122 P. 1077 | Cal. | 1912
This is an appeal from the judgment taken within sixty days after its rendition.
The respondents' objections to the consideration of the bill of exceptions are without merit. The proposed bill and the proposed amendments thereto were not delivered to the clerk for the judge within the time required by section 650 of the Code of Civil Procedure, but it appears that they were mailed to the clerk in due time and that they did not reach him because they were lost in transmission through the mail. Upon motion, after due notice as the record recites, the court afterwards made an order relieving the appellants of this omission and permitting the bill and amendments to be then filed, *429 which was done. The bill was thereafter duly settled, and it is therefore properly a part of the record on appeal.
The case involves a breach of an alleged agreement to execute a sub-contract for the carriage of the United States mails on two mail routes. The acts of Congress provide that a mail contractor under the United States will not be permitted to sublet or transfer his contract without the consent in writing of the postmaster-general, and that when such consent is obtained, the sub-contract between the contractor and his transferee must be in writing, and a copy thereof must be filed in the office of the second assistant postmaster-general. Thereupon the amount thereby agreed to be paid to the sub-contractor is to be retained out of the amount due the original contractor and is to be paid by the post-office department direct to the sub-contractor, and the remainder only is paid, as before, to the original contractor. (Act of May 17, 1878,
The following is a statement of the facts alleged in the complaint.
The plaintiffs had two contracts with the United States for the carrying of mails on two certain mail routes, one for thirteen hundred dollars per year and the other for $980 per year, each payable monthly. The contracts were for four years, beginning July 1, 1906, and ending July 1, 1910. The plaintiffs were partners in the livery business at Susanville, where they resided, and they had the necessary outfit of horses and vehicles for carrying the mails and performing the contract. About February 1, 1907, plaintiffs and defendants made an oral agreement that defendants would perform the service of carrying the mails on both said routes for the remaining time of the contracts for the sum of seventeen hundred dollars per year, and that as soon as the consent of the postmaster-general could be obtained the defendants would execute *430 and deliver to plaintiffs sub-contracts to carry said mails over said routes for the remaining time of the original contracts, which said sub-contracts should specify that the defendants were to receive the same sums as were named in the original contracts, aggregating $2280 a year. It was also agreed that after the execution of said sub-contracts, the defendants would pay over to the plaintiffs each month, out of the moneys received on said contracts, sums amounting to $580 a year, being the difference between the original contract price of $2280 a year and the price of seventeen hundred a year for which defendants agreed to do the service. It was further agreed that, until the sub-contracts were executed, the defendants would carry the mails for the plaintiffs and that plaintiffs would collect the money from the United States and pay the defendants monthly at the rate of seventeen hundred dollars a year. In pursuance of this provisional agreement the defendants began carrying mails on said routes on February 12, 1907. The plaintiffs paid them monthly therefor at the rate of seventeen hundred dollars a year until August 12, 1907. Relying on this oral agreement and on the performance thereof by the defendants, the plaintiffs made important changes in their situation and conditions, to wit: They sold some of their horses and rigs, J.C. Long removed with his family from Susanville to San Luis Obispo County, and George B. Long took the remainder of the partnership outfit pertaining to the livery stable and mail carrying business to Rosebud, Nevada, and there engaged in the livery business and purchased some real estate. The consent of the postmaster-general to the sub-contracts was obtained on July 16, 1907. On August 12, 1907, plaintiffs requested of defendants the execution of the sub-contracts as agreed upon, but the defendants refused to execute the same, abandoned the mail routes, and thereafter refused to carry the mails thereon. Plaintiffs were thereby compelled to resume the carrying of said mails, purchase additional stock for that purpose, transfer their outfit from Rosebud to Susanville, and abandon their property and business in Rosebud. By the refusal to execute the sub-contracts plaintiffs allege they were damaged in the sum of two thousand dollars. By being forced to leave Rosebud, buy more stock and resume the carrying of the mails at Susanville, they allege damage in the further *431 sum of fifteen hundred dollars. The findings are that the damage from these causes were, respectively, $1670 and $743, and judgment was thereupon given for $2413.
The answer avers that these several agreements were oral and were, consequently, void, under section
The principal point made by the respondents in favor of the judgment is that the oral contract was partly performed and that, in consequence thereof, it was taken out of the statute of frauds. This contention cannot be maintained. The case in this particular is not distinguishable from the case of Seymour v.Oelrichs,
In the district court of appeal it was held that the circumstances of the case were such that the defendants were estopped to set up the invalidity of the contract. This was based chiefly on the authority of Seymour v. Oelrichs,
Section 1973 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that evidence of a contract which by its terms is not to be performed within a year from the making thereof cannot be received without the writing or secondary evidence of its contents, and that such contract must be in writing to be valid. The defendants objected to the evidence of this agreement, on the ground that it was incompetent evidence of such an agreement. The objection was well taken and it should have been sustained. We do not deem it necessary to discuss or consider the other points suggested by the appellants.
The judgment is reversed.
Angellotti, J., Lorigan, J., Henshaw, J., and Melvin, J., concurred.