48 P. 360 | Or. | 1897
Opinion by
This is an action to recover of defendant the sum of $1,500 upon a subsidy agreement. The case was tried before the court without the intervention of a jury, and the facts necessary to a determination of the questions involved are stated in its findings. They are as follows, omitting such as do not seem pertinent for an understanding of the situation:
“Second — That on the - day of May, 1890, the defendant entered into a written contract with the plaintiff in words and figures as follows, to wit: ‘We; the undersigned, hereby agree to pay to the Coos Bay, Rose-burg & Eastern Railroad Company the sums set opposite our names, respectively, to wit: Twenty-five per cent, when the first ten miles of said railroad is graded, commencing at or near Marshfield, Coos County, Oregon, and running - eastward towards Roseburg, and via Coquille City and Myrtle Point; twenty per cent, when the rails are laid on the first ten miles; twenty-five per cent, when the second ten miles are graded; twenty per cent, when the rails are laid on the second ten miles; and the balance when the road is completed to Myrtle Point, Oregon. As a consideration for the following subscription, the said railroad company will maintain a depot within the corporate limits of Myrtle Point, Oregon. Said road to be finished to Myrtle Point, Oregon, by January 1, 1891, and to Roseburg by December 31, 1891.’ Defendant subscribed said contract, and wrote after his name $1,500. * * * Third — That on or about the 15th day of July, 1890, the said defendant signed and executed an additional writing, as follows: ‘We, the*586 undersigned, subscribers to the subsidy of the Roseburg & Coos Bay Railroad Company, hereby agree to extend the time of the completion of said road from Coos Bay to Myrtle Point from January I, 1891, to May 1, 1891. All other conditions of the contract signed by us to remain unchanged.’ Fourth- — That work in construction of said road was commenced in the month of August, 1890, at Marshfield, and the first ten miles thereof graded about the 1st of February, 1891. Fifth — That the said railroad .was graded to Myrtle Point, and the rails laid thereon, in the month of August, 1893, an<3 the road completed to that point at said date. Sixth — That said railroad has not been constructed to Roseburg, and no work has been done on the construction thereof eastward from Myrtle Point. Eighth- — That defendant has not paid any part or installment of the amount subscribed.” As a conclusion of law, the court found: “That plaintiff was in default in the performance of the contract in the complaint set out at the time this action was commenced, and therefore cannot maintain the action.” A judgment of dismissal was entered, and plaintiff appeals.
The agreement which forms the basis of this action is much the same as the one sued on in Coos Bay R. R. Co. v. Nosler, 30 Or. 547 (48 Pac. 361), just decided, and the interpretation of each is governed by the same rules. Hence we shall simply make a brief statement of our interpretation of this agreement without a discussion of the rules, and in support thereof we cite the Nosier case. Uríder the agreement in the case at bar, like the Nosier agreement, it was no doubt within the contemplation of the parties that payment of the subsidy should and would be made in five installments, and that four of them might become due and payable prior to the completion of the road to Myrtle Point. The completion of the road to Myrtle Point and the payment of the last installment
Reversed.