6 Indian Terr. 515 | Ct. App. Ind. Terr. | 1906
(after stating the facts). The appellant (defendant) files six specifications of errors, as follows: “(1) The court erred in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial. (2) The court erred in instructing the jury to find for the plaintiff. (3) The court erred in holding that there was sufficient evidence to sustain a verdict for the plaintiff. (4) The court erred in not instructing the jury that the contract between the plaintiff and defendant was contrary to public policy and in violation of law and void. (5) The court erred in not instructing the jury that the defendant railroad company had.no power or authority to make a contract such as the one sued on, and that the same was ultra vires and void. .(6) The court erred in not instructing the jury to find for the defendant, by reason of the failure of the plaintiff to perform the condition precedent of his contract, and by reason of the breach of plaintiff’s covenants for the uninterrupted possession of the said lands” — but discusses them under the head of three propositions. The first proposition is: “Whether, under the contract sued on in this case and the proof, the appellee, Bond, performed the condition and covenants of his contract, and whether therefore the appellant was required, under the terms of the contract, as controlled by the proof, to pay unto plaintiff any portion of the sum of $3,500.00 sued for herein.”
It is contended by the appellant that the agreement in the contract, to protect the defendants in the possession of said land until after its said reservoir shall be completed, is a condition precedent to the performance by the appellant of its part of the contract. The language used in the contract is: “To accomplish said end I agree that the sum of $3,500.00 for the property above referred to in the city of Hartshorne
It is perfectly evident that the contract was entered into between the plaintiff and defendant to secure a reservoir site for defendant. The improvements on the land Avhich
McLoud testified that the defendant commenced the construction of the dam, and while the work was in progress certain parties notified 'the defendant to stop Ayork, whereupon McLoud wrote plaintiff two letters, as follows:
“Little Rock, Ark., Feb. 10, 1902, At Hartshorne. R. I. Bond, Care St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, La. — Dear Sir: I have arranged with my clerk, Mr. McCullough, to get a check*522 for $365.00 from Mr. Varnall, to send to you, and I will cover it bjr voucher to Mm when I get home. Please sign the inclosed receipt and return to me.- James Brazill has served, notice upon our workmen not to build the dam. . He does not claim that he owns the land where the dam is being put, but claims that the building of the dam will cause the water to back up and make part of the reservoir on the land owned by him. He has notified us not to do any clearing for the reservoir, which, of course makes the building of the dam useless to us. 1 have instructed our men to go ahead with the work unless' they are actually stopped by him, and I shall depend upon you to fight out his claim. I went for Dr. Hailey and Jim Elliott today to have them call Brazill off, but we found he had gone to Little Rock, I suppose to see me. I came here from Guthrie and have to return there, and will not get back to Little Rock for several days. If you can instruct Chastain, either in Ms name or the name of Dave Thomas, to do anything to head Brazill off, I wish you would do it. One Brannon has also notified us that Minnie Brannon an Indian woman, claims the N. E. 34 tbe S. E. 34 of section 26, and the W. 34 of the N. W. 34 of the S. W. 34 °f section 25. I shall expect you to protect us against all these claims. I hope that you will have a pleasant trip to Havanna, and that you will get this inclosure before you leave. Yours truly, J. W. McLoud, General Solicitor.”
“Little Rock, Ark., Feb. 21, 1902. Dr. R. 1. Bond, Hartshorne, I. T. — Dear Sir: As you probably know, I have been hung up with an injunction suit at Guthrie, and just got back from there yesterday, and will have to return again Sunday night, and will probabty be up there all next week. If you want to write me there any time next week, do so in care of C. M. Barnes. I will depend upon you to protect us against Jim Brazill and all others. I have instructed our fellows to*523 keep at work and pay no attention to anything short of court order. I understand a bill which I prepared last fall has just just passed the House and Senate, and, if it has, we can twist their tails all right on this, reservoir matter. Yours truly, J. W. McLoud, General Solicitor.”
