28 Wash. 211 | Wash. | 1902
The opinion of the court was delivered by
J. — Action for damages alleged to have been sustained by breach of contract between respondent, as lessor, and appellants, as lessees, of mining property in King county. The material stipulations of the contract are as follows:
“1. That said lessor hereby leases, demises and delivers over to said lessees the possession of all the property, including quartz mining claims, owned by said lessor on and near Miller river, in King county, Washington, with surface ground, dump, tramways, water rights, mill sites, tunnel openings, tunnel sites and likewise all dips, spurs, angles, metal ores, gold and silver bearing quartz, rock and earth thereon, and all rights and privileges and franchises thereto incident, appertaining and appurtenant, and therewith usually had and enjoyed. Said lease, demise and grant to be and to continue from the date of this agreement, and to end on the 27th day of October, 1904.
“2. That said lessees shall have, during the said term, the exclusive right to1 mine, ship, and treat any and all ores and minerals, from said mining property, and shall also have the right and privilege to furnish any and all kinds of machinery, of any nature whatsoever, for treating low grade and other ores, and shall in all ways have the exclusive possession and privilege of working said property as they deem most expedient and practical, and most advantageous to the interests of all parties hereto.”
The third article is, in substance, that within ten days from the date of the agreement the lessees shall pay $1,800 in cash of indebtedness of the lessor, and a balance due by lessor for a tramway already contracted to> be furnished for the mine, and construct all necessary snow sheds for
“5. That said lessees, their executors, administrators, or assigns, shall make the said lessor detailed statements of all Ores shipped and treated, and of all work done and expenses thereof, together with all expenditures, and furnish copies of vouchers (the originals to be shown on demand), on the 15th day of each and every month, for the previous month’s operations.
“7. And it is further expressly agreed between the parties hereto that the cost of all machinery or appliances delivered, placed, or erected for the purpose of mining or treating the said ores on the property of said lessor by the lessees, their executors, administrators, or assigns, shall be deducted, and reimbursed to the said lessees, their executors, administrators, or assigns before the division of any profits, or the payment of the said fifty per cent to the lessor; provided, always, that there shall he no deduction for the cost of machinery or appliances until the same shall have been incurred.”
The eighth article provides that lessees shall keep the properties free from debt and incumbrance, and pay the operating expenses on the 15th day of each month for the preceding month.
“9. It is further expressly covenanted and agreed between the parties hereto that if said lessees, their executors, administrators or assigns shall fail to erect and install the hoisting plant above referred to by March 1st, 1900, or the compressed-air plant, above referred to, within one year from the date of this agreement, that in either of such events, this lease shall he at once forfeited, and said lessor, its successors, or assigns, shall have the right to re-enter
The tenth article provides that there shall be no deduction from the proceeds of the ore shipped or smelted for other than the usual and necessary superintendence, the total amount of which shall at no time exceed $400 per month, unless agreed to by the president of the lessor company, and that the lessor shall have the right at any time during the continuance of the term to enter and inspect the working of the mine. By the fourteenth article it is provided that the lessees shall execute a bond to the lessor in the sum of $10,000 for the faithful performance of the contract. The contract was executed on the 28th of October, 1899. The defendants entered into possession of the mine under the contract, and continued therein until the 18th day'of May, 1900, when they relinquished the property and abandoned the contract. The complaint alleged the execution of the contract, the entry of the defendants into possession of the mine under its terms, the abandonment of the mine and the breach of the contract, and that respondent had faithfully performed all the terms and conditions of the contract obligatory upon itself, and damages for breach of the contract were laid at $30,847.39. The answer of appellants admitted the execution of the contract, the entering into possession of the
1. The errors assigned by appellants may be classified under two heads: (1) The measure of damages; (2) the exclusion from the jury of the issues and proofs of fraud. Upon the issue of fraud some testimony was tendered by appellants and excluded. Some testimony was admitted, but before the submission of the cause to the jury the court withdrew the two affirmative defenses and counterclaim, and submitted' alone to the jury the assessment of plaintiff’s damages. A careful consideration of the evidence tendered, as well as that given upon the issue of
2. But the important controversy arises upon the rule for the measurement of damages given to the jury. The second instruction of the court was:
“I charge you that it is not material in this case how much money the defendants may have expended in the development of the mine in question, nor is it material whether the mine is of great or of small value. You are simply to determine what has been the plaintiffs damage by the failure of the defendants tn carry out the terms of the lease, and you have no right to offset against this damage any amount that the defendants may have expended during the time that they were operating under said lease. The plaintiff is entitled to recover its damages under the rules that I shall hereafter give you, without any offset or deduction on account of expenditures made by the defendants in the operation of the mine.”
