Schwartz v. Inspiration Gold Mining Co.

15 F. Supp. 1030, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2157
CourtDistrict Court, D. Montana
DecidedAugust 1, 1936
DocketNo. 1424
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 15 F. Supp. 1030 (Schwartz v. Inspiration Gold Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Montana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwartz v. Inspiration Gold Mining Co., 15 F. Supp. 1030, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2157 (D. Mont. 1936).

Opinion

BALDWIN, District Judge.

This suit is brought for the purpose of enjoining the defendant from carrying into effect a certain resolution said to have been passed by a majority of its stockholders at a special meeting held on December 9, 1935.

In the bill of complaint, after stating the necessary jurisdictional facts, plaintiff’ alleges: (1) That the defendant is a corporation created, organized, and existing under and by virtue o f the laws of the state of Montana, and operating quartz gold mines and a mill for the reduction of quartz gold ores in Madison county, Mont.; (2) that the plaintiff is the owner of 6,000 shares of the. capital stock of the defendant corporation and registered as such upon the books of the defendant; (3) that said stock is of the value of $1 per share aftlie present, but, if the acts, hereinafter described and threatened to be done by the defendant, are done, the said stock will immediately be of no value at all; (4) that on March 25, 1935,- [1032]*1032and at the date of the filing of the complaint herein, the defendant had and' still has in said mine large bodies of commercial gold ore disclosed and ready to be mined and sent through the mill owned by the defendant, consisting in part of an ore chute approximately 200 feet in length, with an average width of from 3 to 4 feet, extending westerly on the 1,000-foot level of one of its said mines containing approximately 103,057 tons of ore of the value of $6.50 per ton, from which can be produced 250 tons of ore per ' day at a total operating cost of $4.50 per ton, which can be operated at a net profit to plaintiff of $2 per ton; (5) that on March 25, 1935, the defendant had and still has mining supplies, ore broken in mine and dump, small tools and utensils, mine timbers, mine and mill buildings, mining machinery and equipment, electrical transformers and power line, mine camp equipment, mine furniture and fixtures, office furniture and fixtures, drills and spare parts thereof, and automobiles of the value of $365,834.20, “easily worked and accessible profit making mines, and sufficient mill, milling machinery mining tools, supplies and' other equipment necessary to make instant profit and sufficient to pay its stockholders 10‡ per share per year dividend for a period of more than ten years”; (6) that on December 9, ■ 1935, the officers and directors of the defendant corporation gave' notice that “there-would be a meeting of the stockholders of said corporation for the purpose of submitting to it a certain proposal of an unformed corporation, whose pre-natal name is Bear Gulch Mining Company, to be incorporated when, where and for how much and for how long in a period of existence, being untold and undecided but which the officers of the defendant will in due time disclose”; (7) that the notice so given “contained the following words, and only the •following words, as to'the purpose of the meeting, and as to what business would be transacted at said meeting”; (8) a copy of the notice is set out in the bill of complaint, and so far as it is material for the purpose of this decision is as follows: “To the stockholders of the Inspiration Gold Mining Company: In_accordance with a resolution adopted' by the board of directors of the Inspiration Gold Mining Company on the 7th day of November, 1935, notice is hereby given-that a special meeting of the stockholders of the above-named company will be held at the principal office of the company in room 204 in the O’Rourke Estate Building, City of Butte, County of Silver Bow, State of Montana, on Monday, the 9th day of December, 1935, at the hour of eight o’clock p. m., for the purpose of considering a proposition to sell, assign, transfer and set over unto the Bear Gulch Mining Company,' a Montana corporation hereafter to be formed, all of the right, title and interest of said company in and to that said mining-lease and option dated June 10, 1932, made and entered into by Worder I. * * * Higgins * * * (and others), parties of the first part and Frank C. Ball, of Butte, Montana, party of the second part, in and to certain mining property situate, lying and being in the Tidal Wave inorganized mining district, Bear Gulch, Madison County, Montana, and which said mining lease and bond was on the 18th day of July, 1932, assigned by the said Frank C. Ball to the Inspiration Gold Mining Company and under and' by virtue of which said assignment the Inspiration Gold Mining Company entered upon and holds possession of said mining property. The consideration for said transfer is the immediate taking over of said property by the Bear Gulch Mining Company, the Bear Gulch Mining Company agreeing to provide a fund of sufficient cash, as a working fund, for the further development of said property, to comply with all the terms and conditions of said lease and bond as aforesaid, and' to preserve the same intact for the said Inspiration Gold Mining Company for a period of five years from the date of said transfer and assignment to the Bear Gulch Mining Company, * * * the Bear Gulch Mining Company agreeing at the end of said term to re-assign and re-convey to the Inspiration Gold Mining Company the said mining lease and option of June 10, 1932, unless further extension is granted said Bear Gulch Mining Company by the directors of said Inspiration Gold Mining Company, and other valuable consideration, and for the transaction of any other business which may lawfully be considered at said meeting”; (9) “that the said notice is too indefinite and uncertain to be any notice at all of what business would be transacted. That the artificial person with which the defendant pretends to deal had not been formed at the time of the meeting, to-wit, December 9, 1935. That the amount of money to be advanced and the consideration of the so-called transfer intended was not named in the notice and therefore the entire notice was a nullity”; (10) “that notwithstanding that no notice had been given, certain stockholders of the defendant met and a majority pf them voted that said [1033]*1033indefinite contract be entered (into). That the same is too indefinite as to a consideration from the so-called Bear Gulch Mining Company to be any contract at all, or to be giving any consideration to the defendant for the transfer of its properties; that the same may be so small a consideration as to be virtually a gift to the so-called Bear Gulch Mining Company of all of the defendant’s properties which are of great value and which give a value of $1 per share to the stock owned by plaintiff in said defendant. That the officers of the said Bear Gulch Mining Company, if it is ever formed', and plaintiff alleges that it will be unless prevented by the order of this court, will be largely the same as the board of directors of the defendant company”; (11) “that the said Bear Gulch Mining Company will procure the possession of and the title to properties of the defendant company, of the value of more than one million dollars, and much of said property is perishable from use and will be used up and destroyed by the so-called Bear Gulch Mining Company, if possession of it is given under the said action of the stockholders and officers, voted to be done and threatened to be done by them at the said meeting of the 9th day of December, 1935; (12) that there is no plain, speedy or adequate remedy at„law for the plaintiff; (13) that “plaintiff appearing at said meeting notified all other persons there present and the president and other officers of the said defendant of her protest and objection to any such disposition of defendant’s property, as contemplated by the officers and the stockholders there present”; (14) said protest is set out in abbreviated form in the bill of complaint herein.

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Bluebook (online)
15 F. Supp. 1030, 1936 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2157, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwartz-v-inspiration-gold-mining-co-mtd-1936.