Schwab v. Wageley

250 P. 156, 80 Colo. 199, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 463
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 4, 1926
DocketNo. 11,387.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 250 P. 156 (Schwab v. Wageley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwab v. Wageley, 250 P. 156, 80 Colo. 199, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 463 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Harry E. Schwab, Henry T. Meyer and Charles E. Meyer brought this action against D. S. Wageley, doing *200 business as D. S. Wageley and Company. The complaint alleges that the defendant in the City of Denver was engaged as a broker in the business of buying and selling oil stocks and royalties or interests in oil productions. In the month of April, 1920, he represented to the plaintiff, Charles Meyer, that he, defendant, had an opportunity to buy a 1/64 royalty interest in the Middleton royalty, out of the Ohio Oil Company’s Trapshooter oil lease in the Bock Creek oil field of Carbon county, Wyoming, for the sum of $25,000, and told Meyer that if he and his co-plaintiffs would put up one-half the amount, or $12,500, towards the purchase price, he, defendant, would put up the other one-half and they would purchase the same jointly as an investment. That Meyer for himself and associates, believing the representations to be true, raised the sum of $10,000 in money which they gave to the defendant, the remaining $2,500 of their share defendant agreed to advance and to reimburse himself out of the royalties thereafter earned and paid. That the defendant represented to the plaintiffs that the property could not be purchased for less than $25,000 and it was a good investment at that price. That these representations of the defendant, all of which plaintiffs believed to be true, were false and fraudulent and known to be so by defendant and that the defendant bought the entire royalty interest in question for the sum of $10,000; that the defendant’s representations to the plaintiffs were for the purpose of deceiving them, and did deceive them, and obtaining for himself one-half interest in the royalty for nothing; that the royalty was purchased by the defendant and title thereto taken in his own name, the title to the plaintiff’s one-half being so held in part as security for $2,500, the deferred payment of the plaintiffs; that the defendant has collected on the royalty more than the sum of $5,000. By reason of the foregoing facts the plaintiffs claim to be, in equity, the owners of and entitled to, the possession of the entire royalty interest and *201 asked for the transfer thereof by the defendant to them, and for an accounting of moneys received by him on the royalty.

In his answer the defendant admits that plaintiffs paid-to him on this deal the sum of $10,000, and denies the alleged fraud. In a separate defense the defendant alleges that he was the owner of the royalty interest at the time he sold one-half of it to plaintiffs and that he merely sold a one-half interest therein to them and denies that he ever agreed to purchase the royalty interest jointly with the plaintiffs, and further alleges that after the purchase, and prior to some time in November, 1920, plaintiffs exchanged and traded to him their interest in this royalty and transferred the same to him for capital stock of the Hutton Lake Oil & Gas Company, which the defendant delivered to them, and they accepted the stock in full payment and exchange for their royalty interest. The affirmative matters of the defense were denied in the replication. Trial was to the court without a jury and the court found for the defendant and dismissed the action. Plaintiffs are here to review that judgment.

We have read with care the evidence in this case. . We are unable to discover any legal ground upon which the judgment can be sustained, even upon the evidence of the defendant himself. That the plaintiffs gave to the defendant $10,000, and that the defendant paid for the royalty interest only that amount, are clearly disclosed by the evidence and there is no contradiction by the defendant. The plaintiffs’ theory, which defendant takes issue with, is that they entered into a contract with the defendant whereby the plaintiffs and the defendant were jointly to purchase this royalty for $25,000, the respective parties to the agreement each to pay one-half, and to get one-half of the thing purchased. The defendant’s theory in his answer is that he was the owner of the royalty interest at the time the deal between him and the plaintiffs was made, whatever it was, and that he, the de *202 fendant, was merely selling to the plaintiffs one-half interest in a royalty which he owned. The evidence of the defendant himself and of his books of account are inconsistent with this theory and claim. Only indirectly does the defendant seek to disprove the allegations of the complaint and the testimony of the plaintiff, Charles Meyer, that the parties were to make a joint purchase of this royalty. As we read the record, it shows clearly that the defendant did not own the royalty at the time the plaintiffs advanced him this money, and it also shows that the $10,000, which they did advance, constituted the sole source of the payment which the defendant made for the entire royalty interest in controversy. It was the plaintiffs’ money, and not the money of the defendant, that enabled the defendant to take up the option. The defendant’s own books show that the royalty interest was transferred to him and taken in his own name after the plaintiffs had advanced to him the full amount of money required to take up the option. In making the full payment to the grantor of .the royalty interest defendant paid partly in money, $7,500, and partly in stock of the Hutton Oil Company but this stock was a mere substitution of the stock of the company for $2,500, instead of an equal amount of money which he had already received from the plaintiffs. So we say that as the foregoing facts which we have outlined sufficiently appear, even from the testimony of the defendant himself, in the absence of any evidence in support of the affirmative defenses of the answer to the contrary, the plaintiffs may treat the defendant as holding this royalty interest as their trustee, and under the doctrine of constructive trusts the plaintiffs are entitled to this royalty interest, since, as the result of the defendant’s fraudulent conduct, he secured from the plaintiffs the entire purchase price of the royalty interest toward which the defendant contributed nothing at all unless it be his services and expenses that might have been incurred in securing the option. Kayser *203 v. Maugham, 8 Colo. 232, 6 Pac. 803; Hall v. Linn, 8 Colo. 264, 5 Pac. 641; Walker v. Bruce, 44 Colo. 109, 97 Pac. 250; 39 Cyc. 169 et seq.; Young v. Hinds, 68 Colo. 164, 188 Pac. 739. Even though the title to this royalty was taken in the name of the defendant, the plaintiffs furnished the money to purchase the same and in equity are entitled to it. The testimony is undisputed that' the plaintiffs trusted implicitly the defendant in this transaction and believed him to be honest and that the representations he made were true. The relation between these parties may not be strictly a fiduciary relation but the defendant had secured the confidence of the plaintiffs and has abused it. Where, however, fraud and misrepresentation are so convincing, as we think they are in this case, under the doctrine in Mattern v. Canavan, 3 Cal. App. 493, 86 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 156, 80 Colo. 199, 1926 Colo. LEXIS 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwab-v-wageley-colo-1926.