It appears from the testimony of plaintiff that the dam was completed without'interruption by any one: “Q. Was the work on that dam ever stopped by any outside party from the time it began until it was completed? A. No, sir; it was not. I passed through there every day in my practice, and the work never stopped on account of anything except rain and natural conditions. Q. Did they ever call on you to protect them in any way? A. No, sir. Q. Was the dam as a matter of fact completed? A. Yes, sir” — and under the terms of the contract the $3,500 became due. If this provision of the contract can be called a condition, it can only be a conditional promise, and, the condition having been performed, the defendant is liable to pay according to the terms of the contract. Lawson on Contracts, § 409: “A promise may be conditional, i. e., where the performance is not due immediately, but becomes so only after the happening of a future event. In such cases the condition precedent must take place before the party can be in default for not performing his promise.”
Appellant insists that it was compelled to institute condemnation proceedings to perfect title. When this contract was executed, the act authorizing condemnation proceedings had not been enacted. No titles in fee could be secured, the Indian was not authorized to convey title in fee, and the right to occupancy could alone be conveyed. The plaintiff fully complied with the terms of his contract. After the act of February 28, 1902 (chapter 134, 32 Stat. 43 [U. S. Comp.
The second proposition presented by appellant is as follows: “The court erred in not instructing the jury that the contract between the plaintiff and defendant was contrary to public policy, in violation of law, and void.” The contract •between plaintiff and defendant contained this clause: “I (Bond) further covenant and agree to (cause to) be assigned •and transferred to the said railroad company, a lease between •one Dave Thomas, an Indian citizen, and one J. D. Chastain, ■an Indian citizen, of date December 11, 1901.” The lease was dated December 11, 1901, and the plaintiff had the same duly assigned. In a letter written by the plaintiff, and directed to J. D. Chastain, at the instance of defendant's attorney, is explained what defendant desired to have done. It. is as follows: "Little Rock, Ark., Feb. 4, 1902. J. D. Chastain, Esq., Hartshorne, I. T. — Dear Sir: T have reached settlement with the Choctaw, Oklahoma, & Gulf Railroad Company in regard to the reservoir, and inclose you herewith the original lease 'between you and Dave Thomas for you to assign and acknowledge the assignment writing on typewriter and attached to the same. I also inclose you another lease drawn up in better form, from Dave Thomas to you, covering 240 acres of land, which please have Dave Thomas sign and acknowledge, and then you sign and acknowledge the assignment on the back of it to the railroad companjq and return these to Mr. McLoud, Little Rock, Ark. * * * Yours truly,
The third proposition discussed by appellant is as follows: “That the agreement or contract alleged to have been made between J. W. McLoud, general solicitor of the Choctaw Railroad, and R. I. Bond, was not authorized by the company through its directors or president, and therefore was not binding upon the company; and, further, that it could not have been authorized by the company because such contract by the company would have been ultra vires and void.” Appellant insists that it is not shown
The first act to authorize the Choctaw Coal & Railway Company to construct and operate a railway through the Indian Territory, and for other purposes, was approved February 18, 1888. 25 Stat. 35, c. 13. This act was amended February 13, 1889 (25 Stat. 668, c. 152), on February 21, 1891 (26 Sfiat. 765, c. 249), and also on January 22, 1894 (28 Stat. 27, c. 14), and on August 24, 1894 (28 Stat. 502, c. 330), an act was passed as follows: “An act to authorize purchasers of the property and franchises of the Choctaw Coal and Railway Company to organize a corporation and to confer upon the same all the powers, privileges, and franchises vested in that company,” section 5 of which is as follows: “That the said corporation, when organized as hereinbefore provided, shall have and possess perpetual succession and shall be able to sue and be sued, plead and be impleaded, in all courts of record and elsewhere, and shall have power to ordain, establish and
In 2 Beach on Corporations, par. 427, it is said: “When an act in its external aspect is within the general powers of a company, and is only unauthorized because it is done with a secret unauthorized intent, the defense of ultra vires will not prevail against a stranger who dealt with the company without notice of its intent. That a mining plant bought by a mining company, and adapted to its business, contained some properties that the company buying might not be authorized to purchase, does not avoid the notes given for the plant.
Appellee insists that the cases cited by appellants in Central Transp. Co. vs Pullman Palace Car Co., 139 U. S. 24, 11 Sup. Ct. 478, 35 L. Ed. 55, and Pennsylvania R. Co. vs St. Louis, A. & T. R. R. Co., 118 U. S. 317, 6 Sup. Ct. 1090, 30 L. R. A. 83, are not applicable, “for the reason that in the
It is our judgment that the action of the court below in directing a verdict for the plaintiff was correct, and the judgment of the court is therefore affirmed.