In the third instruction the court charged the jury, in substance, that, the contract provided that the lessees should within one year from the date deliver the four drill, water-power, compressed-air plant, and drive the tunnel as described for the distance of 800 feet; that ’not later than March, 1900, they should furnish and install the hoisting plant and all the other appliances mentioned in the contract; and that if it- should he found from the evidence that the defendants had not delivered such air plant and hoisting plant, and constructed the tunnel as mentioned, plaintiff was entitled to recover snch sum as
The rights of the parties must be determined by the interpretation of the contract, and in the light of the circumstances and conditions surrounding them. Prior to the 28th day of October, 1899, the lessor was the owner of certain mining property situated in the Cascade mountains, upon which certain development work had been done. Several hundred feet of tunnels and cross cuts had been made, and at least one winze sunk to the depth of some fifty feet from the lower tunnel. An ore chute had been disclosed of about eighty feet in length at the point where it was intersected by the main tunnel. A few carloads of ore had been shipped, showing very fair values. A considerable amount of ore taken by the lessor from the property in the course of its development work had been stored in one of the cross-cut tunnels. • At the breast and upon the surface of this ore, where it was exposed, good values were indicated. As the result of the development work done, and in the light of the value shown by the ores exposed to examination, there was promise of a mine which, when properly opened and developed could be operated at a profit. The lessor desired to contract with the lessees to assume the labor and responsibility, and advance in the first instance the necessary funds for the development and operation of the mining claims. The lessees desired to lease and develop the mine. It is apparent, from the surrounding circumstances and view point
“The building of the road and fence was a part of the consideration for the grant. The defendant chose to stipulate for the payment of the consideration in this way, and we cannot see why it is not as much bound to perform its agreement as if it had stipulated to pay in anything else. Suppose, for instance, it had agreed to deliver to- plaintiff, as a part of the consideration for the right of way, a thousand-dollar United States four-per-cent, bond, and then refused to keep the covenant. Would any one doubt that the plaintiff could maintain an action for its breach, and recover, as the measure of damage, the value of the bond ? We see no difference in principle between the case supposed and the present one. Here the agreement ivas to build a certain road and a certain fence. Tailing to build them we think defendant should be made to pay what it would reasonably cost to construct them.”
See, also, Logansport, etc., R. Co. v. Wray, 52 Ind. 578; Cincinnati Southern R. Co. v. Hudson, 88 Ky. 480 (11 S. W. 509); Cincinnati & Springfield R. Co. v. Village of Carthage, 36 Ohio St. 631; St. Louis, J. & C. R. R. Co. v. Lurton, 72 Ill. 118; Gathwright v. Callaway County, 10 Mo. 412; Wilson v. Graham, 14 Tex. 222; Mayor, etc. v. Second Ave. R. R. Co., 102 N. Y. 572 (7 N. E. 905, 55 Am. Rep. 839); Strutt v. Farlar, 16 Mees. & W. 249.
It may be observed of the reasoning in Taylor v. Railroad Co., supra, that an actual consideration had been paid; that is, the right of way had been granted. It is also inferable that the erection of the fence, and its main
“The rule adopted by this court in Holmes v. Nat. Gas Co., No. 123, June Term 1890, is not applicable here. In that case, the lessor -was to be paid only for oil or gas actually found and used: While there was a covenant that the lessee should drill a second well, it was not stipulated that anything should be paid for failure to do so; hence, the only way in which the plaintiff could possibly prove any damages, was by showing that there was oil or gas in his land which could and would have been obtained and utilized by putting down another well. In the case at bar, however, the damages for delaying to drill are fixed and liquidated by the parties themselves in their agreement.”
