Phillips v. Homestake Consolidated Placer Mines Co.

273 P. 657, 51 Nev. 226, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 5
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 22, 1929
Docket2575
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 273 P. 657 (Phillips v. Homestake Consolidated Placer Mines Co.) 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
Phillips v. Homestake Consolidated Placer Mines Co., 273 P. 657, 51 Nev. 226, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 5 (Neb. 1929).

Opinion

*230 OPINION

By the Court,

Sanders, J.:

This appeal was taken from a judgment entered upon an order sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s amended answer. Therefore a question of pleading only is involved.

The action was begun in 1921 on four promissory notes, each dated on July 24, 1920, and each for the sum of $500, payable to the plaintiff and signed by the defendant. The complaint avers four separate causes of action in short form of a complaint on each note. The amended answer admits the execution and delivery of the notes, and alleges as follows:

“As a further defense to the first, second, third and *231 fourth causes of action set forth in said plaintiff’s complaint, and to each of them, and by way of counterclaim, the defendant alleges that ever since on or about the 8th day of September, 1913, the defendant and its predecessors in interest, have been and now are the owners in possession and entitled to the possession of the Homestake placer mining claim, situate in the Battle Mountain mining district, county of Lander, State of Nevada; that on or about the first day of October, 1913, the predecessors in interest of the defendant leased and demised to the plaintiff and one L. R. Ray and one A. H. Crampton a lease on the southerly two hundred (200) feet of said Homestake placer mining claim; that thereupon said plaintiff and said Ray and said Crampton entered in and upon said leased and demised premises and worked, mined and extracted therefrom placer, gravel containing placer gold; that thereafter and on or about the-day of-, 1915, the defendant and certain of its predecessors in interest became owners of the two-thirds interest in said lease; that on or about the 24th day of July, 1920, the defendant gave the promissory notes, set forth and contained in the plaintiff’s complaint, for the purpose of acquiring and in payment of a one-third interest in said lease held by said plaintiff; that during the period of said lease and prior to the purchase of the one-third interest of the plaintiff, and after the defendant and its immediate predecessors in interest had become the owner of the two-thirds interest in said lease, large amounts of placer gold were extracted from said leased premises in excess of the sum of thirty thousand (30,000) dollars; that said gold was extracted from said premises without the knowledge or consent of the defendant; that no accounting was ever made to the defendant for their two-thirds interest therein by the plaintiff; that plaintiff well knew and was advised of the fact that said gold had been extracted from said leased premises and was so advised at the time of the execution of the promissory notes aforesaid, and that being so advised *232 said plaintiff failed and neglected to inform the defendant thereof and said plaintiff willfully and knowingly concealed from the defendant the knowledge of the fact that said large amounts of placer gold in excess of the sum of thirty thousand (30,000) dollars had been so extracted from said demised premises; that at the time of the execution of the promissory notes mentioned in said complaint, all pay ore and gravel of commercial value had been extracted from said leased premises all of which was well known to the plaintiff and which said plaintiff failed and neglected to apprise the defendant and which said facts said plaintiff concealed from the defendant.
“Wherefore, the defendant demands an accounting be had between the plaintiff and the defendant and that the plaintiff be required to pay the defendant, and account to the defendant for the value of all placer gold so extracted from said premises; that plaintiff take nothing by said complaint, that said notes be canceled and held for nought; that defendant have judgment for its costs herein incurred.”

To this pleading the plaintiff demurred upon the grounds (1) that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense; (2) that the counterclaim did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; and (3) because the cause of action stated was not plead-able as a counterclaim to the action. The demurrer was sustained upon the grounds, first, that the pleading did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense; second, that the counterclaim did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

Aside from serious objections which might otherwise be urged against the pleading in question, we shall treat it as a counterclaim, for the reason that the pleader designates it as a defense by way of counterclaim. The cause of action attempted to be stated in favor of the defendant and against the plaintiff is for the cancellation of the notes set out in the plaintiff’s complaint, on the ground of nondisclosure. The gravamen of the defendant’s cause of action is the concealment by the *233 plaintiff of the fact, within his own knowledge, that all ore and gravel of commercial value had been extracted from the leased premises at the time of the defendant’s purchase from the plaintiff of his interest in the lease. The question presented for decision is whether, under the circumstances, the plaintiff’s nondisclosure of the true physical condition of the property amounted to a fraud upon the defendant.

The general doctrine, with respect to concealment as a form of actual fraud, and as distinguished from those analogous violations of fiduciary duty which do not constitute actual fraud, but may be included within the term “constructive fraud,” is stated by Pomeroy as follows: “If either party to a transaction conceals some fact which is material, which is within his own knowledge, and which it is his duty to disclose, he is guilty of actual fraud.” 2 Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence (4th ed.), sec. 901.

In the extended discussion of the subject, the author states “that it has never been contended, in our system of jurisprudence, that a vendor in a contract of sale is bound to disclose all facts which, if known by the buyer, would prevent or tend to prevent him from making the purchase.”

The same subject is discussed in Story’s Equity Jurisprudence (14th ed.), secs. 292, 294, 300, and 303, and elsewhere in the same chapter. The general rule of equity, as laid down in both of the texts referred to, is that a failure to disclose amounts to an undue concealment, and, therefore, to a fraud, where there is a nondisclosure of those facts and circumstances which one party is under some legal or equitable obligation to communicate to the other. Pomeroy, in section 904, states that “in ordinary contracts of sale, where no previous fiduciary relation exists, and where no confidence, expressed or implied, growing out of or connected with the very transaction itself, is reposed on the vendor, and the parties are dealing with each other at arm’s length, and the purchaser is presumed to have as many reasonable opportunities for ascertaining all the facts as any other *234

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
273 P. 657, 51 Nev. 226, 1929 Nev. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-homestake-consolidated-placer-mines-co-nev-1929.