47 P. 616 | Or. | 1897
Opinion by
This suit arises out of the following facts: On February 24, 1893, the defendant Bush recovered judgment against the plaintiffs for the sum of $24,566.50 on a promissory note, of date August 31, 1892, executed by them to the defendant Holman, and by him indorsed and transferred to Bush before maturity, as collateral security for about $16,000. Prior to the commencement of this
On the 15 th of April, 1893, a corporation known as the Oregon Electric Light Company, of which Holman was the manager, was and for a long time prior thereto had been supplying certain of the State buildings at Salem
But Holman, to overcome the force of this position, alleges as a defense that the stock of himself and Thompson was sold to Mitchell, Anson, Paxton, and McCornack under and in pursuance of an option contained in a contract between himself, as the representative of all the stockholders of the corporation, and Anson, and McCornack, made on January 26, 1893, and that, as a part of' such contract, he and his associates reserved the right to collect from the State any money due the corporation under the lighting contract referred to, at the time the option to purchase the stock should be exercised by Anson and McCornack. This contract is in writing, and contains no such stipulation or agreement; but Holman avers that it was omitted therefrom by a mutual mistake of the parties, and this is the only defense set up in the answer, and the controlling question in this case. Upon this issue the burden of proof is with him, and he must show by clear and satisfactory evidence, not only that there is a mistake in the written agreement, but that such mistake was mutual, or shared in by all the parties, and that it did not occur through his own negligence: Lewis v. Lewis, 5 Or. 169; Stephens v. Murton, 6 Or. 193; Epstein v. State Ins. Co., 21 Or. 179 (27 Pac. 1045); Kleinsorge v. Rohse, 25 Or. 51 (34 Pac. 874). And this he has wholly failed to do. The written contract was prepared by the plaintiff Anson, and the undisputed evidence shows that he intentionally drew it in the precise form in which it was executed, and that no words were omitted which he
But it is claimed, and the court below found, that the deferred payment from the State was not in the minds of ^he parties at the time the contract was made, or during any negotiations pertaining thereto, and for that reason the written contract ought to be modified so as to exclude such claim against the State from its operation. Considering this to be true, it affords no ground at this time for the reformation of the contract actually made,
The doctrine that an officer of a corporation acquires no legal claim against it for services performed in the discharge of his official duties, unless a compensation therefor was fixed by resolution or by-law of the corporation prior to the performance of the services, has no application to the questions raised in this case. The services performed by Holman, and for which he was accustomed to receive compensation at the rate of $100 per month, did not pertain to the duties devolving upon him as director and president of the corporation; and hence, under the rule announced in Wood v. Lost Lake Mfg. Co., 23 Or. 20 (37 Am. St. Rep. 651, 23 Pac. 848), he is entitled to compensation upon a quantum meruit, and it is not questioned but what the services were reasonably worth
Modified.