122 P. 626 | Wyo. | 1912
This action was commenced in the district court of Converse County by the defendant in error as plaintiff and who will be referred to in this opinion as plaintiff, against the plaintiff in error as defendant and who will hereinafter be .referred to as defendant, upon two alleged causes of action upon separate accounts. The first cause of action is for an alleged indebtedness of $1,538.72 on an account for work, labor and services performed and expenditures made in and about the business of and at the request of defendant between August 16, 1904, and July 30, 1906. The second cause of action is for money alleged to have been paid out at different times for and on behalf of defendant and upon his request between January 1, 1905, and December 1, 1908. It is alleged that a copy of each account marked respectively exhibits “A” and “B” is attached to and made a part of 'the petition. Exhibit “A” upon which the first cause of action is based is entitled “Robert O. Hilliard, Dr., to Douglas Oil
“The above case having heretofore in obedience to the order of this court of May 13, 1910, been set down for-trial on September 6, 1910, and having been continued until September 9, 1910, and the same having been proceeded with on the last named date by the consent of counsel the case having been adjourned to Cheyenne for the introduction of further testimony and final argument to be had at such time as the business of the court would permit, and the business of the court now permitting it to be heard, come now the above named parties on this 30th day of December, 1910, by their respective attorneys, and the case is proceeded with by the introduction of evidence until the conclusion of the same, and thereupon the same is argued to the court, and the court being duly advised in the premises and the defendant having requested the court to separately state its findings of fact and its conclusions of law herein does say and find as follows, to-wit:
I.
FINDINGS OF FACT.
1. That by reason of the matters and things set forth in the first cause of action of plaintiff’s petition herein, the defendant on July 30, 1906, became indebted to the plaintiff for the items and in the amounts set forth in said first cause of action and more particularly specified in Exhibit A at*211 tached to and made a part of said petition not in the sum of $1,538.72, b'ut in the sum of $1,387.29, for services and expenditures made by the plaintiff on behalf of the defendant; that no part of said amount has been paid by said defendant or by anyone on his behalf; and that the interest on said sun? from August 30, 1906, to the present time is $480.93.
•2. That by reason of the matters and things set forth in the second cause of action in plaintiff’s petition herein the defendant on November 8, 1908, became indebted to the plaintiff for the item's and in the amounts set forth in said' second cause of action and more particularly specified in Exhibit B, attached to and made a part of said petition, as the same were corrected on the trial of the case in the sun? of $1,061.86; that no part of said sum has been paid said plaintiff by said defendant or by anyone on his behalf; and' that the interest on said sum from December 8, 1908, to the present time amounts to the sum of $174.61.
II.
CONCLUSIONS OR LAW.
And as conclusions of law this court does say and find as; follows, to-wit:
1. That under the first cause of action as set forth in-plaintiff’s petition there is now due from the defendant to. the plaintiff the sum of $1,387.29 as principal and $480.93 as interest amounting in all to the sum of $1,868.22; and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover said sum from the defendant and to have judgment and execution therefor.
2. That under the second cause of. action set forth in plaintiff’s petition herein there is now due the plaintiff from the defendant the sum of $1,061.86 as principal and $175.61 as interest, amounting in all to the sum of $1,236.47; and that the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant said sum and to have judgment and execution therefor.
3. That the plaintiff is entitled to recover from the defendant its costs herein and to have judgment and executions therefor.”
“To all of which findings of fact, conclusions of law, judgment and order the defendant does now and here except.”
A motion for a new trial was made and presented to the court which overruled the same and the defendant brings error.
