There is no relation of trust or confidence between mining
partners which is violated by the sale and assignment by one
partner of his share in the company assets and business to one or
more of his associates without the knowledge of the other
associates.
The record in this case discloses no equitable reason why the
defendants in error, who purchased the interest of third parties in
a mine in which all were jointly interested with the plaintiff in
error, should be held bound to share with the plaintiff in error
the interest so purchased.
This was a suit in equity. The facts which make the case are
stated in the opinion of the Court.
Page 114 U. S. 253
MR. JUSTICE WOODS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit in equity. The facts, as they appeared by the
pleadings and evidence, were as follows:
In January, 1878, two miners, named Davidson and Van Boxall,
located a mining claim near Leadville, Colorado, which they called
the "Winnemuck." In March following, they jointly conveyed to the
appellant, Bissell, and to the appellees Foss and Hunter each a
one-fourth interest in the property in consideration of their
agreement to furnish money to sink a shaft to the ores on the
claim. These parties worked the mine as mining partners until July,
1878, when Davidson and Van Boxall, with the consent of their
associates, sold their one-fourth to three persons, Rawlings,
Handley, and Robertson, called in the record "The Missourians," who
with Bissell, Foss, and Hunter continued the working of the
mine.
Tabor and Reische, who owned and worked a mine adjoining the
Winnemuck, on an alleged title not necessary to state, claimed the
ore from the Winnemuck mine, and instituted, from time to time,
attachment proceedings, by which they seized the ore as it was
taken from the mine. The associates who were working the Winnemuck
mine procured the release of the ore by giving forthcoming bonds,
with one Halleck as security, who signed the bonds on condition
that the money arising from the sale of the ore should be placed
and kept in bank as an indemnity to him until the ownership of the
ore could be settled. On this understanding, the proceeds of the
sale of the ore were deposited in the Miners' Exchange Bank of
Leadville.
In August or September, 1878, the owners of the Winnemuck,
Bissell, Foss, Hunter, and the Missourians, having received from
the sale of ore money more than sufficient to indemnify Halleck,
with the surplus bought and paid for an interest in the New
Discovery lode. About October 1, 1878, they had on deposit to their
credit in the bank $16,000, and Halleck was bound for them to the
amount of $12,000.
In the latter part of September, the Missourians offered for
sale their one-fourth interest in the mines. Bissell and Foss
were
Page 114 U. S. 254
anxious lest the interest of the Missourians should fall into
the hands of Tabor and Reische, who might thereby gain some
advantage in their suits then pending. They had a conversation in
reference to the purchase of the interest of the Missourians. They
differ in their account of this conversation. It is thus detailed
by Bissell:
"Along about the 30th day of September, Mr. Foss came to my room
and stated that the Missourians, as we termed them, were wanting to
sell their quarter interest in the property, and had offered it for
$30,000, and he said that he thought we had better go in and buy
it. I said to him that it was all well enough to buy it, if they
wanted to sell, but that I was confident that I could get it at
better figures. I said, 'I am almost certain, Mr. Foss, that I can
buy it for less; let me manage it and I think I can buy it for
$15,000,' and went on to say what I would say to them concerning
all the trouble and suits in the case. He said, 'Very well, if you
can get it for that, so much the better.' It was an agreement and
understanding between us that if we could get it for $15,000 we
were to take it."
He further stated in reference to the same interview:
"We sat down there and made figures to see if we could pay for
it out of the money belonging to the company in bank, and the
result of our figuring was, that we couldn't do it to the full
extent; that we could pay a portion of it from that money, and the
balance outside, each of us to raise our share."
In answer to the question, who were to have the interests in the
quarter to be purchased of the Missourians, he said:
"They were to go between us four, Trimble and Hunter, Foss and
myself. Mr. Trimble's and Hunter's were interests together; they
owned jointly that quarter interest, so I was informed by Mr.
Trimble and Mr. Hunter."
Foss gave the following account of his interviews with Bissell
in reference to their project to buy out the Missourians:
"I met Dr. Bissell over Tribe and Jeffrey's store in Leadville,
and we talked the purchase over. I told him that the boys wanted to
get out bad, and I thought they would sell pretty reasonable, but
that as I was working about there managing the mine, he could do
better than I could. I said
Page 114 U. S. 255
he had mentioned to us one night on the street $30,000 as a
price, but that we wouldn't agree to for a moment. We wondered how
we could do about the money for the purchase. If we could use the
company money, we thought we must use a little more than our joint
interest. Bissell was to see the boys in regard to it."
