Alhambra Consolidated Mines, Inc. v. Alhambra Shumway Mines, Inc.

239 Cal. App. 2d 590, 49 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 25, 1966
DocketCiv. 11120
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 239 Cal. App. 2d 590 (Alhambra Consolidated Mines, Inc. v. Alhambra Shumway Mines, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alhambra Consolidated Mines, Inc. v. Alhambra Shumway Mines, Inc., 239 Cal. App. 2d 590, 49 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

GOOD, J. pro tem. *

Plaintiff above named, herein called "Consolidated,” appeals from an order granting a new trial in an action for conspiracy to slander title to a mining leasehold, trespass and dispossession by defendants (all being stated in a first cause of action) and for malicious prosecution (stated in a second cause of action) wherein judgment was entered upon a jury verdict for $83,000 damages against Alhambra Shumway Mines, Inc., its directors and a stockholder as well as other defendants who have since been dismissed. Because all of the issues on appeal relate equally to all defendants, "Shumway” herein, for convenience, will include both corporate and individual respondents. Shumway’s motion for a new trial was grounded upon excessive damages, insufficiency of the evidence and error of law. The trial court granted it upon all of the grounds set forth "including specifically the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict.” Consolidated assigned the judgment to appellant G. G. Davis before the motion for new trial was heard. Davis appeals separately from said order upon the sole ground of the timeliness of the notice of intent to move for a new trial. Consolidated’s appeal is predicated upon a claimed abuse of discretion in granting said motion and urges that res ad judicata deprives Shumway of all defenses herein. These issues will be separately discussed below as will the issues raised by Shumway’s cross-appeal from the judgment.

The appeals are the latest stage in a series of three lawsuits between Shumway, owner of the gold mining property, and Consolidated, its lessee. By a lease executed in 1947 and amended in 1948, Shumway leased the mine for 20 years to Consolidated. In February 1951 Shumway filed an action to rescind the lease on the ground that it was an invalid dis *593 position of substantially all corporate assets without the formal approval by vote or written consent of a majority of voting stockholders required by Corporations Code section 3901. The case bore the El Dorado clerk’s file number 7021 and will sometimes be referred to by that number herein. Various aspects thereof were the subject of decisions by this court in 1953, 1957 and, finally, in February 1962. An order appointing a receiver was reversed in the case reported in 116 Cal.App.2d 869 [254 P.2d 599] because an injunction would have provided adequate remedy to protect Shumway’s rights therein. The case was tried in 1955 and a judgment in favor of Consolidated was reversed because Consolidated had not paid its corporate franchise tax since 1950. This decision is reported in 155 Cal.App.2d 46 [317 P.2d 649]. The case was retried in 1960 and judgment in favor of Consolidated was affirmed by this court upon the ground of laches on the part of Shumway’s officers and shareholders. Again, the decision is reported in 200 Cal.App.2d 322 [19 Cal.Rptr. 208]. The parties were embattled in case 7021 from February 1951 until February 1962, a period of 11 years.

The record shows that in 1949 a purportedly rich discovery was made by Consolidated and widely publicized but that further development by way of any mining operations was suspended immediately thereafter; and, at the time of an apparently unopposed resumption of possession by Consolidated in 1956, that Consolidated had not paid either the taxes or an annual rental of $100 as required by the lease since 1950. In 1956, Consolidated’s president reentered the mine and commenced negotiations for a new lease. A stockholder, Rego, expended some $70,000 rehabilitating the mine, during the course of said negotiations. Rego left in 1957 when Consolidated’s president (not Shumway) informed Rego that they could not operate the mine because they could not negotiate the new lease. The testimony concerning these negotiations is not entirely clear as to who instituted them nor why a new lease was considered necessary. Consolidated’s president remained in possession for three or four months after Rego’s departure and then left voluntarily. The property was unoccupied for several years thereafter. No order or other demand for possession appears to have been made by Shumway until in 1959 it served a notice of forfeiture on Consolidated. Ten separate breaches of lease were specified, all occurring since 1950.

*594 Thereafter, in 1961, Shumway filed a quiet title action against Consolidated alleging a forfeiture by reason of said breaches of the lease and abandonment as well. In defense of its leasehold interest Consolidated filed an answer denying all breaches and alleging an estoppel by reason of the alleged malicious prosecution and maintenance of said case 7021 as well as trespass and the use of force and violence in preventing its possession and use of the mine. In a separate cross-complaint Consolidated sought damages in excess of $5,000,000 in three separate counts of trespass, conspiracy to slander title and malicious prosecution. That action, hereinafter referred to as “case No. 10391,” although set for trial prior to the trial of the instant ease, was continued by reason of the illness of Shumway’s counsel, the late Aubrey H. Seed, Esq. The case is still pending in El Dorado County.

In January 1963, after its ultimate victory in the long pending ease 7021, Consolidated filed the instant ease. In the first count, Consolidated sought damages for conspiracy to slander its leasehold title, trespass and dispossession, all based upon acts alleged to have occurred during the long pendency of the rescission action. As above noted, the second cause was for malicious prosecution. Shumway’s answer included a general denial and pleaded the separate defense of another action pending between the parties involving the same issues, being case No. 10391 discussed above. Whereupon, Consolidated resorted to the expediency of a unilateral praecipe for dismissal of its three causes of cross-complaint in said quiet title suit. The dismissal, however, still left the same allegations that formed the substance of the cross-complaint as well as the present complaint still pleaded by way of special defenses in its answer to the said quiet title suit.

As indicated above, a jury returned a verdict of $83,000 damages in favor of Consolidated, following which the trial court granted Shumway’s motion for a new trial. Shumway has cross-appealed from the judgment, urging error in permitting the present damage suit to be tried before disposition of its quiet title suit and contending that it was an abuse of discretion not to have first tried the issue of its separate defense of the pendency of said quiet title suit. The issues raised by the appeals and cross-appeal will be discussed in three sections with further factual and procedural details supplied as may be pertinent,

*595 I

The issue of timeliness of the notice of intent to move for a new trial will be discussed first. It arises under the following circumstances: On June 25, 1964, at the time of entering the judgment on the verdict herein, the court clerk mailed a copy thereof to all attorneys of record. The copy included the date, book and page number of entry.

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Bluebook (online)
239 Cal. App. 2d 590, 49 Cal. Rptr. 38, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1799, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alhambra-consolidated-mines-inc-v-alhambra-shumway-mines-inc-calctapp-1966.