19 Nev. 121 | Nev. | 1885
By the Court,
On the twenty-sixth day of March, 1866, an agreement was entered into between the trustees of the Sutro Tunnel Company, an association then existing under the laws of this state, it being the predecessor in interest of the present corporation, respondent herein, and the Gould & Curry Silver Mining Company, then a mining corporation, with reference to the construction of the Sutro tunnel, under the act of the legislature of this state, approved February 4,1865 (Stat. 1864-65, 128), and the royalty to be paid by the mining corporation for the extraction of ore after the drainage of its fifine by the tunnel.
0n the twenty-ninth day of March, 1879, the parties to this
This action was brought to recover the amount due for the construction of one hundred and seventy-one linear feet of said lateral tunnel, and for the consequential damages resulting from the non-payment of the same. Appellant and respondent
1. The first question to be considered involves a construction of the statute of limitations. (1 Comp. Laws, 1016-1048.) Can a foreign corporation, in a case where the contract was made out of this state, plead the provisions of this statute? Does section 21 of the statute'refer to the provisions of section 32 as well as to section 16? Appellant contends that the statute in question is different from that of other states; that in effect it should be classified and treated as to distinct statutes - — one preceding section 32, the other including it and subsequent sections; that the latter statute is unique in its character, and is independent of all the provisions contained in the first statute. This position is a novel one, and has been presented in an ingenious and plausible manner; but the question arises whether it can be supported by the crucial test applied in the construction of all statutes — the intention of the legislature. Did the legislature intend that such a construction should be placed upon its work? Was it within the thoughts of the members of that body when enacting the original provisions in 1861, or when adopting the amendments of 1867? In considering these questions we are irresistibly led to the conclusion that such was not the intention of the legislature. When the amendments of 1867 were enacted they became a part of the law of 1861. The law thereafter, as before, was embodied in one statute upon the subject, and must be treated as an entirety. When the amendments of 1867 were made, sections 21 and 32 were both revised. The whole subject was before the legislature. It necessarily follows that if section 21 applied to section 32 in the original act, it is also applicable in the act as amended. The question then is, whether section 21 was ever intended to apply to section 32. The language of section 21 is general in its terms. There are no restrictions-to any specified class of cases or causes of action.
In Robinson v. Imperial Silver Min. Co., 5 Nev. 75, this court declared that the expression “cause of action” in section 21 includes actions concerning real estate as well as personal actions. Section 21 was inserted for the purpose of creating an exception to the general rule as to the time when the cause of action, whatever it might be, should be commenced; the exception being the absence of the defendant from the state. There
2. The next question presented for our determination arises under the provisions of article 15 of the first agreement, executed in March, 1866: “If any question should arise between the parties to this agreement, either in respect to the time when the mine of the party of the second part shall have been drained in accordance with the foregoing articles, and the payment of two dollars per ton for ore extracted should commence; or in respect to the amount of money at any time due or payable from the party of the second part to the parties of the first part, it is agreed that such question shall be determined by each party choosing one competent and disinterested person as an arbitrator; and in the event of disagreement between such arbitrators, they shall choose a third competent and disinterested person. The arbitrators shall be sworn, and a majority of the three may decide the disagreement between the parties hereto, and their decision shall be final.”
Under this clause of the agreement, was.respondent bound to arbitrate, or make an effort to arbitrate, the disagreements between it and appellant, before commencing this action? It is questionable whether this article has any application to the facts of this case. It will be observed that the agreement of 1866 is adopted “subject to the changes and modifications” contained in the agreement of 1879. The article in question related to the main tunnel, to its construction and maintenance, and to the rights and privileges of the mine-owners therein. The main tunnel was not then completed to the Comstock lode, and many questions were liable to arise as to when the tunnel should in fact drain the mines, or when the payment of royalty for ore extracted should begin; and a disagreement upon cither of these questions necessarily involved the other in respect to ■the amount of money that might, at any time, be due or paya
Under these circumstances, it would seem that the fifteenth article of the original agreement was not applicable to the new condition of affairs under the contract of 1879. But if we concede, for the sake of the argument, that it must be considered as of binding force, what was there in dispute between these parties that required an arbitration to be made? Bear in mind that no controversy is presented in the record as to the length of the lateral tunnel, or its completion in accordance with the specifications; and the amount of money to be advanced, as well as the time of payment, is expressed in the agreement. Upon this state of facts, what could have been accomplished by arbitrators under the limited authority given them in the covenant under consideration? There was no dispute “ in respect to the time when the mine” of appellant should be drained; no dispute as to when the payment “ for ore extracted should commence”; and no dispute “in respect to the amount of money at any time due or payable ” from appellant to respondent — within the power or province of the arbitrators to adjust even if they had been appointed. The only question in dispute as to the amount of money due arises from the contention of appellant that it was only responsible for the actual cost of the construction of the tunnel, and, as we shall have occasion hereafter to state, that contention cannot be legally sustained.
