Little Nell Gold Mining Co. v. Hemby
Little Nell Gold Mining Co. v. Hemby
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court:
This action was commenced by the defendant in error, as plaintiff, against the plaintiff in error and two others, as defendants, to recover for work performed by the plaintiff and four others, for the defendants, in a mine operated under a lease. The four others referred to assigned their claims to plaintiff. The allegations of the complaint, necessary to be referred to, as contained in the first cause of action are as follows:
“Third. That on the 29th day of March, 1900, plaintiff commenced work for the defendants at their*583 request as a miner, and continued in said employment for the period of five hundred nine (509) days, for which services defendants promised to pay plaintiff the sum of $3.00 per day.
“Fourth. That said services were worth the sum of one thousand five hundred and twenty-seven dollars ($1,527.00),” etc.
In the other causes of action the complaint is the same, substituting, of course, the respective names of the plaintiff’s assignors, and the number of days worked by each, and the total amount earned by each.
Defendants answered, and among other things, alleged that.the plaintiff and his assignors worked for the defendants under a contract, whereby, the defendants were to pay to the plaintiff and his assignors $1.00 per shift in cash and the further sum of $2.00 per shift, at such time as’ the mine would yield ore in a sufficient amount to pay necessary mining expenses and past indebtedness, after first paying royalty, and paying- to the defendant company one-half of the proceeds of the ore shipped, and that if the ore shipped was not sufficient to pay the royalty, expenses, past indebtedness, and one-half to the defendant company, then the plaintiff and his assignors were to receive only their proportionate share of the proceeds of ore remaining; and that it was agreed, that the defendant company was to be responsible to the plaintiff and his assignors for the said sum of $1.00 per day and no" more. ' The defendants further allege in their answer, that the plaintiff and his assignors were paid $1.00 per shift, and have received all that was coming to them out of the ore shipped, and that the defendants did not owe the plaintiff or his assignors anything. Plaintiff in his replication substantially denied the foregoing allegations of the answer.
Under the same assumption, the implied contract set up in the complaint upon which, the plaintiff could recover as on quantum meruit is, that the defendants would pay plaintiff and his assignors for their work, whatever the services were reasonably worth, which he alleges to be a certain sum, and which happens to be $3.00, per day.
What did the plaintiff prove? On his direct examination he testified: “He (meaning one of the defendants) said, I could go to work there, they were paying $1.00 a day, as .they went, and when they got ore, they would pay the other $2.00 a 'day,” and on cross-examination he said: “My understanding was, that we were to receive $2.00 a day out of the proceeds of the ore; if they got ore, for them to pay it out of the ore.” Mr. Smith, one of plaintiff’s
All the work done by plaintiff and his assignors was done under the contract thus proven by him. They evidently worked until they Voluntarily quit, or until the work under the lease ceased; at least there is no evidence or claim that any of them were discharged. They did not receive the two dollars per day they were to receive from the proceeds of ore, for the very good reason that the ore was not found; an unfortunate result that happens with more or less frequency in mining. Plaintiff also proved that such work was worth three dollars per day.
At the close of plaintiff’s ease defendant moved for a nonsuit; this was overruled. Defendants rested without putting in any testimony. The court then, becaiise the defendants had failed to distribute the proceeds of the second shipment, held that the plaintiff was entitled to recover three dollars per day for all the time, which he and his assignors had worked, and directed the jury to return a verdict for the amount prayed for. Exceptions were saved to the -rulings and directions of the court, and to the verdict. Judgment was entered on the verdict for the sum of $2,186.70, which was the amount at three dollars per day, less what had been paid. To this judgment the defendants excepted.' Their motion for a new trial was overruled, to which they excepted.
It is difficult to comprehend upon what principle of law this judgment can be sustained.
Tt has been assumed, that the complaint stated a cause of action on an express contract; but plain
It has been likewise assumed that the complaint also stated a cause of action on quantum meruit. Notwithstanding that there was an express contract relative to wages in which the greater part of the wages was dependent on a contingency that' the evidence shows never happened; that all the work was done under this contract; that after the failure to divide the second shipment, the men who were then there knew of it, and continued to work under the contract, and received and accepted all subsequent benefits derived therefrom, and had received and accepted all benefits accruing to them under the contract before the second shipment, the court below took the view, that because defendants had failed to divide the proceeds of the second shipment according
Reference
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- Little Nell Gold Mining Company v. Hemby
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- Published