Royal Consol. Mining Co. v. Royal Consol. Mines (Cal.) Co.

110 P. 123, 157 Cal. 737, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 322
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1910
DocketSac. Nos. 1744, 1750, 1764.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 110 P. 123 (Royal Consol. Mining Co. v. Royal Consol. Mines (Cal.) Co.) 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
Royal Consol. Mining Co. v. Royal Consol. Mines (Cal.) Co., 110 P. 123, 157 Cal. 737, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 322 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

On the ninth day of February, 1898, Royal Consolidated Mining Company, a corporation (designated in this opinion as the “vendor” or the “California corporation”), entered into a written contract with J. C. Kemp Van Ee for the sale by it to him of certain mining properties in Calaveras County. The terms of the contract, which will be set out at greater length hereafter, provided for the incorporation by the purchaser of a company under the Joint Stock Companies Acts of Great Britain, for the purpose of acquiring the properties. Such company, the Royal Consolidated Mines (California) Company Limited (which will be referred to by us as the “British corporation”) was formed, and title to the properties in question became vested in it. In 1902 this corporation executed, or attempted to execute, to Frederick' Rheinwald Bullock, William Bryson Butler, and John Thomas Hod-son, as trustees, an instrument purporting to convey said properties to the trustees as security for the payment of seventy-five thousand pounds of debenture stock to be issued by the corporation (and in fact subsequently issued by it) to persons lending money on the faith of such debentures. Pending this action, Bullock, one of the trustees, died, and was succeeded by Leon Ephraim Morris.

This action was brought by the California corporation against the British corporation, J. C. Kemp Van Ee, the trustees above named, and other defendants designated by fictitious names, to foreclose a vendor’s lien upon the property conveyed by said plaintiff, its claim being that some $312,000 with interest was due on the purchase price of the mines, and that it was entitled to a lien for such unpaid balance. Each of the named defendants appeared and resisted plaintiff’s claim. Albert Raymond, appearing as a defendant sued by a fictitious name, also denied the existence of plaintiff’s asserted lien. *741 Raymond himself claimed a lien on the property by virtue of an attachment for the sum of $64,421 and interest, levied in an action brought against the British corporation.

The trustees, Morris, Butler, and Hodson, filed in addition to their answer a cross-complaint, seeking foreclosure of the instrument executed to them to secure payment of the seventy-five thousand pounds of debentures.

The trial resulted in findings upon which the court entered its judgment: 1. That plaintiff recover nothing and that its action be dismissed against defendants and cross-complainants; 2. That cross-complainants take nothing as against plaintiffs and defendants, except that cross-complainants have and recover from the British corporation the sum of $242,500 with interest; 3. That defendants recover costs from plaintiff; 4. That Van Ee and Raymond recover costs from cross-complainants; 5. That cross-complainants recover costs from the British corporation. In other words, the court determined in the original action that the plaintiff had not established its-right to a vendor’s lien, and, in the cross-action, that the instrument under which the trustees claimed was not a valid' mortgage and could not be foreclosed, but that such trustees were entitled to a money judgment against the British corporation for the sums actually advanced to it by the debenture-holders.

From this judgment three appeals have been taken. No. 1744 is the appeal of the cross-complainants (trustees) from those parts of the judgment denying them the relief of foreclosure, giving them a money judgment, and awarding costs against them. They appeal also from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

No. 1750 is the appeal of plaintiff from the parts of the-judgment decreeing that it recover nothing, that the action be dismissed, that cross-complainants have judgment for $242,500 and that defendants recover from plaintiff their costs.

No. 1764 is an appeal taken by the British corporation and' J. C. Kemp Van Ee from the part of the judgment whereby cross-complainants (trustees) recover a money judgment and. costs against said corporation.

The bills of exceptions presented by the respective parties are, except for the assignments of error, identical, and for this- *742 reason, among others, the various appeals can most conveniently be considered in a single opinion.

It will be well to take up first the questions arising on plaintiff’s appeal (No. 1750) from the judgment declaring that it is not entitled to a vendor’s lien. Some of the facts to be stated in this connection will be important in considering the other appeals.

The complaint sets forth at length the terms of the agreement of February, 1898, between the plaintiff, the then owner of the properties in question, and Van Be. This agreement, after reciting that the plaintiff is the owner of the mining properties in question, and that Van Be is desirous of acquiring such property, provides that the vendor (plaintiff) agrees to sell, and Van Be agrees to purchase, the aforesaid properties for the sum of four hundred thousand dollars, payable as provided in the agreement. The purchaser, it is agreed, shall on the signing of the agreement, pay the sum of sixty thousand dollars to the credit of the vendor with the Anglo-Califomian Bank, Limited, at its San Francisco office, on account of the purchase consideration. The third paragraph reads as follows: “The purchaser shall proceed forthwith to incorporate a company in London under the Joint Stock Companies Acts of Great Britain, for the purpose of acquiring the aforesaid properties, and said company shall have a nominal capital of 250,000 shares of one pound each, of which 25,000 shares, at the par value, shall be reserved for the purpose of providing working capital for the said properties, and the balance of shares, namely, 225,000 shares, shall be issued fully paid up and be deposited in London with the Anglo-Californian Bank, Limited, as security for the payment of the balance of the purchase consideration of $400,000 for the said properties, and upon the allotment and deposit of said 225,000 shares, the property shall be duly and legally conveyed'by the purchaser to the company to be formed as aforesaid to acquire the same, free from all encumbrances.”

The agreement further provides that the balance of the purchase price, namely, three hundred and forty thousand dollars, “shall be paid in the manner following, that is to say, an amount equal to eighty per cent, of the net proceeds arising from the working of said mines shall be paid to the vendor monthly on or before thirty days after the time of each and *743

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 123, 157 Cal. 737, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-consol-mining-co-v-royal-consol-mines-cal-co-cal-1910.