Galbraith v. Monarch Gold Dredging Co.

84 P.2d 1110, 160 Or. 282, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 124
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 1, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 84 P.2d 1110 (Galbraith v. Monarch Gold Dredging Co.) 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
Galbraith v. Monarch Gold Dredging Co., 84 P.2d 1110, 160 Or. 282, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 124 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

BAILEY, J.

The circuit court on May 24, 1938, upon the written consent of the attorney for defendant entered judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, John W. Galbraith and Eliza Ray Galbraith, and against the defendant, Monarch Gold Dredging Company, in the sum of $4,751.73, together with interest thereon at 6 *284 per cent per annum from December 3, 1936, and the further sum of $474.41 as costs, being the full amount asked by the plaintiffs in their complaint. Thereafter, on June 24, 1938, the defendant filed a motion to have the judgment set aside on the ground that the defendant’s attorney had no authority to consent to it. This motion was denied by the court, with permission to the defendant to file a motion to vacate said judgment pursuant to the provisions of § 1-907, Oregon Code 1930, on the ground that the said judgment was taken against the defendant through its mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect.

Thereupon the defendant filed a new motion to have the judgment set aside, on two grounds, towit: that the attorney for the defendant had no authority to consent to the entry of such judgment, and that at the time of stipulating consent to the entry thereof the then attorney for the defendant was of the opinion that such consent did not preclude an appeal to the supreme court. This motion also was denied by the circuit court.

In its notice of appeal to this court the defendant recites that it is appealing from the original judgment and from the orders of the circuit court denying its motions to have the said judgment set aside.

In May, 1934, the plaintiffs and one Marian E. Galbraith, owners of land in Grant county, entered into a contract with Howard Investment Company for the sale by the plaintiffs to that company of certain described lands or so much thereof as the said investment company might desire to use for dredging purposes. Before any dredging operations by the investment company were commenced, that company sold and transferred its interest in the contract to the defendant in this case, and the plaintiffs herein succeeded to all interest that Marian E. Galbraith had in the contract.

*285 The price to be paid for the lands taken for dredging purposes was $300 an acre. According to the allegations of the complaint, the defendant dredged 43.411 acres of land, the purchase price of which as specified in the contract would amount to $13,023.30, of which sum only $8,271.57 had been paid. The amount awarded by the judgment represented the difference between the above amounts.

A copy of the contract is attached to the complaint as an exhibit. In it is a provision for arbitration in the event of “differences of opinion or construction arising” out of the said contract.

The defendant demurred to the complaint, claiming that the action should abate until the matters in dispute had been arbitrated, and on the further ground that the complaint failed to state facts constituting a cause of action. This demurrer was overruled.

Thereupon the defendant filed its answer, in which it denied that the defendant had dredged more than 39.073 acres of land and further denied that the total amount which the defendant was to pay plaintiffs was in excess of $11,730. The answer affirmatively alleged that the defendant had paid to the plaintiffs the sum of $9,271.59, leaving the defendant indebted to the plaintiffs in an amount not exceeding $2,458.41.

Two affirmative defenses are set forth in the defendant’s answer, the first of which is a plea in abatement to the effect that the contract provided that any differences between the defendant and the plaintiffs should first be settled by arbitration, and that (1) the amount of acreage dredged by the defendant had not been determined by arbitration and (2) the defendant had deposited with plaintiffs $1,000, which money was agreed to be applied toward the final payment to be *286 made under the contract when the defendant completed its dredging operations, and that the question of whether defendant had completed such operations was, under the terms of the contract, to be settled by arbitration.

As a second further and separate answer “and as an alternative defense only in the event the plea in abatement should be denied,” the defendant alleged that a settlement had been had between the defendant and the plaintiffs on or about October 29, 1935; that on that date the defendant had paid the plaintiffs the sum of $702, “in full settlement and satisfaction of all controversies under such contract prior to such date”; and “that a large portion, if not all, of the said pretended claim of the plaintiffs” related to dredging done prior to the date of the said settlement.

The demurrer of the plaintiffs to the two affirmative defenses in the defendant’s answer was sustained on May 10, 1938, and the defendant was granted three days to file an amended answer. The defendant, however, elected not to plead further.

The action had been instituted on March 11, 1937, and in order to avoid further delay the court on or about May 10, 1938, with the knowledge of counsel for both parties, set the case for trial for May 24 following.

After the commencement of this action certain personal property belonging to the defendant was attached and in order to discharge it from attachment a bond and undertaking were duly executed by Alton L. Collins and T. W. Collins as sureties, and on the entering of judgment against the defendant corporation for the amount prayed for in the complaint, judgment was also entered against the sureties, both of whom joined with the defendant in the notice of appeal.

*287 The following facts from the affidavits in support .of, and in opposition to, the motions to set aside the judgment, are not in dispute: On May 10, 1938, W. J. Noon, secretary of the defendant corporation, was notified that the case had been set for trial for May 24, 1938, at ten o’clock in the forenoon. During the week of May 16 Mr. Noon was called by telephone at Baker, Oregon, by Orval D. Yokom, who was then the only attorney representing the defendant. Mr. Yokom told him that the trial of the case was set for May 24 and requested him to be at John Day, where the attorney resided, on Sunday, May 22. Mr. Noon did not go to John Day on that date, but in the evening of May 22 Mr. Yokom received a letter from him stating that Mr. Noon was going to Olympia, Washington, and that if it was imperative for him to be present at the trial, Mr. Yokom could wire him at Olympia. Mr. Yokom did not again get in touch with Mr. Noon, for the reason that he thought it might be possible to compromise the matters in dispute between the parties, inasmuch as arrangement had been made for a meeting on the following day between Mr. Yokom and Mr. Hubbard, plaintiffs’ attorney.

On Monday, May 23, attorneys for the litigants discussed the question of a settlement of not only the matters in dispute in the present action, but also other differences growing out of the contract. On that day or early the next morning the attorney for the defendant got in touch with Alton L.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 P.2d 1110, 160 Or. 282, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbraith-v-monarch-gold-dredging-co-or-1938.