In answer to the question, "What was said about the price?" he
replied:
"We talked the amount; $20,000 was spoken of. He thought that
was too high and more than we should give. I thought so too, but
$30,000 was the price fixed by them. That I wouldn't think of for a
moment. We figured it over, but I don't remember the exact figures,
and we concluded that at $15,000 we could pay for it, in case we
could draw out the money in the Exchange Bank. Dr. Bissell thought
it could be bought for less than $10,000. There was no proposition
made for any definite price, but if we could buy the property, we
were to buy it together. He was to see what was the best he could
do with it."
He was then asked to state "whether there was, up to the time
you concluded the trade with Handley, any agreement with Dr.
Bissell that you and he should buy that property for $15,000," to
which he replied "No, sir."
After these conversations between Bissell and Foss, Foss, and
Hunter, early in October, 1878, purchased of the Missourians for
$15,000 their interest in the Winnemuck and New Discovery mines,
and in the money of the associates on deposit in the Exchange Bank.
The purchase was made in the name of Foss, but it was agreed
between him and Hunter that Hunter was to have two-thirds and Foss
one-third of the share. The money to pay for the share was all
advanced by Hunter, Foss agreeing to reimburse Hunter the
one-third. In order to induce the Missourians to sell at $15,000,
Hunter declared to them that he was willing to sell his fourth to
Foss for that sum, and actually made a pretended sale and
conveyance to Foss at that price.
Bissell was not informed of the negotiations for the sale and
purchase while they were going on, and Foss requested
Page 114 U. S. 256
Handley, the one of the Missourians with whom he treated for the
purchase, not to tell Bissell of the sale. After the purchase was
completed, Foss denied the right of Bissell to a one-third share of
the interest sold by the Missourians. Matters thus remained until
November 16, 1878, when the Tabor party, on one side, and Foss,
Bissell, and Hunter, on the other, joined in a conveyance of their
interests to B. M. Hughes, as trustee, to hold 73 out of 100 equal
shares for the Tabor party, and 27 for Bissell, Foss, and Hunter,
and, by agreement, the mines were to be worked and the moneys made
deposited in the First National Bank of Denver, one of the
appellees, and credited to the two parties in the proportions above
stated. On April 2, 1879, there was on deposit in the bank to the
credit of Foss, Bissell, and Hunter $92,502.58. It was in reference
to the division of this fund that this litigation arose.
If there had been no purchase of the interest of the
Missourians, Bissell, Foss, and Hunter would each have owned
three-twelfths of this fund. But Bissell, insisting that he was
entitled to a one-third of the one-fourth interest purchased of the
Missourians, claimed four-twelfths. Foss and Hunter, insisting that
Bissell had no interest in the share purchased of the Missourians,
contended that he was only entitled to three-twelfths of the fund,
and they jointly to nine-twelfths. Thereupon Foss and Hunter, on
April 26, 1879, brought the present suit in equity against the
First National Bank of Denver as the depositary, and against
Bissell as the adverse claimant, to recover nine-twelfths of the
fund. The bank answered the bill and at the same time filed a
cross-bill in which it alleged that it was merely a stakeholder,
claiming no interest in the fund and praying that Foss, Hunter, and
Bissell might be required to interplead. Bissell answered both the
original and cross-bills, claiming four-twelfths of the fund.
The sum in dispute between the parties seems to have increased
after the filing of the original bill, and before final decree
amounted to $36,454.35. This sum, by agreement of the parties, was
deposited in the registry of the court, and they
Page 114 U. S. 257
stipulated that the decision of the court should settle their
rights not only to the fund claimed in the original bill, but to
the whole amount in the registry of the court.
On final hearing, the circuit court decreed "that Foss and
Hunter were entitled to the $36,454.35 in controversy in the
registry of the court, and that it be paid to them." From this
decree, Bissell appealed.
It is clear that the appellant had no claim to the fund in
controversy unless he had some title, legal or equitable, to the
property which produced it. But he was not a party to the purchase
of the property by Foss and Hunter. The Missourians, who owned the
property, never bargained with Bissell to sell him any interest in
their share, and never conveyed to him any interest in it. They
contracted with Foss and Hunter only. Bissell never paid any part
of the purchase money; it was paid exclusively by Foss and Hunter.
His title, if he has any, is not based on any contract of purchase
made with the Missourians, nor on any contract or understanding
between him and Hunter. He bases his claim on the conversation and
agreement between himself and Foss. This agreement, as stated by
Bissell, was that Bissell and Foss should buy out the Missourians
for the benefit of themselves and Hunter and divide the share
equally between the three, and that each should pay one-third of
the purchase money. According to Bissell's own version, the
arrangement was based on the expectation that a large part of the
purchase money could be paid out of the deposit of the parties in
the bank. But the evidence shows that the money which they were at
liberty to draw from the bank would pay less than one-third of the
price at which the purchase was made. Foss testifies that all his
individual resources consisted of a small grocery store, not paying
much, and that he "was just living in the hope of beating
Tabor."
