193 P. 1036 | Or. | 1920
In defendant’s abstract of record appear fifty-five assignments of error. In its brief it rests its cause upon seven propositions, which it vigorously maintains. The plaintiff alleged damage by reason of four asserted breaches by defendant of the contract between the parties, and stated his rights of action growing out of said breaches as separate causes in one complaint. The court having overruled the defendant’s motion requiring the plaintiff to elect upon which of his alleged causes of action he would rely, it assigns the court’s action as error.
‘ ‘ The practice, however, of allowing or disallowing a motion of the kind is a matter largely within the sound discretion of the trial court: Manders v. Craft, 3 Colo. App. 236 (32 Pac. 836); Carlton v. Pierce, 1 Allen (Mass.), 26; Hawley v. Wilkinson, 18 Minn. 525 (Gil. 468); Plummer v. Mold, 22 Minn. 15; Wagner v.*325 Nagel, 33 Minn. 348 (23 N. W. 308); Kerr v. Hays, 35 N. Y. 331. Harvey v. Southern Pac. Co., 46 Or. 505 (80 Pac. 1061).”
In a recent case discussing the law relating to the right of the defendant to compel the plaintiff to elect between two canses of action stated in the complaint, Justice Burnett said:
“The canon laid down by the case last cited is in substance that to require an election it must be impossible for both causes of action simultaneously to be true”: Askay v. Maloney, 92 Or. 566, 573 (179 Pac. 899, 902), citing Hayden v. Pearce, 33 Or. 91 (52 Pac. 1049); (High v. Southern Pac. Co., 49 Or. 98 (88 Pac. 961); Harvey v. Southern Pac. Co., 46 Or. 505 (80 Pac. 1061); Swank v. Moisan, 85 Or. 662 (166 Pac. 962) .
A general rule of pleading for the recovery of damages on account of breaching a contract is thus stated in 4 Enc. of Plead. & Prac. 941:
“Where it is sought to recover for several breaches of one entire contract, it may be stated, as a general rule, that all the breaches may be set out in one count or paragraph of the declaration or complaint: Wilcox v. Cohn, 5 Blatchf. (U. S.) 346 (Fed. Cas. No. 17,640); Sheetz v. Longlois, 69 Ind. 491; Smiley v. Deweese, 1 Ind. App. 211 (27 N. E. 505); Richardson v. State, 55 Ind. 381; Fisk v. Tank, 12 Wis. 276; Chambers v. Robbins, 28 Conn. 544; Smith v. Boston etc. R. Co., 36 N. H. 459; Legh v. Hewitt, 4 East, 154; Brown v. Stebbins, 4 Hill (N. Y.), 154.”
The rule under the Oregon Code, as announced by Justice Deady, in the ease of Oh Chow v. Hallett, 2 Sawy. 260 (Fed. Cas. No. 10,469), is as follows:
“The practice of assigning more than one breach in the same count or statement of a cause of action, prior to the Code, was permitted only in covenant upon a deed and by statute in debt upon bond with a condition, or to secure covenants. When an ordinary*326 contract contains various substantive and independent provisions — as in this case, to pay for labor furnished, and to furnish transportation to laborers — if there is a breach or failure to perform more than one of the stipulations, there are distinct causes of action, requiring different proofs, and which may admit of different defenses, and therefore should be stated separately. This cause of action, not .being pleaded separately, is liable to be stricken out on motion: Or. L. 261.”
In Toy William v. Hallett, 2 Sawy. 261 (Fed. Cas. No. 14,123), Justice. Deady stated that different breaches of the same contract give rise to distinct causes of action. Justice Bean, in speaking for this court in Bade v. Hibberd, 50 Or. 504 (93 Pac. 365), said:
“The causes of action mentioned in the complaint both arise out of contracts, and can be properly united in the same complaint. * * The objection that they are not separately stated should have been taken by motion at the proper time.”
Section 67, Or. L., provides that the complaint shall contain a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, without unnecessary repetition. Section 85, Or. L., states that in the construction of a pleading for the purpose of determining its effect, its allegations shall be liberally construed, with a view of substantial justice between the parties.
*327 “The court shall, in every stage of an action, disregard any error or defect in the pleadings or proceedings which shall not affect the substantial rights of the adverse party”: Section 107, Or. L.