If, however, the proper exception had been made still the judgment should not be reversed if it appears from the record that such failure or refusal to make special findings of fact was not prejudicial error. It is said in 38 Cyc., at page 1953 as follows: “The making of findings of fact and conclusions of law is for the protection of both court and parties, the purpose of such findings and conclusions being: to dispose of the issues raised by the pleadings, and to make the case easily revi'ewable by exhibiting the exact grounds upon which the judgment rests.” It simplifies the matter of appeal upon the question as to whether upon a given state of facts, or special findings of fact the law has been correctly applied. Had the defendant desired to do so he could have brought that question here for determination without a
In Ingle v. Jones, 2 Wall. (69 U. S.) 1, 17 L. Ed. 762, the doctrine is clearly announced as follows: “While a special contract remains executory, the plaintiff must sue upon it. When it has been fully executed according to its terms and nothing remains to be done but the payment of the price, he may sue on the contract or in indebitatus assumpsit, and rely upon the common counts.” In Smith v. Wambacker and Weil, supra, a contract was introduced in evidence and it was claimed that this contract limited the recovery to certain things specified therein alone. The action was an action on an account, and the contention of the defendant that the action should have been on the contract was not sustained. In Frontier Supply Co. v. Loveland, supra, the petition, as in the case here, was in the short form under section 4406, Comp. Stat. 1910 (sec. 3560 R. S. 1899) upon an account for goods sold and delivered. This court said: “Conceding that there are special contracts as contended contemporaneous with and precedent to the sale, the right of election as to pleading the cause of action remained in the plaintiff.” In Metcalf v. Gilbert, supra, this court said: “It is settled law that where the contract has been fully performed by the plaintiff, and nothing remains to be done but the payment of the money by the defendant, it is not necessary to set out or declare upon the special contract, but the liability of the defendant may be enforced under a count for the reasonable value of the services. In such case the contract may be used as evidence, and the recovery can not exceed the amount thereby agreed upon; the only effect in such case of proof of an express contract as to price is that the stipulated price becomes the quantum meruitThe plaintiff having the right and having so pleaded the general denial contained in the answer put in issue the liability of the defendant. The authority to make the charge could be siis-
The contracts being thus in the record, in so far as they are germane to the issue upon the alleged indebtedness sought to be recovered in this suit, they must be construed in determining whether the judgment is unsupported by the evidence and is contrary to law.
It will be observed that title to all the land by virtue of and included in the Hamilton lease was involved in the suits with Hamilton at the time the arbitrators made their award. The interests of Hilliard and the Douglas Oil Fields in sustaining the lease were common. The arbitrators .attempted to sever such interests under the contract of August 16, 1904, which provided that Hilliard would take or claim or insist •only upon such title as the company had. The sub-lease or agreement of October 31, 1904, by its terms is a substitute for any other deed or instrument as showing Hilliard’s title and right under the Hamilton lease as ascertained by the arbitrators. It was the company’s title under the lease that was being assailed and which materially affected Hilliard’s interest therein and was in litigation at the time the award was made by the arbitrators. The acreage awarded to Hilliard constituted one-third of the acreage covered by the Hamilton lease. He and the company held title from a common source. Failure to maintain the company’s title to the land in the litigation would be equally fatal to Hilliard’s title. While he repudiates the contract, we think he must be charged with notice of the arbitrators’ action and the award to him of this land, and further,- whether McWhinnie was clothed with power to bind him to the contract of October 31, 1904, or not, that .such contract was admissible in evidence as showing a compliance with the arbitrators’ award, and in the absence of fraud or exception thereto he will be held to have accepted the fruits of such award. Having agreed to take such title only as the company had he took the title impressed with a law suit and we think was charged with notice that the title was being litigated.- Under such circumstances, Hilliard must be held equitably bound to pay his proper proportion of the expenditures of the plaintiff in .defending the lease, and the same are recoverable in this kind of actionand the evidence tending to show his knowledge that such expenditures were being made for his benefit
AVe are therefore of the opinion that’the judgment upon the first cause of action should for the reasons stated be reversed; and that the judgment upon the second cause of action' should also be reversed and vacated for the foregoing reasons unless the plaintiff shall, within 60' days after the mandate herein is filed in the District Court, remit all of