43 Wash. 523 | Wash. | 1906
For several years from 1886 or 1887 to 1894, the Northwestern Coal and Transportation Company, a corporation, operated the Bucoda coal mine in Thurston county, and used in connection therewith certain engines, boilers, pumps, coal and water cars, rails, tippers, screen bars, tools and implements, such as are ordinarily used in the coal-mining business. In 1894 the mine closed down, and has not since been operated. In 1896 or 1897 the property was sold by a receiver to the respondent herein, who purchased it for the benefit of the estate of John S. Doe;, deceased, of which estate he was one of the executors. By instrument dated at San Francisco, California, February 25, T897, Ella-nor H. Doe, in her own right and as guardian of the estate of Mary Marguerite Doe, a minor, authorized this respondent and one Charles F'. Doe, “as executors of the estate of John S. Doe, deceased,” to buy this property. Said written instrument contained this provision:
“And it is understood and agreed by and between; the said Bartlett Doe and Charles F. Doe and Ellanor II. Doe, that in event this property is purchased on said sale by and in the name of Bartlett Doe, the said purchase shall be made for and in the interest of the estate of John S. Doe, deceased, and not in the interest of Bartlett Doe individually.”
It appears that Ellanor H. Doe and Mary Marguerite Doe were beneficiaries under the will of said John S. Doe, deceased. From the years 1894 until 1903, the property herein involved was, with the exception of two years, assessed as personal property, and in the name of the Northwestern Coal and Transportation Company, and the taxes paid by respond
It is urged first by appellants- that respondent has no capacity to sue; that he is one of the executors of the will of said John S-. Doe, deceased, holding under an appointment by the court of the state of California, and consequently without authority to maintain any action as such executor in this state. We think, however, that the written, instrument signed by himself and Charles- F. Doe and Ellanor H. Doe; herein-before referred to, by virtue of which he purchased this propter ty, has the effect o-f constituting respondent the trustee of an express trust within the contemplation of Bal. Code, § 4825 (P. C. § 253)'.
The various questions raised in the briefs- with reference to the regularity and validity of the sale of this property
This brings us to an inquiry touching the amount of ree eovery. According to the findings of the jury, the value of the property taken aggregated $4,324,90. Under the instruction given by the trial court, the damage caused by the detention of this property should have been estimated at the rate' of six per cent interest from Uoveanber 18, 1904, to June 14, 1905, which would amount to $148.35. In answer to' special interrogatories, the jury found that the. cost of restoring the engines and the buildings where they were situate would be $100, and that the cost of restoring the boiler and its building would he $150. These were the only damages alleged in the complaint, which the trial court submitted to the jury. It ia
• Numerous errors are assigned by appellants upon the rulings of the trial court in admitting testimony. We think that some of the evidence to which appellants excepted was immaterial and incomipietent. But we think its injurious effect can he corrected by a reduction of the amount of the rer co-very.
The case is remanded to the superior court, with instructions to modify its judgment by reducing the amount of retcovery from $4,130 to $398.35. Costs in this court to- appellants.
Mount, C. J., Dunbar, Fullerton, and Crow, JJ., concur.