In the ease of Gibson v. Oliver, 158 Pa. St. 277 (27 Atl. 961), it was said of a similar contract:
“The manifest purpose of the lease wras to test the demised premises for oil and gas purposes by putting down two -wells thereon. This was not done, nor was it even attempted.”
It also appears that the damages were stipulated. So, in Cochran v. Pew, 159 Pa. St. 184 (28 Atl. 219), a similar conclusion was readied upon the authority of the pre
“ ... it not appearing from the evidence that the appellee would in any reasonable probability ba.ve been benefited by a compliance with the undertaking to commence operations by boring or mining for oil on bis land, be should in no event have recovered more than nominal damages for the breach of appellant's covenant;
It is a cardinal principle in the measurement of damages that the party injured shall receive compensation commensurate with his loss or injury, and it is the right of the person who is bound to pay the compensation not to be compelled to pay more than compensation and costs. It will be observed from an examination of the contract under consideration here that no reasonable inference of liquidated damages is gathered from its expressions. In this regard it differs from the'coal-land contracts before the supreme court of Pennsylvania in the cases before mentioned. The case of Colorado Fuel & Iron Co. v. Pryor, 25 Colo. 540 (57 Pac. 51), seems to be pertinent and applicable to the present controversy. In that case there was an undivided one-half interest in designated coal land, and the contract provided that the lessee for a definite period should enter upon the demised premises, and work them in the manner necessary to a good and economical mining of coal; that the work should commence an a specified date, and be prosecuted with reasonable diligence. The lessee rvas required to pay a fixed royalty on each ton mined. The plaintiff alleged that the lands contained large and valuable deposits of merchantable coal, which could be worked and extracted at a profit by the expenditure of money; that under the lease the lessee entered on the premises, opened up> a vein of coal, and had since re
“The party seeking to recover substantial damages for breach of a contract must establish the facts which entitle him to such recovery. ... In construing a contract, the first point to ascertain is, what the parties meant, understood and intended, as determined by the words employed . . . and, as an aid in this respect, the situation of the parties, and the facts and circumstances surrounding the transaction at the time of the execution of the contract, as, also, its subject matter and the object of the parties in making it, may be taken into consideration. . . . The premises were demised expressly for coal-mining purposes. They were not then, nor are they yet, in shape to produce. Whether they could be successfully operated as a coal mine depended upon future development. By the transaction the lessor expected to receive compensation in the way of royalty, and the lessee profits from the operation of the leased premises as a coal mine; so that the benefits thus realized would be mutual. Unless coal was found of a merchantable grade which could be produced at a reasonable profit, or if that discovered was valueless, to require the lessee to mine it and pay royalty on the production would im*226 pose a burden without any benefits in return. The obligation was imposed upon the lessee to open the premises as a coal mine, and operate them as such; hut, in tho absence of express provisions in the lease regarding what conditions should exist before a penalty would attach for a failure to observe this obligation, or under what 'circumstances it should comply with this provision, the law presumes that the parties to the leasei at the time of its execution, considered the purpose for Avliich it was executed and the conditions under which it would be mutually beneficial to carry out its terms and provisions, and, therefore, intended by the language employed to contract accordingly. 2 Parsons on Contracts, *499. The right to mine having been granted, tlie law implies that the lessee should exer’cise reasonable diligence in working the mine (Koch's Appeal, 93 Pa. St. 434) ; but unless coal actually existed on the premises of a merchantable grade, which could bo produced at a reasonable profit, or, if none existed, or that which was found was valueless, then, under this contract of lease, it would be under no such obligation.”
It is concluded that the rule for the measurement of damages announced by the superior court ivas erroneous; that the basis of the assessment must be compensation of the plaintiff for whatever loss it may have sustained by reason of the non-performance of the contract by tlie defendants. If the mine in fact was tested, and the ores extracted therefrom are without- commercial value, it would seem that the loss to plaintiff could not be substantial. If upon trial it is shown there is reasonable probability that ores can be taken from the mine at a reasonable profit, and what quantity can he reasonably produced under the terms of the contract when performed, the profits on plaintiff’s share of the ores so derived from tho mine should then be the measure of plaintiff’s damages. What is here determined is that upon the case as
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with these conclusions.
White, Eulleeton, Hadley, Mount, Anders and Dunbar, JJ., concur.