Spor v. Crested Butte Silver Mining, Inc.

740 P.2d 1304, 60 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1987 Utah LEXIS 740
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1987
Docket19403
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 740 P.2d 1304 (Spor v. Crested Butte Silver Mining, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Spor v. Crested Butte Silver Mining, Inc., 740 P.2d 1304, 60 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1987 Utah LEXIS 740 (Utah 1987).

Opinion

STEWART, Associate Chief Justice:

The plaintiffs, the Spors, 1 brought this action to declare a rescission or termination of a preincorporation contract they had entered with Crested Butte Silver Mining, Inc. Crested Butte counterclaimed against the Spors, alleging breach of contract and seeking specific performance. Crested Butte also sued Candelaria Metals, Inc., to compel Candelaria to release mineral properties covered by the preincorporation contract that Candelaria had leased from the Spors.

The Spors filed a motion for summary judgment. In a memorandum opinion, the trial court ruled that Crested Butte and the Spors had agreed to a mutual rescission and to an accord and satisfaction of the preincorporation contract. Accordingly, the court granted the Spors summary judgment and dismissed Crested Butte’s claim against Candelaria because it was dependent upon Crested Butte’s counterclaim against the Spors. Crested Butte appeals from the summary judgment and the dismissal on the ground that there are disputed factual issues as to whether the preincorporation contract had been rescinded or terminated by an accord and satisfaction. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

Crested Butte and the Spors executed an “Agreement to Incorporate” (“Agreement”) dated July 30, 1979. The Agreement contemplated the creation of a new corporation to be called Gold-Spor Mining Company. The main section of the contract provided that Crested Butte and the Spors would become equal shareholders. Each party was to receive 1,000,000 shares of stock in the new company. Crested Butte was required to contribute two large pieces of mining equipment to Gold-Spor, and the Spors were to contribute certain real and personal property. The agreement specifically provided that the contribution of the properties by each party was to constitute “full payment for [each party’s] one million shares of the capital stock *1306 of Gold-Spor....” There was no other condition to be met for the parties to receive the stock.

In a separate section of the contract, Crested Butte agreed, “[u]pon the formation of Gold-Spor,” to lend Gold-Spor up to $150,000 “as may be requested by Gold-Spor.” Gold-Spor was required to execute a promissory note with a five-year term at eight percent interest. The loan was to be secured by Gold-Spor's issuance of up to 200,000 shares of additional stock to Crested Butte. The loan from Crested Butte was contingent only “[u]pon the formation of Gold-Spor,” and the money was to be paid as “may be requested by Gold-Spor.” The loan proceeds were not required to be used in the business and were, in fact, used for personal purposes.

Gold-Spor was incorporated July 31, 1979. The Spors contributed their properties to the new corporation, as required, and on February 19, 1980, the Spor family, without authorization by Gold-Spor’s board of directors, caused one million shares of stock to be issued to themselves and their relatives.

Crested Butte, however, did not contribute the equipment it contracted to transfer. Nevertheless, Crested Butte claims that at all times it has been ready, willing, and able to transfer the equipment, but asserts that the Spors were required to assist Crested Butte in the transfer of the equipment and have failed to do so. Specifically, one of the pieces of equipment Crested Butte was to contribute to Gold-Spor was owned already by Crested Butte and was located in Colorado. Crested Butte claims that the Spors were to specify where this equipment was to be moved to but that they have failed to designate a location. Apparently, Gold-Spor was to have paid for moving this piece of equipment from Colorado. Crested Butte was also required to purchase a second piece of equipment and then contribute it to Gold-Spor. Crested Butte asserts that the Spors were to locate a suitable piece of equipment to be purchased. According to Crested Butte, the Spors failed to fully complete this obligation. Because the equipment has not been contributed, Gold-Spor Mining Company issued no stock certificates to Crested Butte.

Although Crested Butte has not transferred the equipment, it did loan Gold-Spor $125,000 at Gold-Spor’s request. The money was used to get Gold-Spor through the first year and to provide the Spors with personal finances. Gold-Spor never executed the required promissory note and did not pledge any stock as security for the loan, as it was required to do.

In May, 1980, the Spors sent a letter to Crested Butte proposing a plan to terminate the Agreement. The plan was not adopted by the parties. Later, on August 18, 1980, representatives of Crested Butte and the Spors met in Salt Lake City. At the meeting the Spors charged that Crested Butte had defaulted on its obligations under the Agreement by failing to contribute the equipment it was required to transfer to Gold-Spor. Crested Butte rejected the assertion on the ground that the Spors had not performed their obligations, and without the Spors’ performance, Crested Butte could not complete its obligations.

At the same meeting, the parties discussed Gold-Spor’s making early repayment of the $125,000 loan to Crested Butte. John Larsen and Daniel Svilar of Crested Butte attended the meeting and later testified in their depositions that they suggested early repayment of the loan in lieu of Gold-Spor’s unfulfilled obligations with respect to the loan. They also testified that only after the loan was repaid would Crested Butte then consider further negotiations to settle or to carry out the rest of the Agreement. They further stated that they fully expected Crested Butte to receive its share of Gold-Spor stock upon transfer of the mining equipment, even after the loan had been repaid. On the other hand, the Spors assert that prepayment of the loan was intended to satisfy all their obligations under the Agreement or, in the alternative, to rescind the entire Agreement, and not just that portion of the Agreement which defined the loan obligations.

Three days after the August 18, 1980 meeting, the Spors were informed by letter *1307 that Crested Butte was ready, willing, and able to perform its obligations under the Agreement if the parties could resolve their differences concerning the equipment. Crested Butte asserted that it was not in breach of the Agreement and had not waived any of its rights under the Agreement. Crested Butte also stated that it awaited the Spors’ response regarding Crested Butte’s offer “on the prepayment of the loan.”

The next correspondence between the parties occurred September 15, 1980, when the Spors’ attorney sent a check constituting payment of the interest that had accumulated on the loan. The letter of transmittal stated:

Enclosed is check No. 164 in the amount of $9,052.43 from Gold-Spor Mining Company payable to Crested Butte Silver Mining Incorporation [sic] which represents the accrued interest on the loan from Crested Butte Silver Mining Incorporated to Gold-Spor Mining Company through September, 1980. My clients will pay $5,000 plus interest on or before November 1, 1980, December 1, 1980, January 1, 1981, February 1, 1981, March 1,1981, and the remaining balance on or before April 1, 1981.

A notation on the September 15 check stub reads: “Accrued interest at 8% on loan through September 1980.” No other notations or comments were made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
740 P.2d 1304, 60 Utah Adv. Rep. 27, 1987 Utah LEXIS 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spor-v-crested-butte-silver-mining-inc-utah-1987.