Horan v. Consolidated St. Gothard Gold Mining Co.
Horan v. Consolidated St. Gothard Gold Mining Co.
Opinion of the Court
In December, 1911, plaintiffs and one Murphy contracted to build a flume in Nevada County for the defendant to furnish water to its mine, for which they were to receive twenty-six thousand dollars. The contractors failed in their undertaking, after having drawn nearly half the contract price on account, leaving creditors to the extent of $6,213.72, with less than one-third of the flume completed. On the eighteenth day of November, 1912, a new agreement was entered into between the parties hereto, under which defendant agreed to complete the flume, applying so much of the unpaid balance of the contract price as was necessary for the purpose, the remainder, if any, to be applied, first, to the payment of the debts incurred by the contractors, the balance, if any, to be paid to the contractors, the defendant to use in such completion all tools, machinery, supplies, and lumber on hand provided or used by the contractors in connection with said contract. The flume was completed in September, 1913, at an expense of over twenty thousand dollars, leaving nothing for the creditors or the contractors.
In June, 1914, plaintiffs brought this action, alleging a number of defaults and violations of the supplemental contract on the part of defendant, praying for an accounting; for judgment for any credits that may be found due plaintiffs on such accounting; “for such other and further relief in the premises as may seem meet and agreeable to equity”; and for costs.
The trial of the ease began on June 12, 1917, before the court without a jury, and, on March 25, 1918, the court made the following findings: That, by virtue of said supplemental agreement of November 18, 1912, plaintiffs assigned to their creditors all rights to any money or damages that might thereafter accrue in their favor from or against defendant to the extent of $6,213.72; that plaintiffs were not entitled to recover against defendant any sum unless the amount of damage accruing in favor of plaintiffs under said contract should be found to be in excess of said sum; that no sum amounting to $6,213.72 is shown to have accrued in favor of plaintiffs; that, in accordance with the terms and conditions of said contract, “defendant received from plaintiffs two horses, harness, and wagon to be used *336 by defendant in connection with the construction and completion of said flume, which said horses and wagon were to be returned to plaintiffs after such completion; that defendant failed to return the same or any part thereof and subsequently converted the same to its own use to plaintiffs’ damage in the sum of five hundred dollars.’.’ It was then found that under said contract defendant received from plaintiffs a sawmill and equipments which, after defendant had completed the manufacture of lumber thereat, plaintiffs were at liberty to have taken possession of. 1
Judgment was entered against defendant for the sum of five • hundred dollars and for costs, amounting to $263.30. The appeal is by defendant from said judgment. "
It is first contended by appellant that, as the action was solely one for an. accounting and there was no allegation in the complaint of conversion, there should have been rendered no judgment for conversion.
In its answer defendant denied “that it received from the plaintiff two horses, harness, and wagon”; denied “tliat defendant has or does now retain the said horses, harness, and wagon”; denied “that the plaintiffs are damaged thereby in the sum of five hundred dollars or in any sum or at all.”
1. No question is here raised as to the propriety of the remedy by bill for an accounting between the parties hereto. While by the supplemental contract a sort of novation was invoked, yet under said agreement the plaintiffs were still interested in the contract and the results thereof, and a trust or confidential relation was thereby created between them.
The defendant admitted receiving into its possession the horses, etc., in question, with other equipments owned and used by the plaintiffs in the work of constructing the flume. It was further admitted by the president of the defendant that he shipped the two horses to the city of San Francisco and there sold them for the sum of one hundred dollars. There is no testimony showing definitely what became of the harness and wagon. The plaintiffs testified that they never received back the last-mentioned property and their testimony as to that was not contradicted. The plaintiffs further testified that the horses, harness and the wagon were reasonably of the aggregate value of $550.' They said that the horses were young—about eight years old—and in excellent physical condition. This testimony was sufficient, if believed by the court, as evidently it was, to warrant the finding made by the court that the damages suffered by the plaintiffs for the detention and conversion of the horses, *339 harness, and the wagon amounted to the sum of five hundred dollars. Much stress, however, is laid upon the statement made by one of the plaintiffs, when testifying, that he did not care whether the horses in question had also died, two of their other horses let to defendant to be used in the construction of the flume having died during the progress of the work. The inference from that statement is, it is assumed, that the plaintiffs regarded the horses in question as of no substantial value. But we cannot say that such is necessarily the inference to be drawn from the said statement. At any rate, it was for the trial court to draw its own inferences from the testimony, and as to the statement in question, it appears that that court attached to it no significance in connection with the determination of the value of the horses or the damages resulting from their conversion. We must so assume from the findings.
Emphasis is also put upon the testimony of the defendant’s witnesses that, after the completion of the contract, the possession of the horses, wagon, harness, and other equipments was available to the plaintiffs, and that all the said property would have been delivered to them if they had called for it. But the fact remains that the property was not turned over to the plaintiffs and no explanation was given why it was not, other than that above indicated, viz., that the plaintiffs did not themselves take possession of it. There is no satisfactory showing that the plaintiffs knew when the work of construction was completed and the further use of the property by the defendant became unnecessary.
We have discovered no substantial reason for disturbing the judgment, and it is therefore affirmed.
Chipman, P. J., and Burnett, J., concurred.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- THOMAS HORAN Et Al., Respondents, v. CONSOLIDATED ST. GOTHARD GOLD MINING COMPANY (A Corporation), Appellant
- Cited By
- 4 cases
- Status
- Published