105 Cal. 447 | Cal. | 1895
This is an action by W. E. Dennison, the respondent, against E. W. Chapman, the appellant, upon an alleged breach of a contract by which the defendant agreed to purchase a mine for the joint benefit of plaintiff and defendant.
Plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for thirteen hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents and costs. The appeal is from the final judgment and from an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.
On the second day of September, 1889, plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract, by the terms of which defendant agreed (provided the purchase could be made at a price satisfactory to the parties respectively) to purchase, within thirty days from the date of
Upon such purchase being made the plaintiff was to be placed in charge as superintendent for a term of one year at a monthly salary of one hundred and fifty dollars.
Defendant was for the period of one year to reserve and carry for the plaintiff a one-fourth interest in the mine, and at or before the expiration of the year to give plaintiff a clear title to such one-fourth interest at cost price thereof up to the time of conveyance, the defendant to he paid such cost price out of the proceeds of the mine. Defendant was to furnish plaintiff suitable quarters for himself and family.
The agreement was to be a full settlement of all accounts between the parties up to the date of its execution, and five hundred dollars paid by defendant to the plaintiff on the execution of the agreement was to be considered as an advance on account of salary.
Omitting some minor provisions of the agreement, not essential to present purposes, it contains this further clause: “It is further mutually agreed by the parties herein, respectively, that should the said Bumfeldt mine be not purchased, then this agreement shall extend and apply to any other mine or mines that may be obtained by the said party of the first part at prices mutually satisfactory to the parties hereto within ninety (90) days from the date of this agreement.”
The Rumfeldt mine, upon examination, proved unsatisfactory, and was not purchased. There was in El Dorado county, California, a gold-bearing quartz mine known as the “Taylor mine,” owned by E. S. Chester and W. E. Straut, who, with defendant and some others, organized a corporation under the name of the Idle wild Gold Mining Company, to which corporation the Taylor mine was conveyed.
On the ninth day of October, 1889, said Chester and Straut, as parties of the first part, entered into an agreement with defendant and his brother, W. S. Chapman,
All the profits and dividends on the fifty thousand shares of stock sold were to go to the parties of the first part until they were fully paid, and the fifty thousand shares of stock was to be issued in the names of the Chapmans, and deposited in escrow, to be held until payments were all made, and then delivered to the parties of the second part, the said Chapmans, of whom defendant was one.
The complaint avers that the purchase by defendant of such interest in the Taylor mine was made under and pursuant to their agreement, that plaintiff and defendant began to operate the mine, that plaintiff continued to operate and superintend the mine, as per his agreement, and on his part performed all his obligations under the contract, that defendant failed to furnish any quarters for plaintiff and his family, and on the first day of October, 1890, defendant discharged him and refused to deliver to him any share of the stock, etc.
The answer denies that the purchase of stock in the Idlewild Gold Mining Company by defendent was made under, or pursuant, or in fulfillment of his agreement with the plaintiff, or that plaintiff was ever superintendent of said mine, etc.
The complaint averred the value of twelve thousand five hundred shares of stock to which he was entitled to be sixty-two thousand five hundred dollars; by an amendment thereto it was averred that, by reason of
The complaint averred that W. S. Chapman was only a nominal party to the purchase of the stock, that defendant really owned the whole fifty thousand shares purchased, and that plaintiff was entitled to one-fourth part thereof.
This was denied by the answer, and it may be remarked here that the uncontradicted evidence showed defendant to be the owner of only one-half of the purchase, or of twenty-five thousand shares of the stock. It followed that if plaintiff was entitled to recover, it was for one-fourth part of defendant’s purchase, equal to six thousand two hundred and fifty shares. The shares were admitted by the answer to be worth two dollars each.
Appellant urges certain objections to the complaint, viz: 1. That so far as it relates to the stock it sounds in replevin, which does not lie upon an unexecuted agreement for the purchase and sale of personal property; 2. That the contract of September 2,1889, never became operative, for the reason that no purchase of a mine ever occurred; 3. That there is no allegation in the complaint that the Idlewild stock was purchased at prices mutually satisfactory.
There was no demurrer interposed to the complaint. It follows, therefore, that all merely technical objections are waived, and we have only to determine whether the complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
The prayer of the complaint was for judgment against defendant for the possession of the shares of stock, or their value in the event possession cannot be' had, in the sum of, etc.
Where, as in this case, there is an answer to the complaint, the court may grant the plaintiff any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issue. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 580.)
As to the contention that the contract never became operative, for the reason that no mine was ever purchased by defendant, we have only to turn to the complaint to see that it is charged that under the contract one-half of the Taylor mine was in effect purchased, and that the better to carry out the contract of purchase a corporation was formed, to which the mine was conveyed, and the stock issued to the several parties in proportion to their interest, all of which appears from the contract (Exhibit A), made a part of the complaint.
This was in effect, although not literally, the purchase of a mine, or of an interest therein. If done under and in pursuance of the contract, and acquiesced in by the parties, it was as binding upon them as though the fee to the mine had been conveyed directly to the defendant.
If A agrees to purchase for B one thousand bushels of wheat, at a given price per bushel, but only succeeds in purchasing one-half of that quantity, B is not bound to accept it under the contract; but if he does so, he must pay for it, and most certainly A could not afterward object that the contract did not bind him.
In the present instance plaintiff, under the contract, might have insisted that an entire mine should be purchased, and that the legal title should pass to defendant, but if, instead thereof, defendant, under the contract, purchased, not the whole, but a one-fourth, interest in a mine, the ownership of which was evidenced, not by the legal title, but by certificates of stock showing a
The complaint does not, in precise language, aver that the stock was purchased “ at prices mutually satisfactory to the parties,” as expressed in the agreement.
