Seymour v. Slide & Spur Gold Mines, Ltd.

42 F. 633, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2214
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedJune 17, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 F. 633 (Seymour v. Slide & Spur Gold Mines, Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seymour v. Slide & Spur Gold Mines, Ltd., 42 F. 633, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2214 (circtdco 1890).

Opinion

Hallett, J.

In 1886 complainants owned a mine in Boulder county, which they desired to sell in England, and they employed John Haldeman, of London, as a broker to make the sale. Haldeman conceived the idea of organizing a corporation to purchase the property, and procured the organization of respondent under the limited liability companies acts of Great Britain for that purpose, apparently with a view to keep the sellers and buyers apart. Haldeman proposed to take the title of the mine in his own name, and convey it to the corporation w'hich should be organized, and thus become a purchaser from complainants, and a grantor to the corporation. Complainants w'ere to sell for $750,-000, of which one-half was to be paid in cash, and one-half in stock of the corporation. The first deed to the property was made to Haldeman, and placed in escrow with Wells, Fargo & Company, of London and the United States, to be delivered on payment of the cash part of the consideration. Respondent was organized in the early part of the year 1887, but nothing of consequence was done towards completing the sale; until August 18th of that year, when ah agreement was entered into between J.. Fenton Seymour, acting for complainants and Haldeman, to the effect .that, upon payment of £10,000 in addition to £12,500 paid before that time, Seymour should “register the titles” “free from all charges and in-cumbrances” in Boulder county; and, furthermore, that Seymour should cause the mine to be worked “to its full capacity,” and that the proceeds of the mine should amount to certain sums stated in the agreement, of which the company should have notice by cable. The agreement then proceeds as follows:

“The said J. Fenton Seymour hereby undertakes and agrees to take the control of the management of the said property until the payments hereinafter mentioned are completed, and it is understood and agreed that he shall retain such control until the said payments are completed. The said John Halde-man agrees that 375,000 shares, of one pound each, in the above company, shall be transferred to Mr. Clarence Preston Elder as trustee, and deposited with Messrs. Wells, Fargo & Company in London, to the intent that the said shares shall be held as security for the due performance of the following conditions, viz.: First, the payment of 10,000 pounds in addition to the above mentioned 22,500 pounds within three days after the receipt of the third successive weekly return from the mine as hereinbefore mentioned; and, second, the balance of 45,000 pounds at the expiration of ten days after the receipt of eight Successive weekly returns-of the nature and value above specified. Upon the completion of the above-mentioned payments, the said J. Fenton Seymour hereby undertakes and agrees to release the above-mentioned 375,000 shares, less 77,500 to which he is entitled, and also less the number of shares, with the consent and under the supervision of the aforesaid Clarence Preston Elder, acting for the said J. Fenton Seymour. In case the weekly returns cabled from the mine shall from any cause fall below the sum of two hundred pounds sterling per week, then, in that case, such returns shall not count, but the time for paying the second ten thousand pounds and the balance of the forty-five thousand pounds shall be extended pro rata; but should the successive weekly returns amount to two hundred pounds sterling per week, with a [635]*635moderate increase weekly, as hereinbefore mentioned, and the said John Ilaldeman shall make default in the payment of the balance of the forty-five thousand pounds, then, in that case, the said J. Fenton Seymour shall have the right to forfeit the amounts already paid, and to claim the above-mentioned 375,000 shares.”

There is some dispute as to the result- of work carried on by Seymour in the mine under this agreement, complainants claiming that returns were made as required by the agreement, and respondent claiming that the mine fell short of the amount specified in the agreement; but this is not material. The £10,000 first mentioned in the agreement were paid, and a deed from complainants to the company for the property was placed on record in Boulder county. This deed, it will be observed, was substituted for that which was first made out to Haldeman, and was then in escrow with Wells, Fargo & Company; and the párties say that this was done for convenience, and to save the necessity of recording two deeds, — one to Haldeman, and another from Haldeman to the company. At all events, the company obtained title directly from complainants. Some small payments were made on the further sum of £55,000, which by the agreement was to be paid to complainants within two or three months thereafter. Nothing further was done towards completing the sale until October 5, 1888, when a proposition in writing was made by J. Fenton Seymour as agent for complainants to certain persons who bad become, or were about to become, stockholders in the company, as follows:

“First. In payment of thirty-five hundred pounds to Wells, Fargo & Company, we agree to start the mine at work in name of company. Said sum to credit of Col. Seymour. Second. Company to send cashier and engineer if they think fit, and Colonel Seymour to be resident manager and director for the period of one year. Third. All proceeds to be transmitted to company bankers. Fourth. Mr. Elder to deliver 75,000 shares to the Scotch subscribers, and forty-five thousand to Mr. Bust on payment of said sum. Fifth. The balance of shares to remain in Mr. Elder’s hands as trustee until a final settlement can be made inside of three months after acceptance of this proposition. Sixth. Colonel Wilson, or whoever pays the thirty-five hundred pounds, to receive fifteen thousand shares from Mr. Elder on the final settlement, not later than three months, and meantime receive a legal obligation from Mr. Elder as trustee. Seventh. On resignation of Mr. Elder as a director, Mr. Allen to be elected. THighth. 'Thirty-five hundred pounds to ho paid so soon as the company can register the transfer of the 75,000 shares.”

The £3,500 mentioned in this proposition were paid to complainants, and accepted bj^ them, on the 15th day of December, 1888; and it is sufficiently shown that Seymour thereafter held possession of the property for the company. An agreement made by Haldeman and one If. E. Gilbert, who, prior to the organization of the company, seems to have been set up as its representative, of date May 16, 1887, and another agreement of date September 10, 1887, between the company, Halde-man, and Gilbert, sufficiently show that the 375,000 shares deposited with Wells, Fargo & Company, and by the agreement of August 18, 1887, transferred to Elder as trustee, were given to Haldeman in pay[636]*636ment for the, property, and a principal point in controversy between complainants and respondent is whether they were also accepted by respondents in the same way. It is clear enough, however, that this is not the effect of the agreement of August 18, 1887, for by the terms of that instrument Elder was to hold the shares “to the intent that the said shares should be held as security for the due performance of the following conditions,” and then follow the conditions for the payment of the £10,000 and the' £45,000; and the final clause which gives Seymour, the right to forfeit the amount paid, and to claim the shares, is onljr an option in case of default, which complainants were in no way bound to accept.

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Related

Wilson v. Seymour
76 F. 678 (Eighth Circuit, 1896)

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Bluebook (online)
42 F. 633, 1890 U.S. App. LEXIS 2214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seymour-v-slide-spur-gold-mines-ltd-circtdco-1890.