135 P. 904 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
On July 20, 1906, an agreement was entered into between Margaret Northey, Stephen H. Northey, the Butte & Boulder Mining & Lumber Company and H. L. Frank. This agreement is prefaced by an introductory clause which recites that the min
This action was brought by the heirs of Frank, to recover as for an indebtedness due. They allege the execution of the contract; that the money was actually furnished by Frank and used by the company; that no part has ever been repaid; that the company has never realized any earnings in the operations of its business after deducting its running expenses; and that a reasonable time has elapsed since the defendant received the money from Frank. There is a second cause of action upon an assigned claim. The answer admits the execution of the contract, denies that there is anything due, and sets forth some affirmative matters, which, however, were on motion stricken out, and no exception was reserved. The trial court found the issues in favor of the plaintiffs and rendered judgment for the whole amount claimed upon both causes of action. From that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.
While the appellant in its brief asserts that the complaint does not state a cause of action upon either cause of action set forth in the complaint, no argument whatever is offered in support of that contention, as it applies to the second cause of action,
The principal contention arises over the construction of that
Appellant relies upon cases which hold that a contingency, such as the one before us, affects the liability, renders the obligation conditional, and imposes upon the party seeking its enforcement the burden of showing that the contingency has happened or the condition has been fulfilled, before recovery can be had. Among the cases are Blake v. Coleman, 22 Wis. 415, 99 Am. Dec. 53; Lyman v. Northern Pac. Elevator Co. (C. C.), 62 Fed. 891; Munro v. King, 3 Colo. 238; Toombs v. Consolidated Poe M. Co., 15 Nev. 444; Breaux v. Lauve, 24 La. Ann. 179; Tebo v. Robinson, 100 N. Y. 27, 2 N. E. 383; Orman v. Ryan, 25 Colo. 383, 55 Pac. 168; and Congdon v. Chapman, 63 Cal. 357. The conflict, however, between the cases cited by appellant and those relied upon by respondents, is more apparent than real. Every ease has been decided upon its own peculiar facts and surrounding circumstances, the courts being unable to formulate any definite, general rule upon the subject. The authorities are therefore of little, if any, value as precedents.
In the contract before us the parties appeared entirely capable of expressing themselves in plain, terse English. No one complains that the language employed is not explicit or that it is
In Lyman v. Northern Pac. Elevator Co., above, it appeared that the elevator company issued its notes or evidences of indebtedness which provided that they should be “paid out of the first net earnings of the company ”; of this Judge Williams said: “It is very clear from the agreement and note, which must be read as one paper, that there is no liability of the company on this note, except out of the net earnings, and that, if net earnings have not been made, it cannot be contended that the company is liable for the face of the note as absolutely as if there was no provision either in the note, or in the contract of August 15, 1890, respecting the payment out of the net earnings. Certainly, the clause was inserted for some purpose—either to limit the liability or to add to the security of the stockholder. It certainly does not add to his security, for if no provision had been inserted when the note became due, not only the net earnings but all of the company’s property could have been applied to the payment of the note. It therefore limited the company’s liability to the net earnings. If it was intended as a pledge of the net earnings as security, such language would have been used in the contract; but the contract does not provide that the net
Whatever impulses may control individual action, courts must
In Congdon v. Chapman, above, there was involved a writing by which Chapman agreed to pay Congdon for certain shares of stock in a mining company ten cents per share “from the first moneys which can be realized from the sale of any stock of said company owned or controlled by him; * * * and said Chapman agrees to use all reasonable efforts to realize on the stock of said company owned or controlled by him without unnecessary delay, to the end that said payment may be made to said Congdon.” In an action by Congdon against Chapman to enforce payment upon the theory that the shares were to be paid for within a reasonable time, whether Chapman sold his stock or not, the court held the defendant not liable, and said: “By this agreement the parties clearly expressed their intention that the stock should be paid for out of the first moneys that could be realized from the sale of any stock of the company owned or controlled by Chapman; the latter further agreeing to use all reasonable efforts to realize on the stock without unnecessary delay, ‘to the end that shid payment may be made to said Cong-don.’ At the trial the court below found that the defendant used reasonable diligence and made all reasonable efforts to sell the stock, but had been unable to sell any of it. Under such
In so far as the judgment in favor of the plaintiffs is based upon the first cause of action it is erroneous. The cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to dismiss the complaint as to the first cause of action and to enter judgment in favor of plaintiffs upon the second cause of action nunc pro tunc, as of the date of the original judgment. Each party will pay his own costs of this appeal.