130 P. 886 | Cal. | 1913
This is an appeal taken from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and from an order denying the motion of defendants for a new trial.
The action was one whereby plaintiff sought to have canceled a certain contract by which he had leased to defendants Steele and Baxter, with the understanding that the said agreement should be assigned to a corporation to be formed by them, the right to manufacture, sell, and control a patented device upon which plaintiff owned the patent rights and known as "the Nelson axle oiler." This agreement provided that Nelson should advance no money; that the defendants should manufacture, sell, and control the patented article; and that they should pay plaintiff fifty per cent "of the net proceeds from said Nelson axle oiler and from said corporation." The contract contained a provision that a statement should be rendered to Nelson by the manufacturer on the fifteenth day of each month. In the agreement was this paragraph: "That should this corporation not be on a paying basis within one year from date, this contract may be canceled at the option of any of the parties hereto, or may be extended under a new agreement, and upon a new basis." The date of this instrument was May 14, 1909. On June 22, 1910, plaintiff sent to defendants the following notice, dated May 15, 1910:
"Messrs. W.E. BAXTER, H.D. STEELE, Los Angeles, Calif.
"Gentlemen: In accordance with our contract relative to the Nelson axle oiler, which expired May 14, 1910, and now becomes null and void, I wish to advise and serve this notice, that I will not continue, extend or renew any contract with you, as you have not fulfilled your part as per agreement. *17 You must consider all obligations between us at a close. This as per our past agreement.
"Yours truly,
"(Signed) R. NELSON."
The court found that the contract was duly executed; that it was duly assigned to the defendant corporation; that monthly statements were rendered to plaintiff at times alleged in the answer, but that said statements showed neither the net earnings nor the financial condition of said corporation; that defendants sold the right to manufacture and control the Nelson axle oiler in the territory known as Northern California for the sum of two thousand five hundred dollars, for which promissory notes were accepted, only five hundred dollars of which had been paid prior to May 15, 1910; "that in order to show the `net gain' of $26.95 contained in defendants' exhibit No. 1, the defendants treated as cash on hand promissory notes amounting to $2000, which were not yet due. The said notes being the unpaid portion of the promissory notes for $2500 received for the sale of the right to manufacture, sell and control the said Nelson axle oiler in Northern California." The court also found that the notice of rescission quoted above was sent to defendants June 22, 1910, and as a conclusion of law announced that plaintiff was entitled to judgment canceling the contract in question, enjoining defendants and those claiming under them from using the Nelson axle oiler or in any manner dealing with it, and for costs, but that said judgment should be entered without prejudice to an action by any of the parties for an accounting.
Appellants' first point is that the matter of the existence or nonexistence of net gain for the year was one squarely in issue and that the court did not find thereon. There is no merit in this contention. The finding of the court which we have quoted inhaec verba was equivalent to a finding that the business was not on a paying basis at the end of the first year. This finding was based upon a stipulation that the very facts found with reference to the method of figuring the "net gain," so-called, were true. The only important question therefor is whether or not these facts show that the concern was on a "paying basis" on May 14, 1910. Respondent insists that the expression means that there must have been "profits" or an excess of receipts over expenditures in order *18
that the concern might be said to be upon a paying basis, citing as instructive upon this point a number of cases, includingPeople v. San Francisco Savings Union,
Appellants cite Lowther v. Miller-Sibley Oil Co.,
The notice of rescission was sufficient. Appellants suggest that it treats the contract as null and void and does not purport to give them any clew to Nelson's right arising out of the failure of the corporation to be upon a paying basis. But the notice does refer to the plaintiff's refusal to continue, extend, or renew the contract — rights which could only arise under that part of the agreement defining the options which would exist if the enterprise should not be on a paying basis in its first year. This was sufficient to direct the attention of appellants to the exact basis of plaintiff's claim.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Henshaw, J., and Lorigan, J., concurred.