Treat v. Ellis

6 Alaska 290
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedNovember 11, 1920
DocketNo. 879; No. 1951-A
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 6 Alaska 290 (Treat v. Ellis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Treat v. Ellis, 6 Alaska 290 (D. Alaska 1920).

Opinion

JENNINGS, District Judge.

The cornerstone of plaintiffs’ case is the assertion in the fourth paragraph of the| complaint that on June 5, 1909, an oral agreement was entered into between plaintiffs and defendant, whereby the. plaintiffs were to release defendant from certain alleged indebtedness and were to extinguish and discharge certain alleged liens and equitable interests on and in certain mining property belonging to defendant, and defendant,, in considera-' tion thereof, was to convey to plaintiffs a one-fifth interest. [297]*297in said mining property — plaintiffs now seeking to compel! such conveyance.

Before an oral contract for the conveyance of land will be specifically enforced—

“the contract must possess all the elements and features necessary to the specific enforcement of any agreement except the written memorandum required by the statute.” 4 Pomeroy’s Eq. Jurisp., note 1 to § 1409, p. 2780.

And it must be—

“clear, certain, definite, just, reasonable, and mutual in all its parts, and if it be wanting in any of these essentials it cannot be enforced.” Wagonblast v. Whitney, 12 Or. 83, 6 Pac. 399, decided before June, 1900.

The Debt to Smith cmd Treat — (Plaintiffs’ Exhibit A, Dated May 15, 1907, Pi R. p. 95.)

Smith and Treat jointly advanced to Ellis"$500, to be used in getting out ore from Ellis’ mining claims and shipping' it to the smelter. This was a straight mpney loan (of a speculative nature, however, dependent on the amount of the returns from ’ the smelter), but nevertheless the money advanced was secured by a lien called “mortgage” on the mining property.

There is nothing to indicate that this money was advanced under an agreement that Smith and Treat were to obtain any interest in the mining claims, nor with the expectation or even the hope on their part that they were to obtain such an interest.

The smelter returns being insufficient to liquidate the debt, the relation of debtor and creditors between Ellis on the one side and Smith and Treat on the other continued until June 9, 1908. There is no evidence of any work having been performed by and through the money advanced by Smith and Treat, except the getting out of ore and the shipment of same to the smelter in accordance with said advance of $500.

On the last-mentioned date the parties entered into the incorporation contract. Plaintiffs’ Exhibit D, dated June 9, 1908, P. R. p. 104. “Mr. Ellis wanted to improve and develop the property, and we were anxious to get our money, so various methods were suggested, which finally resulted in the drawing” of another contract. Testimony of Smith, P. R. p. 103.

[298]*298Accordingly, on June 9, 1908, a contract was entered into by which Ellis agreed to form a corporation and to deed his claims to that corporation in consideration of all its stock, then to transfer 20 per cent, of that stock to Smith and! Treat, and 20 per cent, to the treasury of the company, and Smith and Treat were to give Ellis a receipt in full for .the aforesaid debt, draw the articles, attend to the filing and recording, pay all expenses of incorporation, and devote “whatever time and attention might be necessary to the proper organization of said corporation and the sale of said stock.” It would seem that this agreement to incorporate was entered into as much for the benefit of Smith and Treat as ‘for the benefit of Ellis.

The contract of 1907 was abrogated — was “wiped out” — ' by this contract of 1908. Smith, P. R. p. 105; also A. T. p. 36. It is rather difficult to see how Smith and Treat were at ány time in position to charge Ellis with any liability on this contract until they had performed, or offered to perform, or had been legally excused from performing, ’their part. It would be difficult, also, to construe this contract as not embracing in its terms an obligation on the part of Smith and Treat to actually make a sale of said treasury stock. If the intention had „been that Smith and Treat were simply to use their best endeavors to sell the stock, the words “give whatever time and attention might be necessary for the sale of said stock” would hardly have been .used.

Smith did prepare the articles of incorporation, and Ellis signed and duly executed them, and left them with Smith, and expressed, also in writing, his willingness and intention to do everything required of him by the contract (P. R. p. 144); but Smith and Treat never filed the articles, and never sold the treasury stock, and never receipted to Ellis, and never released the mortgage. ,

The Oral Contract.

Ellis had an opportunity to lease the property to one Crane, and after consultation, he on June 5, 1909 (after 7 o’clock in the evening, according to Smith’s testimony, P. R. p. Ill), came into Smith’s office after an interview with Crane and said: “What interest do you expect in this property, if we carry out this lease?”

[299]*299It would have been more appropriate to call whatever interest they had in anything “an interest in the transaction,” not an interest in the property : but it is not hard to understand how Ellis would fall into the error or habit of thinking and speaking of Smith and Treat as having an interest in the property, for they had never canceled the mortgage, or given him a receipt for the debt,, and, besides, he may have thought that the incorporation contract gave them such interest. It would seem from the bringing of suit No. 721 and from, the fourth paragraph of the complaint in this caSe that Smith and Treat thought they had such interest, and, if they could think so, it would not be unnatural for Ellis to think the same.

According to Smith, Ellis “wanted to know if we would take our money back with big interest. I told him we would not; that, we had gone into the matter in the nature of a grubstake proposition. There was nothing there at the time we put the $500 into it, and our money had performed all the work that had been done on it since that time, and we certainly would not take a chance of that kind and just accept our money back.”

Smith further testifies (on page 112, P. R.) that they were anxious to get the property developed — something done with it — and that he and Treat retired into another room of the office, and after discussing the matter personally came back and stated to Ellis “what we would do.” When asked what that proposition was, he said that it was:

“That we would, insist upon our ownership of 20 per cent, interest in the property, but during the life of the lease we would accept 15 per cent, of the royalty, or allow Mr. Ellis to take 5 per cent, of our royalty for the purpose of compromising and securing a lease and the development of the property.”
“Q. What reply did Mr. Ellis make to that? A. He said that was all right.”

On June 5, 1909, then, according to the testimony of Smith, it was orally agreed that in consideration of the abandonment of the incorporation scheme Ellis would convey to Smith and Treat a one-fifth interest in the mining property. (Pages 4 and 5, A. T.) If that was the contract, it differs widely as to consideration from the contract alleged in the complaint.

[300]

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6 Alaska 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treat-v-ellis-akd-1920.