The case at bar, therefore, bears no analogy to the covenants contained in insurance policies, with reference to the mode of ascertaining the loss in case of the destruction of the property insured, or any part of it, by fire. There are other authorities which hold that if provision is made for the settlement of disputes by arbitration, in regard to the value of the work to be done or the price of materials to be purchased, wrhere no fixed value is stated in the contract, the arbitration must be had before the action to recover the price can be maintained; but where the contract itself fixes the price to be paid and the time
This is not such a case, and the appointment of arbitrators was not a condition precedent to be performed prior to the commencement of this action.
3. We shall not stop to inquire, in the determination of the next point presented by appellant, whether the agreement of 1866 was valid as between the original parties, or whether it was void because based upon a law (Stat. 1864-65,128), which it is contended was an unconstitutional grant. Suppose the old agreement to have been void at the time of its execution, or if valid, that the special grant of the statute lapsed before the agreement of 1879 was made; would these facts deprive respondent of its right to maintain this action under the second agreement? We think not. Would not the new contract be binding between the parties to this action, although the old agreement might have been held -void as between the parties thereto? Could not the -parties to the new agreement adopt such covenants, in the other agreement, as they deemed applicable to the new, although that instrument was absolutely void between the parties to it? We think they could. Moreover, the covenants in relation to the price to be advanced for every linear foot of the lateral tunnel constructed by respondent are embodied in the new agreement, and can be enforced without reference to any of the covenants and conditions contained in the agreement of 1866.
4. We now come to the fundamental proposition: Did appellant have any authority, under its charter, to make the contract in question? Appellant is a mining corporation, organized for
The facts of this case are-wholly unlike those which existed in Davis v. Old Colony R. Co., 131 Mass. 258,
It is apparent that the doctrines announced in that decision are not applicable to the facts of this case. There the benefits to the corporations were wholly disconnected, remote, and foreign to the business in which they were engaged. Here the benefit .to appellant is direct. The construction of the lateral tunnel, if not absolutely necessary, was certainly a convenient and appropriate means to drain its mine, and enable it to properly conduct and carry on its legitimate business of mining in a systematic and scientific manner.
In Brice’s Treatise on the Doctrine of Ultra Vires, it is said that “ corporations may transact, in addition to their main undertaking, all such subordinate and connected matters as are, if not essential, at least very convenient to the due prosecution of the former,” and that, under many circumstances, “they are in a manner necessitated to engage in business which is not
In applying these principles, the courts have held that a created for the purpose of mining and transportation of coal, had the power to purchase and use a steamboat for the purpose of conveying its coal to market (Callaway M. & M. Co. v. Clark, 32 Mo. 305); that a corporation, created for the purpose of raising and smelting lead ore, had power to smelting-works, and assume a contract entered into by their vendors providing means for the transportation of their ores, when smelted, to market (Moss v. Averell, 10 N. Y. 455); that a corporation created for the purpose of carrying on an iron furnace is authorized to carry on a supply store in with that business (Searight v. Payne, 6 Lea, 283); that railroad corporations have the right to own and control steamboats for the purpose of transporting their freight and passengers across navigable waters on the line of their routes, and also at the end of their roads separating them from the substantial termini of their routes (Wheeler v. San Francisco & A. R. Co., 31 Cal. 65) ;
These and numerous other kindred cases proceed upon the theory that if the contract of the corporation is reasonably and connected with the business in which the corporation is engaged, it comes within its implied or incidental powers. “ Corporations may so far develop and extend their operations as to engage in matters not primarily contemplated by their founders, provided these matters come fairly within their scope, and provided, also, that in so developing and extending their
It will be observed, upon an examination of the cases, that the learned justice who delivered the opinion of the court in Davis v. Old Colony R. Co.,
5. It was averred in the answer that the cost of the construction of the tunnel through defendant’s mining ground should not have been, and was not, greater than forty dollars per foot. At the trial, testimony was given to the effect that a similar tunnel was constructed at a cost of twenty-eight dollars per foot; and it is claimed that the court erred in allowing seventy dollars per foot. This position is clearly untenable. The contract was that appellant should advance and pay seventy dollars for each foot of the tunnel. It could not avoid this contract by showing that the tunnel could have been, or was, constructed for a less sum per foot. The question as to its actual cost was wholly immaterial. The parties fixed the price by their contract, and, in the absence of any fraud, undue advantage, or failure to comply with the covenants as to its construction, are bound by the terms of the contract. We do not believe that appellant would be willing to admit that if the tunnel had actually cost one hundred dollars per foot to construct it, that respondent could have recovered that amount under any of the covenants in the contract. It was not entitled to recover any more, and was not bound to take any less, than was “ nominated in the bond.”
6. Objection is made to the amount of interest allowed. It was admitted at the trial that the legal rate of interest in California, where the contract was executed, was seven per cent per annum, and the question is presented whether the court erred in allowing interest at the rate of ten per cent per
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
41 Am. Rep. 221.
89 Am. Dec. 147.
41 Am, Rep. 221.