It does, however, charge “ that the purchase by the defendant of said stock and said interest in said mine and mining property was made under and in pursuance of and in accordance with the agreement between the plaintiff and defendant, as set forth in paragraph 1 of this complaint.” If made in accordance with that agreement it must have been at a price mutually satisfactory to the parties.
It further charges that in pursuance of the agreement plaintiff and defendant immediately began to operate said mine. These and other allegations indicate that the price was satisfactory to plaintiff, as the fact of purchase indicates it was to defendant, and, in the absence of a special demurrer, was sufficient.
There was evidence sufficient to support the verdict. To comment upon it at length would be productive of no good results. It was conflicting upon the vital question as to whether the purchase of the stock in the Taylor mine was made pursuant to the contract, and for the joint benefit of plaintiff and defendant, as in the contract provided, or independent of that contract, and, unless some error of law has intervened fatal to the verdict, it must stand.
By far the most serious question involved in the case arises under the instructions of the court to the jury.
The fourth and sixth instructions given to the jury at the request of plaintiff are as follows:
“ 4. It is admitted that the defendant, Chapman, did not purchase the whole of the Taylor mine or of the stock of the Idlewild Gold Mining Company. It is claimed by Dennison that Chapman purchased one-half of the stock
“6. As before stated to you, Dennison claims in the complaint that Chapman bought fifty thousand shares of the capital stock of the Idlewild Gold Mining Company, and that while twenty-five thousand shares were taken in his brother’s name, his brother was but the nominal owner of it. It is admitted by the defendant, Chapman, that he bought twenty-five thousand shares. If you find from the evidence that the defendant, Chapman, entered into that mining venture, and purchased the stock in pursuance with the agreement between himself and Dennison, then you are instructed that Dennison would be entitled to at least one-fourth of twenty-five thousand shares of the stock of the said Idle-wild Gold Mining Company; that is to say, he would be. entitled to six thousand two hundred and fifty shares. It is admitted by Chapman that this stock is of the value of two dollars per share or twelve thousand five hundred dollars in all.”
The court also gave the second instruction asked by the defendant, which is as follows: “ I instruct you that, upon the written contract contained in this complaint, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover any thing for the Idlewild stock, unless there was some other and a further agreement between them by which the plaintiff would be entitled to the stock. In other words, the contract of September 2, 1889, contemplated the purchase of a mine, and’ does not apply to and is not applicable
It is quite apparent that there is a conflict in the instructions given on behalf of plaintiff and that given at the request of the defendant.
The former instructed the jury in substance that if the stock or an interest in the Taylor mine was purchased under and pursuant to the contract between the parties of September 2, 1889, plaintiff was entitled to a one-fourth interest therein; while the instruction given on behalf of defendant informed the jury that the agreement of September 2, 1889, contemplated the purchase of a mine, and is not applicable to the purchase of stock in a mine, and that, unless there was another and different agreement entered into between the parties in addition to the original contract, plaintiff could not recover on account of the nondelivery of the stock.
We are of opinion the instructions on behalf of the plaintiff were correct and that in favor of the defendant erroneous.
As before stated in substance, if the purchase of the stock was made under and pursuant to the contract, and accepted by plaintiff as such compliance, it is not perceived that any other further or additional contract was necessary.
It may well be that in the event of delivery of the stock some arrangement would have been necessary to secure to defendant the dividends until he was reimbursed for his outlay on account of the interest to be transferred; so it would have been had defendant purchased the mine and conveyed a fourth interest to plaintiff at the end of one year, with a proviso that de
The view of the defendant as detailed by plaintiff in his testimony seems rational. He said, according to plaintiff’s testimony: “ Now, we will go up there and take a look at it, and if you think well of the way I put this to you, and think well of the mine, all right, and we will vary our contract to suit the case exactly, if it needs any modification, but I cannot see that it does not apply to this case. You may have to abate your demand on me. I have not got all of the mine now, and you will have to have one-fourth of what I have.”
Plaintiff testified that upon visiting and examining the mine he was pleased with it, and that they then proceeded to develop it, etc.
The erroneous instruction was in favor of appellant, and it has been repeatedly held by this court that a conflict in instructions which could not operate injuriously to appellant is not ground of reversal. (Estate of Gharky, 57 Cal. 280; People v. Velarde, 59 Cal. 464; People v. Smith, 59 Cal. 601; People v. Ah Luck, 62 Cal. 503; People v. Turcott, 65 Cal. 126.) Again, a party cannot except to instructions given at his own request, and in this case did not attempt to do so. (Sierra etc. Co. v. Baker, 70 Cal. 572.)
It follows that as the instructions excepted to were proper to be given, and as the erroneous instruction was in favor of appellant and given at his request and could not have injured him, the judgment should not be reversed for that cause.
The instructions taken together were as favorable to the defendant as the law would warrant.
Of the instructions asked on behalf of the defendant and refused it need only be said some of them were in substance embodied in instructions given, others not applicable to the issues made by the pleadings and. the
The pivotal point in the case was as to whether or not the purchase of the stock was made under and pursuant to the contract of September 2,1889; that question determined in favor of the plaintiff, as it was by the verdict, and the recovery is as little as could reasonably be expected from the evidence.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed.
Vanclief, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order appealed from are affirmed.
Harrison, J., Garoutte, J., McFarland, J.