Looking at all the testimony, it is impossible to reach the
conclusion, unless we disregard altogether the evidence of Foss and
rely entirely on that of Bissell, that there was any well defined
agreement between them to buy out the Missourians at a specified
price or that the two had available resources to
Page 114 U. S. 258
make the purchase. Nothing but an arrangement left at loose ends
can be deduced from the evidence. But if the agreement had been
clear and definite, it could bind neither Foss nor Bissell until
Hunter was consulted and agreed to it. If Hunter declined, the
matter was at an end, and there was no obligation on either Foss or
Bissell to purchase for themselves or themselves and Hunter.
The record shows, and counsel for Bissell contend, that Foss
told Hunter about the arrangement, in reference to the purchase,
between himself and Bissell. There is no proof that Hunter assented
to the arrangement made between Foss and Bissell. It is clear that
he did not assent, for he made a different arrangement with Foss by
which he was to purchase and pay for two-thirds of the share of the
Missourians, and Foss the other third, and by which he was to
advance all the money to make the purchase, leaving the funds of
the associates on deposit in the Miners' Exchange Bank untouched.
It is plain, therefore, that the project of Foss and Bissell for
the purchase, for the joint benefit of themselves and Hunter, of
the share of the Missourians fell through. It could not be carried
out without the assent of Hunter, and he did not assent.
To show the fraudulent conduct of Foss and Hunter, stress is
laid by counsel for the appellant on the fact that they deceived
the Missourians by the pretense that Hunter was willing to sell,
and that he did actually sell, his one-fourth to Foss for $15,000,
and thus induced them to sell at the same price. But as the
Missourians were the only persons injured by this stratagem, if
anyone was injured, and they do not complain, we do not see how it
concerns the appellant. The device by which Foss and Hunter made
the purchase at $15,000 did not add to or detract from the rights
of the appellant. And as he is seeking to get the benefit of the
contract thus fraudulently made, as he alleges, it does not lie in
his mouth to complain of a fraud of which he is seeking to share
the fruits.
Bissell had no ground upon which he could base any contract
right to an interest in the purchase made by Foss for himself and
Hunter. He paid no money on the purchase, and he could not have
been compelled to pay any, either by the
Page 114 U. S. 259
Missourians, with whom he had no contract, or by Foss, who,
after Hunter had declined to acquiesce in the arrangement between
Bissell and himself, could not have demanded of Bissell that he and
Foss should buy for themselves. And if Foss had actually bought for
himself and Bissell, he could not have compelled the latter to pay
his half of the purchase money, for Bissell had never agreed to
such a purchase. The agreement could not bind Foss unless it also
bound Bissell. Bissell therefore did not, by reason of his
agreement with Foss, acquire any interest in the share purchased by
Foss and Hunter of the Missourians.
But the appellant insists that there was a mutual agreement
between Bissell and Foss that if either made the purchase, it
should be for the benefit of all, and that this agreement, although
not amounting to a contract which could be specifically enforced if
it had been made with a stranger, created between parties who
sustained to each other the confidential and trust relations which
existed between these parties a constructive trust which would be
enforced in equity.
The contention is that these three parties were in such
relations to each other that if one bought a share in the common
property and business, it inured in equity to the benefit of all,
subject to the payment by each of the associates of his share of
the purchase money. The relations from which this result springs
are stated to be those first, of joint tenants, and second of
partners, and that by reason of these relations, Foss and Hunter
became trustees for themselves and Bissell in purchasing the share
of the Missourians.
It is true that one of two or more tenants in common, holding by
a common title, cannot purchase an outstanding title or encumbrance
upon the joint estate for his own benefit. Such a purchase inures
to the benefit of all, because there is an obligation between them,
resulting from their joint claim and community of interest, that
one of them shall not affect the claim to the prejudice of the
others.
Rothwell v.
Dewees, 2 Black 613;
Van Horne v. Fonda, 5
Johns.Ch. 388;
Lloyd v. Lynch, 24 Penn.St. 419;
Downer
v. Smith, 38 Vt. 464.
