Hazzard v. Johnson

187 P. 121, 45 Cal. App. 19, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 326
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 15, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 3081.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 187 P. 121 (Hazzard v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hazzard v. Johnson, 187 P. 121, 45 Cal. App. 19, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 326 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

CONRET, P. J.

Plaintiff appeals from a judgment for $3,499.30, entered in favor of defendants Johnson, Willard, and Skeats upon their cross-complaint.

On December 11, 1915, the plaintiff, as party of the first part, and the defendants in their capacity as partners doing business under the firm name of North Hubbard Syndicate, as parties of the second part, entered into a contract in writing, whereby the first party leased to the second parties a certain “mine, mining claim and mining property” in San Diego County, known and described as the North Hubbard mine, “together with the appurtenances thereto,” including various items of machinery, tools, and appliances, “also four buildings now upon said premises, to-wit: one engine house, one blacksmith shop, one boarding house and one bunk house.” This lease was to run for a term of three years, beginning with December 15, 1915, “unless sooner forfeited or terminated through the violation of any covenants hereinafter against said lessees reserved, or through their failure to exercise their optional right to purchase said properties hereinafter given or to make the payments therefor strictly as hereinafter required.” The lessees were “to pay the lessor the sum of one hundred dollars coincidently with the signing of these presents,” and also certain royalties. It was further agreed that “upon the violation by said lessees or any person under them of any covenant or covenants herein reserved the term of this lease at the option of said lessor shall expire and the same and the said premises with the appurtenances thereto shall become forfeited to said lessor, and the said lessor or his ageftts may thereupon enter upon said premises and dispossess all persons occupying the same, and with or without force, and with or without process of law. Or at the option of said lessor the *22 said tenants and all persons found in occupation may be proceeded against as trespassers from the beginning of said term both as to royalty and the ore severed therefrom, or as guilty of unlawful detainer.”

“And in consideration of said initial payment of one hundred dollars, the party of the first part hereby gives to the parties of the second part the optional right, to purchase said mine, mining claim and premises, together with all the appurtenances and other property hereinbefore specified for the sum and amount of fifteen thousand dollars ($15,000.00) payable as follows: said one hundred dollars ($100.00) initial payment for rental in that event to apply on said purchase price, and the residue to be paid nineteen hundred dollars ($1900.00) on or before ninety (90) days from the date hereof”; the remaining $13,000.00 to be paid in three installments, the last payable on or before December 15, 1918.

“All or any of said payments may at the option of the lessees 'be made prior to the date on which they are herein required to be made, and all royalties to be paid to the lessor under the terms hereof, shall in the event of the exercise by the lessees of their optional right to purchase, apply upon the installments of the purchase price next to fall due.

“But it is hereby expressly understood and declared that this lease and agreement is made in contemplation of the exercise by the lessees of said option to purchase and not otherwise, and that in the event of the failure of the lessees to exercise said option or to make either or any of the payments of $1900.00, $3000.00, $5000.00 and $5000.00 herein-before specified strictly within the time allowed for so doing, such failure shall at the option of the lessor work a forfeiture not only of said option to purchase but of this lease as well; and any forfeiture of this lease by said lessees shall also at the option of the lessor work a forfeiture of said optional right to purchase, and all payments made shall be forfeited to the lessor and vendor.

“In the event of the exercise by said lessees of their optional right to purchase said property and of the payment by them pursuant to the terms hereof of the first two thousand dollars ($2000.00) of the purchase price in full, within the time herein provided for so doing, the lessor agrees coincidently therewith to make and deposit in escrow with *23 the bank at which payments are to be made, a good and sufficient deed of conveyance of said .premises and other property hereinbefore described, to said lessees, to be by such bank delivered to said lessees upon their full compliance within the time hereinbefore allowed for so doing with the terms of sale of said mine and property hereinbefore specified, and after full payment by them of the entire purchase price thereof.”

Under date of March 10, 1916, the parties made and executed an extension agreement whereby the plaintiff extended the time for making the said payment of one thousand nine hundred dollars for an additional sixty days over and above the time allowed by the original agreement. The time was thus extended to the tenth day of May, 1916. As one of the conditions of this extension, the lessees agreed “that the gross proceeds of each cleanup of the working of said premises during the period of such extension up to the sum of $1900 shall be turned over to said George W. Hazzard for the purpose of making the said $1900 payment.” It was further agreed that “in the event the proceeds of the cleanups of the working of said premises during the period of such extension shall be insufficient to make said payment of $1900 then that as a prerequisite to the further working of said mine by the parties of the second part, said Johnson, Willard and Skeats will make good to said George W. Hazzard any deficiency in said $1900 payment; provided, however, that the only penalty for failure so to do will be the forfeiture of any further right to continue under said lease. This agreement is not intended to alter the terms of the arrangement between the four parties of the second part as between themselves, but is intended merely as an arrangement between them of the one part and said George W. Hazzard, as of the other.”

By his complaint the plaintiff alleged the execution of the said agreement and extension thereof, and further alleged that the defendants had not paid the sums due under the contract and had not delivered to plaintiff the proceeds of cleanups made on the mine as required by the contract and extension thereof; and demanded that the defendants be required to account for the proceeds of whatever things of value they had taken from the mine, and that plaintiff have judgment for the amount so ascertained.

*24 At the time of the trial of this action the only proceeds of the mine not paid to the plaintiff consisted of certain bullion which by stipulation had been deposited in a bank in escrow pending the legal determination of the rights of the parties. Before the findings were filed this bullion was delivered to the plaintiff, who thereby obtained all that he was seeking to recover in- this action.

The cross-complaint of defendants Johnson, Willard, and Skeats declares upon a cause of action for rescission of the contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
187 P. 121, 45 Cal. App. 19, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hazzard-v-johnson-calctapp-1919.