys required to protect the property, free it from liens, and protect the other claimants; it being understood that the Pages were to have an undivided one-third interest in and to everything recovered from said companies. On December 27, 1912, the defendant Walser, by and with the consent of plaintiffs, agreed with his codefendant Margrave that, in consideration of his advancing to him $150 to carry the matters set forth in his contract with the Pages to a successful ending, he would sell and assign, and did sell and assign, to Margrave an undivided one-half interest in his part of the contract' with the Pages, being one-third of the whole.

The district court found the facts to be, in substance, as follows: That at or about the time of the execution of the agreement of date December 21, 1912, plaintiffs delivered to the defendant Walser all their stocks in the several corporations mentioned in said agreement, being of the amount of 689,000 shares, including 250,000 shares of the capital stock of the Indian Consolidated Mines Company of South Dakota, found to be the successor in interest of the other corporations named in said agreement; that defendant so used and manipulated said stocks collectively as to cause all rights and interests represented thereby to be transformed into, and become all the stock, property, rights and interests of the North Rochester Mines Company; that on March 11, 1913, the North Rochester Mines Company agreed to convey, and did convey, to the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company all its property, consisting of a group of mining claims, situated in the Rochester Mining District, Humboldt County, in consideration for which conveyance the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company agreed to issue, and did issue, in the name of the North Rochester Mines Company, 300,000 shares of its capital stock, and paid as a part of said consideration $2,500 in money, which said sum was, upon demand of defendants, paid direct to them; that on March 11, 1913, the defendant Walser, acting for the North Rochester Company and plaintiffs and defendants, entered into an [399]*399agreement with the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company to pool with all the promotion stock of the corporation the stock issued to the North Rochester Mines Company until the 15th day of September, 1913; that plaintiffs and defendants, by virtue of the agreement of date December 21, 1912, were the owners of said 281,000 shares of the capital stock of the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company; that defendants, on the expiration of the pool agreement, failed to withdraw, or cause to be withdrawn, said stock, but permitted it to remain with the trustee, in whose hands it was attached, and in July, 1914, after notice to defendants, was sold under execution to satisfy a debt against the North Rochester Mines Company, and that by reason of said execution sale the interests of plaintiffs in said stock became thereby wholly lost; that plaintiffs had no knowledge of the specific terms of the pool agreement, and no knowledge that the stock had been levied upon or sold until February, 1917; that at the time the stock wtas so issued, pooled and sold, as aforesaid, it was of the value of 10 cents per share, and that plaintiffs were damaged by reason of its sale and the loss of their interests therein in the sum of $9,333.33; that defendants did not notify plaintiffs of, nor -account to them for, the said $2,500 paid to defendants on account of the consideration for the conveyance of the property of the North Rochester Mines Company to the Limerick Consolidated Mines Company on or about the 11th day of March, 1913, and plaintiffs did not learn that any such payment had ever been made, or that defendants had received any such sum on account of such sale until on or about the......day of February, 1917.

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Bluebook (online)
213 P. 107, 46 Nev. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/page-v-walser-nev-1923.