But this rule cannot apply to Hunter and Foss. They
Page 114 U. S. 260
purchased no outstanding title or encumbrance to the prejudice
of the other tenant in common. They did what any tenant in common
with entire good faith might do -- namely purchased the interest of
some of their co-tenants without consulting the others. The title
which they purchased of the Missourians was not antagonistic or
hostile to the title of Bissell. Their purchase did not in any
degree tend to injure or damage his interest. His share was just as
valuable after as before the purchase, and his rights were the
same. In such a purchase, no trust or confidence is violated.
Nor do we think that the relations of the parties as partners
prohibited Foss and Hunter from making the purchase in question for
their own benefit to the exclusion of Bissell. The association of
Bissell, Foss, Hunter, and the Missourians was not an ordinary
partnership. It was what is known as a mining partnership, which is
a partnership
sub modo only, and is thus described by MR.
JUSTICE FIELD in
Kahn v. Smelting Co., 102 U.
S. 641:
"Mining partnerships, as distinct associations, with different
rights and liabilities attaching to their members from those
attaching to members of ordinary trading partnerships, exist in all
mining communities -- indeed, without them, successful mining would
be attended with difficulties and embarrassments much greater than
at present."
He then quotes a passage from the opinion in
Skillman v.
Lockman, 23 Cal. 203, to the effect that a mining partnership
is governed by many of the rules relating to ordinary partnerships,
but also by some rules peculiar to itself, one of which is that one
person may convey his interest in the mine and business without
dissolving the partnership, and then proceeds as follows:
"The same doctrine is asserted in numerous other cases not only
in that court but in the courts of England. Associations for
working mines are generally composed of a greater number of persons
than ordinary trading partnerships, and it was early seen that the
continuous working of a mine, which is essential to its successful
development, would be impossible, or at least attended with great
difficulties, if an association was to be dissolved by the death or
bankruptcy of one of its members or the assignment
Page 114 U. S. 261
of his interest. A different rule from that which governs the
relations of members of a trading partnership to each other was
therefore recognized as applicable to the relations to each other
of members of a mining association. The
delectus personae
which is essential to constitute an ordinary partnership has no
place in these mining associations.
Duryea v. Burt, 28
Cal. 569;
Settembre v. Putnam, 30 Cal. 490;
Taylor v.
Castle, 42 Cal. 367."
This case settles two propositions: first, that the members of a
mining association have no right to object to the admission of a
stranger into the association who buys the share of one of the
associates, and second that the sale and assignment by one of the
associates of his interest does not dissolve the mining
partnership. It follows from these propositions that one member of
a mining partnership has the right, without consulting his
associates, to sell his interest in the partnership to a stranger,
and that such a sale injures no right or property of the other
associates. Much less does a purchase by one associate of the share
of another inflict any wrong upon the other members of the
partnership. There is no relation of trust or confidence between
mining parties which is violated by the sale and assignment by one
partner to a stranger, or to one of the associates, of his share in
the property and business of the association.
It results as a conclusion from these premises that Bissell has
suffered no wrong at the hands of either Hunter or Foss on the
ground that they were his tenants in common or partners by reason
of any contract made between the latter in reference to the
purchase of the share of the Missourians in their joint enterprise.
There has been no violation of any trust and confidence arising
from the relations existing between Bissell, Foss, and Hunter.
The appellant, it is therefore clear, cannot demand any part of
the two-thirds interest purchased by Hunter in the share of the
Missourians. If he is entitled to participate in any way in the
purchase made by Foss and Hunter, it can only be in the one-third
interest purchased by Foss. But this demand cannot be based on any
contract between Bissell and Foss, for the contract arrangement
between them was conditioned upon the
Page 114 U. S. 262
consent of Hunter, and Hunter did not consent. It was also an
element of the agreement that the money of the associates on
deposit in the bank should be sufficient, and should be available
to pay a large part of the money required for the purchase of the
hare of the Missourians. But this condition also failed. He was
therefore bound by no contract with Bissell to make the
purchase.
The only question which remains is was Foss bound, when he
learned that the arrangement he had made with Bissell for the
purchase of the share of the Missourians could not be carried out,
to inform Bissell of the fact and give him a chance to join in the
purchase made by him and Hunter? It cannot be denied that, under
the circumstances, there was an obligation on Foss to inform
Bissell of the failure of their plan before making another with a
third person. But it was not a legal obligation capable of
enforcement
in foro externo, but only a natural obligation
to be disposed of
in foro conscientiae. Story Eq.Jur. ยง 2.
It was one of those obligations which was binding on the honor and
conscience of the party, but one not the subject of a suit, and not
to be enforced in a court of either law or equity.
We are of opinion that the decree of the circuit court was
right. It is therefore
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE BRADLEY and MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS dissented.