The proper construction of Section 11 of the contract is involved in this controversy. Under a certain condition therein specified, the company agrees to pay the contractor $500. Now, what is that condition? Said section provides that “the company will pay the contractor the sum of $500, as reasonable reimbursements of his initial outlay and expense incurred in bringing in his equipment,” provided that it “fails to furnish the contractor less than 1,600 tons of concentrates to haul.” This condition and provision of the contract is clear. It means just what it says and nothing more. The contractor never was entitled to claim that $500, or any part thereof.
It is asserted by appellant that the court erroneously construed Section 13 of the contract, providing that—
“After the aforesaid 1,600 tons of concentrates have been hauled, * * the contractor shall have the preference right to continue hauling the said concentrates*328 * * so long as the company shall have any hauling to be done.”
The testimony shows that plaintiff was- afforded the right to elect, and did elect to haul after he had transported 1,600 tons, and continued to haul until he had delivered at Oxbow 4,300 tons of concentrates.
As the case is presented by the record, the court properly rejected instruction 19 requested by defendant, and rightly gave instructions 17 and 23, the latter reading:
“In his fourth cause of action, designated in the complaint as the third, further, and separate cause, plaintiff refers further to that provision of the contract which gave him a preference right or option to continue hauling after the 1600 tons had been hauled, on the same terms as provided in the contract, so long as defendant should have any hauling to be done; and he alleges that he exercised that option and elected to so continue. In this connection he further alleges that on August 15th, 1919, defendant wrongfully rescinded the contract, and thereafter prevented plaintiff from hauling, and that since that time defendant has produced not less than 4225 tons of concentrates, and he alleges that, had he not been so deprived and prevented from hauling, he would have hauled the same according to the terms of the contract, and that his costs and expenses of such hauling would not have exceeded $2 per ton, and that by reason of being so prevented he therefore suffered damages in the sum of $8,450.
“These allegations are denied by defendant, and the burden of proof is therefore upon plaintiff to establish by a preponderance of the evidence that he was willing, ready, and able to perform according to the terms of the contract, that defendant wrongfully prevented it, and that he was damaged by not being permitted to haul those concentrates at $4 per ton in conformity with the contract.”
“A pimmise made by one party is a good consideration for a promise made by the other party, but the promises must be concurrent and obligatory on both parties at the same time. A promise made by one party, as in this case, without a corresponding obligation or promise by the other, is void.”
This case was cited with approval in Lemler v. Bord, 80 Or. 224, 227 (156 Pac. 427, 1034), and in The Oregon Home Builders v. Crowley, 87 Or. 517, 539 (170 Pac. 718, 171 Pac. 214). In Livesley v. Johnston, 45 Or. 30, 41 (76 Pac. 946, 948, 106 Am. St. Rep. 647, 65 L. R. A. 783), this court, speaking by Justice Wolverton, said:
“Where the agreement is wholly executory, it is essential that the obligations be mutual, else there is no consideration for its support, and it is but a mere nudum pactum.”
To the same effect are the cases of Rose v. Oliver, 32 Or. 447 (52 Pac. 176); Richardson v. Orth, 40 Or. 252, 262 (66 Pac. 925, 69 Pac. 455), and Webb v. Isensee, 79 Or. 114, 120 (152 Pac. 800).
We have read all the testimony in this case, and are satisfied that the record discloses an abundance of data from which the alleged profit could have been estimated.
“An unavoidable, serions accident means, in such a contract, any unusual, unexpected, and unintended occurrence, and not brought on by failure to exercise ordinary care and prudence, and of such character that the parties could not reasonably have contemplated the same at the time of the contract to take adequate precautions to prevent it by the exercise of ordinary diligence, prudence, and foresight, and which causes such interference and resulting delay as could not by such diligence, prudence, and foresight have been avoided.”
The court approves that definition. The phrase “act of God,” as explained to the jury by the court, was so favorable to the defendant that he is not in a position to complain. Under the court’s instruction and the evidence, the jury could not have excused the plaintiff from nonperformance by reason of an act of God. However, there was some testimony tending to prove an unavoidable serious accident. The plaintiff’s truck, while hauling a load of concentrates, for some unexplained reason, and without negligence upon the part of plaintiff or his agents, left the narrow grade of the roadbed and rolled hundreds of
The record disclosing no substantial error whereby defendant might have been prejudiced, this case is affirmed. Affirmed.