Glendenning v. Slayton

179 P. 817, 55 Mont. 586, 1919 Mont. LEXIS 113
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1919
DocketNo. 3,976
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 179 P. 817 (Glendenning v. Slayton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Glendenning v. Slayton, 179 P. 817, 55 Mont. 586, 1919 Mont. LEXIS 113 (Mo. 1919).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this cause plaintiffs recovered a judgment. The defendants have appealed from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The circumstances out of which the action arose, gathered from the complaint, are, briefly stated, as follows: Prior to December 13, 1910, the Ryegate Coal Mining Company, hereafter referred to as the corporation, held a lease for a term of years from the state of Montana, of certain coal land situate in Meagher, now Musselshell, county. On that date it entered into a contract with the plaintiffs under the terms of which it agreed to assign to them the lease free from all encumbrances held upon the land by the state of Montana, by reason of debts due it from the corporation, and to sell them all personal property used in operating the mine. The price to be paid by the plaintiffs was $1,000. Of this sum, $804 was to be paid in cash and the balance, $196, by a credit to be given the corporation upon an account due from it to the plaintiff Gregg, evidenced by a receipt in the form of a receipted bill. The defendants were associated, with other persons not parties to this action, as copartners in conducting a banking business at Rye-gate under the firm name of the Bank of Ryegate. Upon the execution by the corporation of the assignment and bill of sale, it was orally agreed between it and the plaintiffs that the $804 in cash and the receipted bill should be deposited with the defendants, to be held “as an escrow in trust” for the parties to [591]*591be turned over to tbe corporation whenever it had. within a reasonable time paid all the charges due the state and had furnished to the defendants, for the plaintiffs, satisfactory evidence that such charges had been paid and that the title to the leased premises was clear and unencumbered. The deposit was made as agreed, and the Bank of Ryegate accepted the deposit in trust, and as an escrow.

It is alleged that on or about January 13, 1911, the defendants, disregarding the conditions of the trust aiid without waiting until the corporation had furnished satisfactory evidence that its indebtedness to the state had been paid and a clear title to the premises furnished to the plaintiffs, and without the knowledge and consent of the plaintiffs, wrongfully and unlawfully applied the sum of $804 on an indebtedness due to the defendants from the corporation; that the defendants did not receive from the corporation an assignment of the lease with satisfactory evidence that the indebtedness had been paid; that the defendants knew that the indebtedness had not been paid; that no assignment of the lease with satisfactory evidence of the discharge of the indebtedness was ever furnished by the corporation to either the plaintiffs or the defendants; that on or about September 1, 1911, the plaintiffs having learned that the defendants had misapplied the sum of $804 contrary to the terms of the trust, demanded a return thereof together with the receipted bill, but that defendants refused and still refuse, to return the same. It is further alleged that at the time the deposit was made, the corporation was greatly indebted to the state for rents and royalties theretofore accrued, under the lease, but the amount of the indebtedness is not stated. Judgment is demanded for the sum of $1,000, with interest thereon from September 1, 1911.

In their answer, defendants admit that the plaintiffs purchased from the corporation the lease and all the right, title and interest of the corporation in the land referred to in the complaint. They deny all other material allegations therein contained. As an affirmative defense, they then allege, in sub[592]*592stance, that plaintiffs, with full knowledge of all the facts and circumstances connected with the alleged trust agreement, accepted and received the assignment of the lease from the defendant Martin Johnson and forwarded the same to the register of state lands for the purpose of having it formally approved and accepted, and endeavored to procure a new bond running from the plaintiffs to the state of Montana, as is required by law in the event of an assignment of a lease of state land; that plaintiffs soon thereafter took possession of the leased premises, proceeded to operate the coal mines located thereon and extracted therefrom large quantities of coal; that they also took possession of all the appliances used by the corporation in mining coal, and have ever since kept them and appropriated them to their own use. They further allege that in order to raise the sum of $804 referred to in the complaint, plaintiffs gave their individual notes, payable to the Bank of Ryegate, plaintiff Gregg giving his note for $304, due July 1, 1911, and the plaintiff Glendenning giving his note for $500, due June 1, 19.11; that although at the- time the plaintiffs were fully advised of all the facts and circumstances concerning the acts of the defendants in connection with the said trust, they voluntarily paid their notes to the defendants; that on or'about the ninth day of April, 1912, the plaintiff Glendenning, acting for himself and the plaintiff Gregg, paid to the register of state lands the sum of $60 to apply upon the rent due under the terms of the lease; that on or about the twenty-third day of April, 1912, the plaintiffs brought an action in the district court of Mussel-shell county against the corporation and others, seeking to recover from the defendants therein damages for the alleged breach of that clause of the assignment of the lease whereby the corporation had warranted the lease to be clear and free from all encumbrances; that at the time of the happening of these events the plaintiffs were fully advised as to all of them, and that by reason thereof they were estopped to assert that the defendants violated the terms of the alleged trust agreement as set forth in the "complaint, and by their conduct ratified the pay[593]*593ment of said money by tbe defendants. Upon this defense there was issue by reply.

The contentions made in this court are (1) that the complaint does not state a cause of action; (2) that the evidence is insufficient to justify the verdict; (3) that the court erred in refusing to submit to the jury certain instructions requested by the defendants; and (4) that it erred in refusing to grant a new trial on the ground of newly discovered evidence.

The questions presented by the first contention cannot be [1] considered or determined on this appeal. The appeal is from the order denying the defendants a new trial. At no time during the trial was the sufficiency of the pleading drawn in question by objections to the introduction of evidence or other appropriate method. Hence its sufficiency could not be considered by the trial court on a hearing of the motion, nor may it be considered by this court on appeal from the order disposing of it. It could be considered only on appeal from the judgment. (Campbell v. Great Falls, 27 Mont. 37, 69 Pac. 114; Ayotte v. Nadeau, 32 Mont. 498, 81 Pac. 145; Leggat v. Gerrick, 35 Mont. 91, 8 L. R. A. (n. s.) 1238, 88 Pac. 788; O’Rourke v. Grand Opera House Co., 47 Mont. 459, 133 Pac. 965.)

It is not clear from the allegations of the complaint whether the theory of counsel in formulating it was that the deposit made with defendants was an escrow, or created a trust to be executed by defendants as trustees for the plaintiffs and the corporation upon the fulfillment by the latter of the conditions [2] upon which it was to be executed.

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Bluebook (online)
179 P. 817, 55 Mont. 586, 1919 Mont. LEXIS 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glendenning-v-slayton-mont-1919.