Big Eye Mining & Milling Co. v. Livingston
Big Eye Mining & Milling Co. v. Livingston
Opinion of the Court
The Big Eye Mining & Milling Company is the owner of certain valuable mines situate in Yuma county. In the operation of such mines prior to December 1, 1915, it incurred certain indebtedness, a portion of which indebtedness was owing to E'. F. Sanguinetti for supplies furnished the said company. On said December 1,1915, it made, executed, and delivered the promissory note sued upon, and the other named appellants indorsed said note before delivery. About the thirtieth day of May, 1916, one W. W. Reese paid
The defendants Big Eye Mining & Milling Company, J. A. Ketcherside, and H. C. Johnson join in an answer. H. Y. Keteherside makes no defense, and the abstract of the record does not show that said last-named defendant was served in the case. The defense interposed by the said answering defendants is alleged to be that of payment resulting from the following: That one C. H. Kleinbeck and W. W. Reese as copartners, on the twenty-first day of December, 1915, and in the name of C. H. Kleinbeck, entered into a contract with defendant Big Eye Mining & Milling Company, whereby said mining and milling company leased its certain described mines to said partnership for a period of one year in consideration of a payment of $1 and the promise of said partnership to keep and perform other expressed covenants and agreements. The said lessees agreed to do the necessary assessment work for the years 1915 and 1916, and make statutory proof thereof; pay taxes on personal property for the year 1916. The rent reserved is stated as a royalty on the net returns from ore shipped; they agreed to make an expenditure tending to the development of the mines in the sum of at least $5,000 every 60 days until $25,000 has been so expended. “As additional compensation for said lease the said lessees agree to pay, on or before 90 days from the date hereof, certain indebtedness owing by the lessor,” including the note owing to E. F. Sanguinetti, the note in suit; also to pay on or before the exercise of a certain option executed of even date herewith (whereby said lessees herein have an option to purchase a block of stock
The lease contains the forfeiture clause, wherein the parties agree that:
“Time is of the essence of this lease, .and in the event of the failure or refusal of said lessees to make any payments or perform any obligations herein contained on his part to be performed, then at the option of said lessor this lease shall become null and void, and of no effect, and this lessor shall be entitled to take immediate possession of said premises, and all moneys paid by said lessees to said lessor, or expended by said lessees on the property under this lease, . . . shall be forfeited to the lessor as liquidated damages. ... In the event that said lease shall be forfeited prior to the termination thereof, peaceable possession shall be delivered to the lessor of said premises, together with all machinery, etc.; . . . then and in that event upon such delivery said lessees shall be free from any further obligation to do or perform any act or make any payment under said lease. ...”
The answer, after setting forth a copy of said lease containing the above-quoted language, alleges that W. W. Reese was a partner with C. H. Kleinbeck in that lease; that the item of indebtedness shown in Schedule A is the identical item covered by the note sued on which Kleinbeck obligates himself to pay; that pursuant to said contract the lessees entered into possession of the property, and on or about the thirtieth day of May, 1916, the said Reese, acting for himself and Kleinbeck and “pursuant to and in obedience of the said contract and the covenants therein contained, in due course discharged the said note in full by paying the full amount due thereon to the payee named therein, ...” and so notified defendants; that thereafter on the third day of September, 1916, said Reese without authority indorsed said note to W. D. Riley; that Riley was informed of all of the foregoing facts, and had full knowledge of such facts before he acquired said note; that plaintiff Livingston was fully informed and had full knowledge of said facts before he acquired said note. Said defendants pray that the plaintiff take nothing by his action.
The assignment of errors by the appellants is so general that we are not able to determine the specific error or errors relied upon for a reversal. I presume the appellants contend that the judgment is not sustained by the evidence, and therefore the judgment is contrary to law.
The controlling question presented by the defense is whether the note in question was discharged by the transaction between Reese and Sanguinetti on May 30, 1916, which was consummated by Reese’s paying to Sanguinetti the principal sum named on the face of the note and taking the paper specially indorsed to order without recourse. Assuming, as established by proof, that Reese acted in that transaction for and in behalf of Kleinbeek and himself as partners for the reason he was dealing with matters and funds belonging to and with which the partnership was concerned, and with partnership assets, Reese’s acts in the premises may fairly be regarded as partnership acts. If the note was discharged by the partnership payment to Sanguinetti, then certainly Reese had no right to reissue the note as the obligation of the original makers, and Gus Livingston having acquired the paper after it became payable, and chargeable with knowledge of the infirmity in the title of Reese, he cannot recover on the note.
Whether the transaction between Sanguinetti, the holder of the note, and Reese, who paid the money, is of such a character as constituted a payment that operated to extinguish the
“As additional compensation for said lease, the said lessees agree to pay, on or before ninety (90) days from the date hereof, certain indebtedness now owing by the lessor, all as set forth in the itemized statement attached to this lease and marked Exhibit ‘A.’ . . .”
The exhibit attached is a list of debts, including a debt owing to Sanguinetti, shown to be the sum of the principal of the note in suit. The parties concede that the Sanguinetti debt shown on the list was covered by the note, and the purpose was to show the note on the list. The debts listed aggregate $4,000. The clear meaning to be given to the provisions of the lease granted is that the lessees promised thereby to pay the lessor $4,000 additional compensation in 90 days after the date of the lease; that in discharge of said promise, the lessees had the option of paying said sum direct to the creditors of the lessor, named in the list, in lieu of paying the same to the lessor. No lawyer will deny that the obligation assumed would have been discharged by the lessees if within the 90 days they had paid the $4,000 direct to the lessor instead of paying the lessor’s creditors. The option expired at the end of 90 days. If any obligation of the lessees remained, that obligation certainly was to pay said “additional compensation” to the lessor. The lessees failed to keep this promise, and the time for performance expired. After the 90 days expired the lesses were under no obligation to pay the lessor’s debts that were listed in Exhibit “A,” including the note in suit. Whether the obligation remained to pay the lessor the additional compensation promised is not a question in this case. To a certainty, on the thirtieth day of May, 1916, when Reese acquired the note, the lessees had wholly failed to perform the assessment work for the year 1915; they had failed to place improvements on the property worth $5,000 every 60 days from the date of the lease; they had failed to pay the promised additional com
The title acquired by Reese was that of Sanguinetti, and that title was not in the least impaired by Reese notifying the makers of the note that he had acquired the possession of the note, nor by his offer to deliver up the note in consideration of stock of the Big Eye Mining & Milling Company. Reese’s acts were consistent with his avowed purpose in acquiring the note. The Big Eye Mining & Milling Company do not pretend to have credited the amount represented by the note on Kleinbeck’s agreement to pay additional compensation for the lease. If the lease ceased to be binding by reason of breaches of its covenants, no compensation for injury resulting from such breaches can be recovered other than to declare a forfeiture and recover possession of the leasehold estate. Payment of the promised consideration cannot be recovered by action in the courts, and this is the effect to he given to the defense as pleaded in the answer if such defense is given any effect.
The plaintiff acquired all of the rights in the note which Reese owned at the time of a transfer. The judgment is sup
FRANKLIN, C. J., and ROSS, J., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BIG EYE MINING AND MILLING COMPANY, J. A. KETCHERSIDE, and H. C. JOHNSON v. GUS LIVINGSTON
- Status
- Published