Nisbet v. Nash
Synopsis
Mining Partner.—If one partner and part owner in a mining claim convey his interest to a stranger, the latter becomes thereby a partner with the other owners, and entitled to all the rights of his grantor.
Dissolution, Partition, and Accounting.—A partner cannot have partition and accounting without a dissolution of partnership; and a dissolution being found and decreed, the decree should provide for an accounting.
1. One of several parties engaged in a mining venture may, at his pleasure, sell his interest in the property acquired; but he cannot, except under special circumstances of wrong or oppression, maintain an action for partition. Our statute fixes the relations, duties, and liabilities of parties engaged in mining ventures toward one another; and it was the intention of the Legislature in giving to a party thus engaged with others the right to put another in his place without interrupting the business, to take away the common-law right of requiring a dissolution of the copartnership, and as well the right of a cotenant to demand partition of the common property. As a rule it would be ruinous to mining enterprises if the owner of a small interest in the mine could demand as matter of right partition or sale of the mining property.
2. The majority in interest of a mining partnership have the right to control the working of the mine and the affairs of the company. (Dougherty v. Crary, 30 Cal. 300.)
In this case, Nash, Fletcher, and Sexey owned three-fourths of the mine, and John Nisbet the other fourth. Together they had prosecuted work for more than three years for opening and developing the mines, and had expended more than three thousand dollars on the work. The contractors, of whom the plaintiff was one, abandoned their contracts, and the company, or at least three of the four members of it, determined that it was for the best interest of the company to suspend work for the time and to wait until a supply of water could be obtained at reasonable rates. They did not abandon the mine nor the purpose to work it, but only suspended work for the time. This the majority in interest had the right to do. (Civil Code, sec. 2520.)
That section declares that “ the decision of the members owning a majority of the shares or interests in a mining partnership binds it in the conduct of its business.”
3. Under the contract between Sexey and Fletcher of the [549]one part, and Nash and Nisbet of the other, the plaintiff was not entitled to demand or claim any portion of the five thousand dollars purchase-money from Sexey and Fletcher until it should be made out of their share of the net profits arising from the use of the property conveyed.
P. O. Hundley, for Appellant, Plaintiff.
1. That when Fletcher and Sexey purchased an undivided half of the mining claim from Nisbet and Nash, and actually engaged in the working of the claim, expending the sum of three thousand dollars and over, they became mining partners. (Civil Code, sec. 2511; Taylor v. Castle, 42 Cal. 370.)
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