Bailey v. Opp

80 P.2d 40, 77 P.2d 826, 159 Or. 301, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 51
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 40 (Bailey v. Opp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bailey v. Opp, 80 P.2d 40, 77 P.2d 826, 159 Or. 301, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 51 (Or. 1938).

Opinions

BEAN, C. J.

This is an action for money,- founded upon a written contract, as modified by an oral agreement. Verdict and judgment were rendered in favor of plaintiffs. Defendants appeal.

The defendants’ mine, known as the “Opp Mine”, for about 20 years was dormant and nonproductive. The timbers in the tunnels had rotted, the tunnels had caved in, and many of the portals had caved in and were grown over with brush.

On June 24,1929, the defendants, who were husband and wife, entered into a written contract with the plaintiffs, who were husband and wife, of the following purport: The parties of the first part, the Opps, were thp lawful owners of certain patented mining ground consisting of 360 acres, situated near Jacksonville, Jackson county, Oregon. The “Opp Mine”, upon which much development work had been performed, consisted of divers tunnels, raises, drifts, crosscuts, etc., aggregating approximately 10,000 feet. The tunnels were designated by numbers from 1 to 18, inclusive. The Opps desired to improve and develop the mine in tunnel No. 11 and tunnel No. 2, as follows: Tunnel No. 11 was obstructed by caves, etc., and the pipe line to the *304 compressor was disconnected. The tunnel was to be cleaned out and the pipe line reinstated, and timbered where necessary, and approximately 100 feet of track was to be laid in the crosscut at the base of the drift, and the crosscut extended a distance of 25 feet; Tunnel No. 2 was to be cleaned out and extended 200 feet, likewise the pipe line and track was to be carried with such extension. The contract provided: “This work is to be done at any place designated by the first parties”. The second parties, the Baileys, agreed to do the work and furnish the pipe for the pipe line, together with trackage, in a workmanlike manner, and furnish the material at their own cost and expense. The first parties, the Opps, in consideration thereof promised and agreed to pay to the second parties, for all of such labor and materials, the sum of $1,500 on or before October 1, 1929, and also to pay an additional sum of $10,000 in the following manner:

“The first parties, after all of the work has been completed and said equipment has been so installed, shall use their best efforts to make a sale of said property at a price agreeable to the first parties, and the first parties shall pay to the second parties, their successors or assigns, 15% (fifteen per cent) of each payment that shall be made upon the purchase price of said property at and when such payments shall be madp respectively until said full amount of the sum of ten thousand ($10,000.00) dollars shall be paid, without interest. If said mine shall not be so sold, but shall be operated, then the first parties shall pay to the second, parties, their successors and assigns, 15% of the net returns from the operation of said mine until said sum of $10,000, without interest, shall have been paid. ’ ’ *305 personally for the payment of said sums respectively, and this provision in this contract is made to define the manner of payment.”

*304 The contract provided that the mine was not to be charged with the payment of said sums; that is, they were not a lien upon the property. It further provided: “The second parties look entirely to the first parties

*305 The work was to be done in the shortest time possible. The second parties agreed to pay promptly for all labor and material in carrying out the contract. The title to the pipe, tracks and other material installed under the contract, after installation, was to belong to the first parties and be a part of said mine. The contract was duly signed and witnessed in duplicate.

Plaintiffs in their amended complaint allege:

“That subsequent to the execution of said contract, Exhibit ‘a’, the parties thereto orally modified said contract by mutual agreement, and under the terms of the agreement as modified, second parties, plaintiffs herein, were required to drift on the ore vein, located approximately 260 feet from the portal thereof, in an easterly direction a distance of 36 feet, and to install track furnished by defendants and pipe furnished by the plaintiffs, and to extend on the same ore vein in a westerly direction from a point 100 feet from said tunnel #2 to a point 170 feet, and to install track furnished by the defendants and pipe furnished by the plaintiffs, and plaintiffs herein were further required to cut through, muck and clean out a cave-in, and to timber the same where necessary, which said cave-in was unknown to the parties hereto at the time of the execution of said contract, Exhibit “A”, and which cave-in was discovered in tunnel #11 about 965 feet from the portal thereof, and in addition thereto, plaintiffs herein were required to pay to the defendants the sum of $100 in cash, and in consideration for these additional services, materials and equipment to be furnished by the plaintiffs herein, it was mutually agreed by and between the parties that the plaintiffs should not be required to reinstate the pipe line to the compressor in tunnel #11, and that the plaintiffs should not be required to install 100 feet of track in the cross-cut at the base of the drift in tunnel #11, and that the plaintiffs should not be re *306 quired to extend said cross-cut a distance of 25 feet or at all, or furnish any pipe or track therefor, and that the plaintiffs should not be required to extend tunnel #2 a distance of 200 feet or at all, and that the plaintiffs should not be required to furnish or install any track or pipe for said 200-foot extension in tunnel #2, and said requirement that the plaintiffs pay to the defendants the sum of $100.00 in cash was mutually agreed and intended that said payment shall constitute full and complete compliance on the part of the plaintiffs for any and all things undone, whether in the original written contract or as modified, excepting that the plaintiffs were required, subsequent to the payment of the $100.00 in cash, to complete cutting through and cleaning out said cave-in in tunnel #11, approximately 965 feet from the portal thereof, a distance of 96.2 feet and to timber the same where necessary. It was further mutually agreed by and between the parties to said contract that said contract shall otherwise remain in full force and effect.”

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Bailey v. Opp
80 P.2d 40 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 40, 77 P.2d 826, 159 Or. 301, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bailey-v-opp-or-1938.