Haskins v. Curran

43 P. 559, 4 Idaho 573, 1895 Ida. LEXIS 74
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 43 P. 559 (Haskins v. Curran) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haskins v. Curran, 43 P. 559, 4 Idaho 573, 1895 Ida. LEXIS 74 (Idaho 1895).

Opinions

Appellants assign sixty-seven errors, and demand a reversal of both the order denying a new trial and the judgment, and a dismissal of the action.

Appellants open the argument in their brief with the proposition that because the bond which appellant Curran had on the mines did not, in terms, require him to work them, the plaintiff cannot recover for money advanced for that purpose; that the contract sued on only required Haskins to advance money to carry out the obligations of Curran and Hussey with the owners of said mines, and indorsed on the deed or envelopes which contained them, and deposited in the bank; that the conditions thereon indorsed only provided for the payment of money to the owners, and contained no mention of work to be performed on the mines. It appears that this contention was first raised in this court, but I have concluded to pass upon it. *Page 577 The facts appear in the record that, at the time the contract sued on was made, the appellants were working said mines, and the first advance of money made by respondent amounted to $2,750, $2,400 of which was paid to the owners of the mines, and the balance, to wit, $350, was paid by Mr. Curran for work done on the mines. Mr. Curran testified that he worked the Paymaster mine with Mr. Haskins until November 8, 1891, when Haskins told him to quit work, that he would not put up any more money. We think the record clearly shows that the contract sued on contemplated that the mine should be worked, and that Haskins should put up money therefor, as long as it was agreeable for him so to do. There is no merit in the contention.

It appears from the record that the appellants defended in the court below on two grounds, to wit: 1. That a mining partnership was formed by the terms of said contract, and that one partner could not maintain an action at law against his copartners in regard to partnership matters until, at least, a settlement and an accounting had been had between the partners, and a balance struck and agreed upon; and 2. That the contract sued on had been canceled, and superseded by a subsequent contract; while the cause was tried in that court by respondent on the theory (1) that no partnership was created under said contract, and that no partnership existed in said matter; and (2) that the subsequent contract relied upon by appellants was only an option, at best, which had been waived by plaintiff, and was no defense for that reason.

As to the first contention of appellants, to wit, that a partnership was formed by the terms of said contract: It was the evident intention of the parties thereto to form a partnership for promoting the sale of said mines, and to do certain development work thereon, each to stand one-third of the payments and expenses, and each to receive one-third of the profits of the venture. The contract itself recognizes the parties thereto as partners, and contains the following stipulation, to wit: "In consideration of such advancements, said Martin Curran and Susie Hussey hereby admit him [Haskins] as an equal one-third partner in and under said bond, and in and to all property rights, titles, and interests therein," etc. The attorneys *Page 578 for the respondent earnestly contend that said contract contains none of the elements of a partnership, while, in their brief filed herein, they recognize the defendants as partners of the plaintiff, under and by virtue of the terms of said agreement. They say: "The venture seems to have had in it some of the elements of uncertainty incident to mining speculation; and Mr. Haskins, while evidently willing to risk losing one-third of the money which he should put into the speculation, desired to secure himself upon personal security for the two-thirds advanced for his partners. And his partners evidently had sufficient faith in the outcome of the speculation to undertake, in the event of its failure, to repay Mr. Haskins the two-thirds of the money advanced on their account." As to the law on this proposition, Mr. Justice Story, in his work on Partnership, at section 82, says: "There may also be a partnership in some cases touching interests in lands, or in a single tract of land, which will be governed by the ordinary rules applicable to partnerships in trade and commerce Thus, for example, there may be a partnership in working of mines, for courts of equity constantly treat the working of a mine as a species of trade, and apply the same remedial justice to such cases as they do to ordinary partnerships." And we need not go beyond our own statutes to sustain the proposition that a partnership may be formed for such ventures as the one under consideration. The Revised Statutes, section 3300, declares that "a mining partnership exists when two or more persons who own or acquire a mining claim, for the purpose of working it and extracting the mineral therefrom, actually engage in working it."

In the absence of an express contract of partnership, that section of the statute declares that when certain facts, therein enumerated, exist between parties, a mining partnership exists between them. Such parties or any of them do not necessarily need to own the mine so worked. It is sufficient if they acquire it for the purpose of working it, and actually engage in working the same. The provisions of said section need not be invoked in the case at bar to hold that a mining partnership existed between the parties, for the reason that the parties themselves have made an express contract of partnership for promoting the sale and development of said mines, and have actually engaged in working them. *Page 579

Appellants contend that, as the parties to said contract were partners, the respondent cannot maintain this action, for the reason that one partner cannot maintain an action at law against his copartners for advances made by him on account of the firm, until, at least, a settlement and an accounting of partnership matters has been had, and a balance struck and agreed upon by the partners, and cite, in support thereof, Ross v. Cornell, 45 Cal. 133; Graham v. Holt, 3 Ired. 300, 40 Am. Dec. 408; McDonald v. Holmes, 22 Or. 212, 29 Pac. 735; Crossley v.Taylor, 83 Ind. 337; Parsons on Partnership, 268; Story on Partnership, sec. 348a, p. 558. Those authorities recognize the general rule, and some of them also recognize that there are exceptions to the general rule. As a rule, advances to the firm and advances from it do not constitute debts, strictly speaking, but are only items in the accounts between the partners in the winding up of the concern; and in that class of cases a suit for an accounting is as necessary to settle the account as in the case of any other partnership accounts. (Wilson v. Soper, 13 B. Mon. 411, 56 Am. Dec. 573; 2 Lindley on Partnership, bot. p. 1350, and note 2.) But I do not think the case at bar comes within that rule. The stipulation in the agreement sued on is as follows: "It is hereby agreed that the undersigned, W. S.

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Bluebook (online)
43 P. 559, 4 Idaho 573, 1895 Ida. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haskins-v-curran-idaho-1895.