White v. Crow

17 F. 98, 5 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 310, 3 Colo. L. Rep. 543
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Colorado
DecidedJune 25, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 F. 98 (White v. Crow) 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
White v. Crow, 17 F. 98, 5 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 310, 3 Colo. L. Rep. 543 (circtdco 1883).

Opinion

Hallett, J

(orally).

In the year 1881 the Brittenstine Mining Company owned six or eight mining claims in the county of Chaffee. In the course of its operations it had incurred debts which it was unable to pay, amounting in all to $5,000 or $6,000, and early in [544]*544the following year, 1882, these claims were put into judgments by the parties who held them. There were five of these judgments, and upon three of them sales were made of the property of the company during the month of June, 1882. The delay in execution of the judgments was procured by the officers of the company, through some negotiations carried on with a view to the settlement of the demands. One of these judgments was obtained by Joseph R. Crow, upon a claim assigned to him by John B. Hensley, who was a stockholder in the Brittenstine Company, and the agent of the company in this State to receive service of process, appointed by the company pursuant to the statute of the State. He at one time had something to do with the management of the company, but at the time he assigned his demand to Crow, and at the time judgment was entered on that demand, he had no official connection with the company, but was in correspondence with its officers, residing in New York, in respect to the settlement of these claims. He assigned his demand against the company on the first day of January, 1882, or about that time, and on the 9th day of that month Crow brought suit and served his process upon Hensley, as the agent of the company in the State. Four days later, on the 13th of January, Hensley appeared in the County Court of Lake county, in which the suit was brought, and confessed judgment in favor of Crow against the company for the demand, amounting to $1,794.33. No execution was issued upon this judgment, or upon the other judgments, until some time in the month of July following; or if executions were issued, no sale was made until that time. I have not inquired as to the date of execution. The time for the redemption of the property expired in December of the same year. Proceedings were had in a Court of the State of New York, upon which the property of the company was sold by a receiver to Mr. John D. White, plaintiff in the bill in equity, on- which a decree is now to be entered. Mr. White was also a stockholder in the Brittenstine Company;'he was at one time its president. At the time of these transactions he was a director of the company, and at the time of the proceedings in the Court of New York also; and if the company was still in existence, of which I am not advised, after the sale of the property, he ivas still a [545]*545director.. In December following, as a purchaser of the property, he telegraphed to Mr. Smith, an attorney residing at Denver (I think on the 6th of December), to proceed to Leadville and Buena Vista, to confer with parties there, amongst others Mr. Hensley, in respect to claims and demands against this property, with a view to redeem from the sales which had been made on judgments obtained against the Brittenstine Company, as I have stated. An interview took place between Mr. Hensley and Mr. Smith, on the 7th of December, in reference to these matters, in which something was stated as to these several demands against the company, and some things which were not stated it was agreed might be ascertained from the records of Chaffee county, at Buena Vista, to which Mr. Smith proposed to proceed for the purpose of getting full particulars in respect to matters in which he was actiiig for Mr. White. Among other matters discussed at that time was a demand on the part of Hensley against the Brittenstine Company, and Mr. White as the successor of that company, for annual work done on the claims of the company during the years 1881 and 1882. Hensley represented that some of this work had been done, and some of it was still in progress; he expected to have evidence of its completion in a day or two to present to Mr. Smith, and if the property was to be redeemed he desired to have the money so expended refunded to him.

At this point it may be proper to state also that while Mr. Hensley had been corresponding with the officers of the Brit-tenstine Company in New York, and with Mr. White, plaintiff in this suit, to some extent, as to the settlement of these claims, he had also been acting for certain parties in St. Louis and Leadville—five or six of them—called in the evidence the “Western pool.” These parties—some of them, all, I believe, but one—had been stockholders in the company, and had agreed together to unite in the purchase of the several claims against the company, with a view to secure the property to protect the interest which they had in the company—to protect themselves in respect to moneys which they had expended in behalf of the company, and so on. It seems to have been thought desirable on the part of all persons who were con-[546]*546uected with these affairs to get this property; the property was much more valuable than the demands against it, and any one who should secure it would be able to realize something in addition to the claims which were made against it. With that view these parties, Noll of St. Louis, and Loker and Simons, and others, had appointed Mr. Hensley to communicate with the owners of these. claims and purchase them, and he had done so. He assumed to act, and did act, for them in the settlement of these claims, so far as they could be settled. He did not deny Mr. Smith’s right, or Mr. White’s right, to redeem the property at the time and in the manner provided by law, nor conceal his connection with the parties for whom he was acting. It seems to have been contended by counsel for plaintiff that his position in attempting to act for parties in New York, and at the same time for these other parties, was of doubtful character, but I do not discover anything in the evidence to impute wrong to him, or any effort on his part to conceal his relations with this Western pool, or the circumstance that he was endeavoring to secure the property for them. Thus matters stood about the 7th of December. The time for redeeming under one of the judgments would expire on the 10th, under another on the 17th, and under another, I believe, on the 24th of December. Mr. Smith, as the agent of White, redeemed from all the judgments but one; he went further, and paid off some judgments upon which no sales had been made. He went still further, and paid the money which was due for annual work; some of it due to Mr. Hensley, having been advanced by him, other portions to parties who had done the work. From the judgment in favor of Crow he declined to redeem, from some notion that that judgment was void in itself, or so far irregular that Mr. White was not bound to recognize it; upon the ground, I suppose, that Mr. Hensley having owned this claim at one time, his assignment to Crow was collusive; without consideration; done with intent to put the matter in judgment under process served upon him as agent of the company, and without the knowledge of the officers of the company; and upon the ground, also, that this judgment was entered within four days after the service of process upon Hensley, and by his confession, he [547]*547not having authority to act for the compan}^ in that behalf. That, I believe, is in substance the position assumed by counsel here, and this bill was filed to redeem from this judgment upon some such theory as that.

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Bluebook (online)
17 F. 98, 5 McCrary's Cir. Ct. Rpts 310, 3 Colo. L. Rep. 543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-crow-circtdco-1883.