Catmull v. Johnson

541 P.2d 793, 1975 Utah LEXIS 771
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1975
Docket13927
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 541 P.2d 793 (Catmull v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Catmull v. Johnson, 541 P.2d 793, 1975 Utah LEXIS 771 (Utah 1975).

Opinion

MAUGHAN, Justice:

Plaintiffs initiated this action to recover certain royalty payments which they claimed were due and owing pursuant to an agreement between them and defendant Johnson, and which was binding upon the other defendants as successors in interest to Johnson. Upon trial before the court, plaintiffs were granted judgment and they were awarded payments for the years 1971, 1972, and 1973. Defendants appeal therefrom.

On February 28, 1966, plaintiffs conveyed three mining claims to defendant Johnson and his wife. These were situated in Little Cottonwood Canyon, and known as the Free Coinage Claims. This conveyance was expressly made subject to an agreement of the same date between the grantor and grantees, and the terms of the agreement were incorporated by reference in the deed. This agreement provided that Johnson would pay Catmull a percentage of the gross receipts from any ski lift erected upon the land conveyed. The percentages varied according to whether the lift was erected partially or completely on the subject lands, but in no event was the grantor to receive less than two per cent of the gross receipts. The agreement, which was recorded, provided that it was binding upon Johnson’s successors in title and that any subequent conveyance of the fee was expressly made subject to the agreement.

Defendant Johnson encountered difficulty in obtaining financing for construction of the ski lift, on property subject to a royalty agreement. On December 18, 1969, plaintiff executed an “Amendment To Agreement” which provided:

AMENDMENT TO AGREEMENT

For valuable consideration, I hereby amend our Agreement of February 28, 1966 to provide that you or any successor in interest may purchase and acquire all of my rights and interests under said Agreement upon payment to me in cash as follows:

If paid on or before July 1, 1970 the total price shall be $17,000.
If paid after July 1, 1970 the total price shall be $21,000.

Plaintiff received a check in the sum of $10 as consideration for execution of this amendment. Subsequently, in May 1970, the Johnsons’ interest in the property was conveyed to defendant, Snowbird, Ltd., a Utah limited partnership, which had actual knowledge of the agreement. Financing for the project was obtained in 1970; construction commenced in 1970, and continued in 1971. The operation of the ski lifts started in November and December, 1971, including a lift known as Gad II, which was partially erected across the Free Coinage Claims.

No royalties were tendered or paid to plaintiffs, and no demand was made therefor until May 1973. In April 1973, John-, son contacted plaintiff and inquired whether he would sell his royalty interest for $17,000. Plaintiff refused and stated that circumstances had changed since the amendment was executed — there was now a lift operating on the property. On May 16, 1973, plaintiff sent Johnson a letter stating that he would not sell his interest for any price, and demanding the payments due him under the 1966 agreement. On May 24, 1973, Johnson tendered a draft of $21,000 to plaintiff and demanded an assignment of plaintiff’s interest, in accordance with the 1969 amendment to the royalty agreement. Plaintiff refused tender and this action was commenced.

Defendants pleaded that plaintiff’s refusal to accept the tendered payment and to deliver the requested assigment constituted *795 a breach of the 1966 agreement, as amended in 1969; that the agreement was, therefore, no longer binding upon the parties, and plaintiff was not entitled to recover any sum due thereunder. In reply to defendants’ answer, plaintiff pleaded that if the 1969 amendment were a valid option, it had expired, or had been withdrawn.

Upon trial to the court, the court ruled that the 1966 agreement was valid and in full force and effect and that defendants were bound thereby. The 1969 amendment was construed as giving Johnson the right for a reasonable length of time to acquire the interest in the royalty at the prices specified. The trial court ruled that between December 1969 and April 1973, more than a reasonable time had elapsed for exercise of the right to purchase the royalty, that conditions in the interim had changed substantially; and that the royalty payable was grossly in excess of the amount forming the basis of price recited in the amendment.

The findings of fact indicated that plaintiff had calculated the price of $21,000 on the representation of Johnson that the royalty could never exceed $100 per month. By 1973, it was apparent to defendants that the royalty would be approximately $300 per month for 1972, and $450 per month for 1973.

The parties also disagreed as to the proper method of calculating the gross receipts attributed to Gad II, since the rides on this lift are not sold separately. The trial court found that it would be reasonable to calculate the royalty by using the same formula used by the Forest Service to' determine the use fee for ski lifts on governmental lands.

On appeal, defendants contend that the trial court erred in its conclusion of law in paragraph 3, which stated:

3. The so-called “Amendment to Agreement” of December 18, 1969 lacks the mutuality of a bilateral agreement and gave the First Party the right for a reasonable length of time to acquire the ski royalty involved in this action at the prices specified.

Within the factual framework of this matter, this conclusion correctly construes the amendment of 1969, as an option, i. e., a continuing offer, which must be unconditionally accepted within a reasonable time to create a binding contract. 1 Through a process of argument defendants have claimed the trial court found the option void for lack of mutuality. This contention constitutes a distortion of the findings of fact and conclusions of law, which must be construed together. Defendants in their answer had pleaded that they had performed under the agreement, that plaintiffs had committed a breach, which excused defendants from further performance. The conclusion of the trial court was a response to this answer, namely, that so long as the option remained unaccepted, it was a unilateral writing lacking the mutual elements of a contract, and that there must be an acceptance by the optionee, before an executory contract, binding on the parties, can arise. 2

Defendants contend that the trial court erred in concluding that more than a reasonable time had elapsed between December 1969 and April 1973, the time plaintiffs revoked their offer. Defendants urge that as a matter of law the option had not expired prior to May 24, 1973, the day Johnson tendered $21,000.

Where an agreement is silent as to the time in which an optionee is required to exercise his option, the law requires the party to act within a reasonable *796 time. What is deemed a reasonable time is ordinarily a question of fact under all the circumstances. 3 However, by its very nature,' an option is an instrument as to which time is of the essence. 4

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Bluebook (online)
541 P.2d 793, 1975 Utah LEXIS 771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/catmull-v-johnson-utah-1975.