Chappell v. McMillan

113 P. 611, 15 N.M. 686
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1910
DocketNo. 1245
StatusPublished

This text of 113 P. 611 (Chappell v. McMillan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chappell v. McMillan, 113 P. 611, 15 N.M. 686 (N.M. 1910).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT.

ABBOTT, J.

The appellant does not here call in question that part of the' order of the District Court of June 2, 1908, which decrees the validity of the McMillan option and the related conveyances. The essential injury of which he complains to this court, through his assignments of error, is that by the order referred to, his agreement with the'Carthage Coal Company, of July 1, 1904, was declared void and its cancellation decreed. Of the appellees only the Carthage Coal Company, August H. Hilton, and Henry E. Buel are parties to the pleadings on which that portion of the order is founded. In their briefs, both parties claim that the question of the validity of the_ Chappell agreement with the Carthage Coal Company was not before the trial court on the pleadings. That position, we think, is untenable for the appellant since he chose not to stand on his demurrer to the counter claim of the appellees above named, whereby they alleged the invalidity of the agreement in question, and prayed for its cancellation, but instead replied to the counter claim, alleging the validity of his agreement and his right to the payment of ten thousand dollars from the Carthage Coal Company, in accordance with its terms. Overland Dis. Co. v. Wedeles and cases cited, 1 N. M., 528, 531; Bremen Mining Co. v. Bremen, 13 N. M. 111. On the other hand, the three appellees named aver that the appellant, having ■ in his original complaint alleged the invalidity of the McMillan option, is precluded from afterwards, in the same cause, making any claim based on its validity. Whether the.appellant is chargeable with fatal inconsistency in his pleadings we need not determine, since the appellees did not make that one of 'the grounds of their demurrer to his reply to their counter claim, but alleged and relied on the invalidity of the Chappell agreement, for failure of consideration moving from the appellant to the Carthage Coal Company.

The trial court sustained the demurrer, and must therefore have passed on the validity of the Chappell agreement, arriving apparently at the conclusion embodied in Finding of Law 3, which is as follows: “The contract and lease between the Carthage Coal Company was made subject to the rights of the said McMillan under his said option with the Carthage Coal Company and by the election to purchase and the making of the first and second payments of the purchase price, the conveyance of the Carthage Coal Company to the said McMillan and by him to the said Stackhouse and the taking of possession by the latter, before any payment had been made or any act had been done, or was required to be made or done under or by virtue of the terms of the contract and lease between the Carthage Coal Company .and the plaintiff, discharged and released both said plaintiff and said company from all their promises and undertakings therein contained, and the' said contract and lease became null and void and there resulted an entire failure of consideration therefor.”

1 Fortunately, the attorneys in the cause did not, on 'either side, stand on the position that the validity of the Chappell agreement was not involved, but, instead, have aided the court with able and exhaustive arguments on the question,' in their briefs. Adopting the facts as stated in the finding of the trial court quoted, it is obvious that we must first determine what was the consideration on Chappell’s part for what the Carthage Coal Company in its contract with him of July 1, 1904, agreed to do. Was it that he actually should mine certain quantities of coal and pay to the Cartilage Coal Company certain royalties thereon, etc., or that he should promise and agree to do those things in certain contingencies, binding himself to the defendant coal company, to that effect by a valid agreement? On this the whole matter turns. It is familiar law (Cjrc. 9, 323) that a promise to do or forbear from doing an act may be “just as valuable consideration for a promise as the act or forbearance would be,” and “that the promise given for a promise, is dependent on a condition does not affect its validity as consideration.” Cyc. 9, 327.

It was plainly in the minds of the parties, as the contract shows, that Chappell might never make a payment, never mine any coal, never pay any royalties; yet he might have had to do all those things under his contract in the event that McMillan did not buy under his option. The unavoidable inference from the terms of the Chappell agreement and the other facts of record is that, for some reason, the coal company thought or feared that McMillan would not buy under his option, or that the outcome would somehow be unsatisfactory to it. It clearly preferred disposing of the property in question,, at a less price and on more favorable terms to the purchaser than it had made to McMillan, to holding and operating it. It gave Chappell an option to buy it for $65,000, whereas the price to McMillan was $75,000. The difference of $10,000 between the two prices is significant as being the very amount which it agreed to pay Chappell in case McMillan should take the property under his option. In effect, it agreed to give the benefit of the McMillan option to Chappell, as to the first payment to be made under it, which, if made, was to relieve Chappell to that extent, and in the difference of $10,000, between the two prices, in consideration ■of his agreeing to take the mine off its hands, operate it and pay a royalty in the event of the expected failure of McMillan to buy under his option. Up to the time when McMillan met the terms of his agreement, it was protected against such a failure by the Chappell agreement for a consideration which was clearly expressed, and on terms which must have been in the minds of the parties since they were explicitly embodied in the contract.

The appellees contend that the "object” or "motive” of the coal company in making the Chappell agreement is to be distinguished from the “consideration” on Chappell’s part, which is true, but the obvious motive or object throws light on what was the real consideration. The appellees claim also that the appellant áttempts to read into the Chappell agreement conditions which it does not contain when be asserts “that his promise to mine coal and pay a royalty was in the alternative, or that it was - dependent upon the validity and exercise of McMillan’s option.” Yet such, we think, is the plain import of the language of the agreement. After the provisions in it which are appropriate to and constitute a lease of the property, it provides thus: "It is further provided that this lease and option i-s subject to the rights, if .any he has, of Daniel H. McMillan growing out of an option given by the said party of the first part to the said McMillan on the 2nd day of February, A. D., 1904, and the said party of the second part agrees to protect and save harmless the said party of the first part from any litigation which might be brought by the said McMillan against the said party of the first part by reason of his -having executed this contract.” And: “It is further agreed that if it should be determined that the said Daniel H. McMillan has the right to carry out the said option that all payments, except the first, whieh has hereinbefore been provided for, shall be paid to said party of the first part herein, except ten thousand dollars of the last payment specified in the said option, which shall be made to the party of the second part herein, and in case of the refusal or neglect of the said Daniel H.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P. 611, 15 N.M. 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chappell-v-mcmillan-nm-1910.