Dachner v. Union Lead Mining & Smelter Co.

195 P.2d 208, 65 Nev. 313, 1948 Nev. LEXIS 56
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJune 25, 1948
Docket3499
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 195 P.2d 208 (Dachner v. Union Lead Mining & Smelter Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dachner v. Union Lead Mining & Smelter Co., 195 P.2d 208, 65 Nev. 313, 1948 Nev. LEXIS 56 (Neb. 1948).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

R. H. Dachner, doing business under the name and style of Pacific Machinery & Engineering Company, obtained judgment in the district court for the sum of $25,462.07 against the defendant, Union Lead Mining and Smelter Company, a Nevada corporation, for damages growing out of the failure of the defendant to comply with the terms of an alleged contract under which the plaintiff was to construct a flotation mill for the defendant for the sum of $100,000. Defendant has appealed from the judgment and from the order denying its motion for a new trial. The judgment in the sum above mentioned included an item of $15,000 for lost profit, some $3,000 paid by the plaintiff for engineering services, $500 attorneys’ fees paid for services in connection with incorporating a new company to accomplish the financing of the project, and items of payments for machinery, wages and sundry expenses, etc. The district court held as a matter of law that the parties had entered into the contract alleged by the plaintiff, and included in its judgment all items of damage claimed. If the lower court was correct in holding that a contract existed, we are then confronted with a number of questions including (1) as to whether there *315 was a breach of the contract by the defendant, (2) as to whether the plaintiff had first breached his contract, (3) as to whether such breach, if it existed, excused performance on the part of the defendant, (4) as to whether the plaintiff’s alleged breach was in turn caused by the failure of the defendant to perform a condition precedent, (5) whether the items found by the trial court were proper elements of damage under the circumstances, (6) as to the court’s findings of fact with reference to a number of items of damage holding that they were necessary expenditures of the plaintiff “in pursuance of the obligations placed upon him by said contract,” whereas the complaint pleaded each of such items as a quantum meruit, (7) the sufficiency of the proof of these elements, and sundry incidental questions, including many exceptions growing out of the court’s rulings on the admissibility of evidence. On the other hand, if we determine that the trial court was in error in finding that a contract had been entered into between the parties but that the plaintiff is nonetheless entitled to relief as to some of the items within the pleadings and the proofs, many of the questions enumerated will not require our attention at this time. Thus we turn to a consideration of the facts to determine the sole question of law first presented, namely, whether the trial court erred in finding that.a contract existed between the parties.

Was there or was there not a contract between the plaintiff and the defendant for the construction of a mill by the plaintiff for the defendant for the lump sum of $100,000, which sum, plus an additional $50,000 for the retirement of indebtednesses of the defendant, was to be provided by the plaintiff and secured by the defendant’s mortgage, but which was not to be paid to the defendant until the defendant had first submitted a certified public accountant’s report showing the details of such aggregate indebtedness ? Throughout the trial plaintiff steadfastly asserted that such a contract existed, that he had proceeded under it in good faith and was *316 ready, able and willing to perform, was prevented from doing so by defendant’s failure to submit the promised audit, that this was the reason he had never advanced the $50,000 or the $100,000 to provide the cost of the mill and that the defendant had subsequently, without right, canceled his contract. Just as steadfastly the defendant maintained throughout the trial that there never was any contract between the parties, that the matter never got beyond the stage of negotiations, that the accountant’s audit was never required as a prerequisite or condition precedent and that even under the tentative negotiations, claimed by the plaintiff to be a contract, plaintiff had entirely failed in his consideration by failing to advance the $100,000 or the $50,000 or any amount whatsoever. These divergent views were made manifest throughout the trial, were submitted to the district court at the conclusion of the case and in the matter of the making of findings and conclusions and on motion for new trial and were the main subject of contention as raised in the oral arguments before this court and the lengthy briefs on file. Coupled with this situation is the further angle of the dealings of the plaintiff with a group of third persons and the dealings of these third persons both with the plaintiff and the defendant — all with reference to the financing of the project by such group of third persons.

At the conclusion of the testimony and the submission of the case to the district court before which the case was tried without a jury, the learned district judge announced his decision from .the bench in seventeen lines as follows:

“The testimony in this case leads the Court to the conclusion that there was a definite legal contract between the defendant and the plaintiff to do the things set out, that is: To build the mill and furnish the additional sum of $50,000 for the retirement of certificates and certain obligations; And the Court feels that it is reasonable to assume, upon the various documents that have been *317 submitted, that these were obligations requiring the cooperation of the company to assist Mr. Dachner in carrying out the terms of the- contract, and that this cooperation that was made necessary by the terms of the various communications was not carried out by the company. It is therefore the judgment of the court that there toas a definite contract between the company and Mr. Dachner, and that by reason of the violation of the contract, that Mr. Dachner has been damaged in the sum of $25,467.07 and that he have judgment therefor.” (Emphasis supplied.)

There was no formal written contract between the parties, and none such is claimed. There were, however, sundry meetings of plaintiff with the officers of the defendant corporation and with the directors of the defendant corporation and with groups of stockholders of the defendant corporation held at San Francisco, at Carson City, at Reno, and at the mine. There were also meetings and conferences between the plaintiff and the third party group. There were also informal unsigned memoranda made by one or more of the parties as to what had transpired at some of the conferences and meetings. There was testimony of oral proposals and counter proposals and testimony seeking to establish one or more oral agreements between the parties. In addition, there was an exchange of a great deal of correspondence. So confusing was the record of all of these transactions running through the months of March, April, and May 1946 and so confusing were the conflicting interpretations of these transactions as contained in the briefs of counsel that, in an attempt to clarify and concentrate upon the time and place and circumstances under which the minds of the parties .had met or were claimed to have met upon the contract, one of the justices at the oral argument asked counsel for the respondent at the close of the latter’s argument:

“Q. Is it your contention that the contract was made on March 4th ? A. Mr. Brown: It is.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
195 P.2d 208, 65 Nev. 313, 1948 Nev. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dachner-v-union-lead-mining-smelter-co-nev-1948.