Synnott v. Shaughnessy

130 U.S. 572, 9 S. Ct. 609, 32 L. Ed. 1038, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1777
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 13, 1889
Docket176
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 130 U.S. 572 (Synnott v. Shaughnessy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Synnott v. Shaughnessy, 130 U.S. 572, 9 S. Ct. 609, 32 L. Ed. 1038, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1777 (1889).

Opinion

*573 Me. Justice Uamae

delivered the opinion of the court.

On the 24th of May, 1882, John Synnott and Peter Welch commenced an action in one of the territorial courts of Idaho Territory against Michael .Shaughnessy, to have annulled the sale of the Eureka Silver Mine, situated in Mineral Hill mining district, Alturas County, in that Territory, and to compel him to reconvey the same to them as vendors. In their com- . plaint the plaintiffs alleged-that on the 5th day of. July, 1881, they were the owners each of an undivided one half, and in the lawful possession, of the Eureka silver-mining claim, particularly describing it by metes and bounds, which they had located in June, 1880, and upon which they had developed a small seam or vein of galena ore, worth about $1000; that this vein was all of the ore which had been discovered by .them, or either of them, upon the mining claim up to that time, and that they were ignorant of the existence of any other vein or body of ore, and believed that all the value that was then attached to the mining claim arose from the' developments they had made upon the claim and the ore they had discovered,, and did not exceed $2500; that on or about the 3d of July, 1881, the defendant by his agents or employés, had discovered upon a part of the Eureka mining claim, remote from the places where the plaintiffs had been at work, a large and valuable vein, or body of ore, from eighteen inches to four feet in thickness, extending about seventy feet continuously along said vein, the existence of which rendered the mine worth at least $100,000, and of the existence of which these plaintiffs were wholly ignorant ; that the defendant, by his agent? -,and servants, intending to cheat and defraud these plaintiffs, fraudulently and falsely concealed and suppressed from them 'fhe knowledgé of the existence of such vein or ore body, and misrepresented theifacts concerning the same, and fraudulently, and falsely represented to them that no other ore body or vein of ore existed in the mining claim, except such as was known to these plaintiffs; that such false and fraudulent statements . were ioade by the defendant, his agent and employés,-in order to enable mm to purchase the mining claim at a price far below *574 •its real value; that by means of such false and fraudulent concealment and misrepresentations these plaintiffs, who believed-the same to be true, were made to believe that no other body or vein of ore existed in the mining claim than that which was known to them, and that the real value of the claim was not more than $2200; that immediately prior to the discovery of the ore vein or ore body by the defendant, these plaintiffs had employed one Henry Porter as an agent. to find for them a purchaser of their claim at the sum of $2500, and- agreed' to pay him ten per cent of that sum if he should make a sale thereof at the price mentioned; that during such employment of Porter, and while he was endeavoring to obtain a purchaser for the mine;.he, himself, first made the discovery of the aforesaid ore vein and ore body, which -was unknown to these plaintiffs; that upon such discovery Porter concealed the same from the plaintiffs, and falsely and collusively and for a consideration paid to him by the defendant, to wit, $1000, informed the defendant of the existence of such large vein or ore body, and then and there, in violation of his employment by these plaintiffs, and in fraud of their rights, entered into the employment of the defendant, and undertook and agreed to assist him. in concealing from them the knowledge of the existence of the ore body he had discovered,. and in obtaining the mining claim from them at the price of $2200, which was greatly below its real value; that by reason of those false, fraudulent and collusive acts of Porter, as well as the misrepresentations and concealments of the defendant, these plaintiffs were induced to part with their property for the' sum of $2200, and to execute and deliver to the defendant a quit-claim deed of the Eureka mining claim, dated on the 5th day of July, 1881, which was afterwards duly recorded; that by reason of such conveyance thus fraudúlently obtained from them, and if the same.be not declared fraudulent, null and void, they will sustain great pecuniary loss and damage, to wit, $100,000; that since fhe conveyance to the defendant,of the mining claim he has been in the possession of the same, and has extracted and taken therefrom a large quantity of ore and has made large profits theréfrom, to wit, over $3000; and that the plaintiffs.are ready and *575 willing and hereby offer to repay to the defendant the sum- of $2200, the purchase price of the mining claim, together- with interest from July 5, 1881, upon a reconveyance, of the mining property to them.

The prayer for relief was, (1) That the deed of July 5, 1881, be declared fraudulent, null and void, and set aside by the • court, and the defendant be decreed to reconvey the mining claim and premises to the plaintiffs upon their paying him the purchase price thereof, together with lawful interest -from the date of. the purchase; (2) that the- defendant be decreed to account to the plaintiffs for the net proceeds of the ore extracted by him from the mining claim since his purchase thereof, and upon such accounting be decreed to pay the same to the plaintiffs; (3) that' the defendant, his agents and employés, be enjoined and -restrained from interfering with the mining claim, or extracting or clearing away any of the ore therefrom; (4) that the plaintiffs be put in possession of the mining claim by the process of the court; (5)-That the defend-, ant be decreed to pay the- costs of this action; and (6) for other and further relief.

The answer of the defehdant denied specifically all the material allegations of the complaint, and set out in detail the circumstances attending the purchase of the mine, which, if proved, would establish his good faith in, such purchase; and the absence of any fraudulent acts on the part of himself or any of his agents connected with such transactions.

The cause having-been heard upon the pleadings and proofs, the court found the facts - in favor of the defendant, and entered a decree, in his .favor. Upon appeal to the Supreine Court of the Territory, that decree was' in all respects affirmed ; and an appeal from the latter decree brings the case here.

The findings of fact' by the trial court, and which were adopted by the Supreme Court of the Territory, are twenty in number, and elaborately set out all the facts, and circumstances attending the sale of the miné.- The material factSj as gathered from these findings, stated briefly, are as follows:

For some time prior to the 5th of July, 1881, the plaintiffs, *576 Synnott and Welch, had owned the. Eureka mine,.and had lived in a cabin near by. They had done considerable work in developing it, and had found a small vein of ore, from which they had extracted, through several tunnels, about $1000 worth of ore, then lying on the premises. They were desirous of selling the claim, and entered into an agreement with one Porter, to pay him a commission • of ten per cent on' the sale thereof, in case he realized from such sale- $2500.

Under these arrangements Porter first applied to one John Gilman to purchase the claim, but no agreement was reached between them.

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Bluebook (online)
130 U.S. 572, 9 S. Ct. 609, 32 L. Ed. 1038, 1889 U.S. LEXIS 1777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/synnott-v-shaughnessy-scotus-1889.