Inter City Auto Stage Co. v. Bothell Bus. Co.

247 P. 1040, 139 Wash. 674, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 631
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1926
DocketNo. 19580. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 247 P. 1040 (Inter City Auto Stage Co. v. Bothell Bus. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inter City Auto Stage Co. v. Bothell Bus. Co., 247 P. 1040, 139 Wash. 674, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 631 (Wash. 1926).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

In this action respondent sued to recover an alleged balance of five thousand dollars upon a contract evidenced by a proposal signed on behalf of appellant, dated September 10,1921, and an acceptance of that proposal by respondent and performance of all conditions precedent by it.

*676 After trial to the court without a jury, the lower court made findings of fact, conclusions of law and entered judgment in favor of respondent for a balance of $3,571.18, and costs.

The complaint alleges that respondent was, and at all times mentioned in the complaint had been, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Washington; that on January 15, 1921,- and Continuously thereafter until the sale by it of -all its rights to appellant, respondent and appellant were each operating separate passenger automobile stages for compensation between Seattle, Bothell, Woódin-ville, Hollywood, and intermediate points, and were active competitors of each other; that on September 12, 1921, both parties had pending before the state board of public works an application for a certificate of convenience and necessity for the transportation of passengers for hire over the same route; that on that day appellant in writing proposed to' respondent, and to Victor Peterson and Earl Bothell, contingent upon approval thereof by the state board of public works, that respondent execute and deliver to appellant"-an •assignment of its rights to a certificate of public convenience and necessity; that Peterson and Bothell execute similar assignments of any and all rights on their part; that respondent appear with appellant before the state department of public works and request .the approval of the proposition therein made; that respondent consent that the sole certificate for the route be issued to appellant, and to have its application for & .certificate of public convenience and necessity for that.route, denied; that, immediately upon the furnishr ing of such certificate to appellant by the state departs m.ent of public, works, appellant, in consideration thereof, would execute and deliver to., respondent -its *677 promissory note in the sum of $2,000, payable on demand, and the balance, in the sum of $5,000 to be paid by appellant by a trade acceptance on appellant to be endorsed by Joseph Silver, an officer and stockholder of appellant, to be made due and payable in ninety days; that snch payments were to be made only after the famishing to appellant of a resolution, to be passed by at least ninety per cent of the stockholders of respondent and its board of trustees, authorizing respondent to accept the proposal and do and perform all things required for the acceptance thereof, and reciting that due consideration had been given to the proposal of appellant, and that it was determined to be for the best interests of respondent to consummate the deal as proposed.

The complaint further alleges that the proposition of appellant was accepted and that, on September 27, 1921, at a special meeting of the stockholders and board of trustees of respondent, the proposition was accepted by the stockholders and the board of trustees, more than ninety per cent of the stock of respondent attending, including Peterson and Bothell, each and all of whom voted to accept the proposal, and passed and furnished to appellant a resolution of the stockholders and board of trustees accepting appellant’s proposal and declaring that the acceptance was for the' best interests of respondent; that respondent, Peterson and Bothell thereupon executed and delivered assignments of all their rights and interests in and to any certificate of public convenience and necessity for such automobile stage route; that subsequently, in. September, 1921, respondent with appellant appeared before the state department of public works and requested the approval of that department of the sale and of the stipulation between the parties, and .asked that a sole certificate *678 for the stage route be issued to appellant; that respondent then and there consented to have its application denied, and thereby performed each and all of the things necessary and required of it in the acceptance of the proposals of appellant, abandoning its rights to a certificate of public convenience and necessity for the route, and obtaining a sole certificate to be issued to appellant.

The complaint then alleges that, after the parties had appeared before the state department of public works and after a hearing thereon, the department, as requested by respondent, did deny its application for a certificate for the route, and at the same time granted appellant a certificate of public convenience and necessity to operate on that route; and that thereupon respondent immediately ceased to operate stages or carry passengers on that route.

It is then alleged that, on September 23, 1921, appellant delivered to respondent its promissory note for $2,000, which it thereafter paid; that appellant refused to execute its trade acceptance for $5,000, although the sole certificate of public convenience and necessity had been issued to appellant at the request of respondent. It is then alleged that there is due from appellant the sum of $5,000 with six per cent interest from October 1, 1921.

In response to a motion therefor, a bill of particulars was furnished by respondent, which sets forth the proposal of appellant to respondent, the acceptance thereof, the copies of respondent’s corporation minutes which were required by the proposal, the ratification thereof by the stockholders and trustees, and copies of the assignments which were made by Peterson and Bothell to one Hamilton, and the assignments from Hamilton to respondent; that there was no assignment *679 from respondent to appellant, but that the stipulation between them, made before the state department of public works, amounted to the same thing as an assignment.

To the complaint the defendant filed its second amended answer, among other things denying that respondent was at all times mentioned in the complaint a domestic corporation; admitting that, in September, 1921, both parties were operating automobile stages' over the route, and had pending before the state department of public works applications for certificates of public necessity and convenience for the transportation of passengers for hire over the route mentioned; that respondent consented to have its application for a certificate denied; that a certificate was issued to appellant on its application, and that it never executed any trade acceptance to respondent; admitted that it had paid the sum of $2,000; that it had paid no other sum, and denied that any other sum was due.

Six affirmative defenses were then set up, which are so voluminous as to preclude their being set out in full in the length that may be accorded an opinion in this case.

The first affirmative defense alleged false and fraudulent representations by respondent and its officers relied upon by appellant, inducing its entering into the contract, to its damage in the sum of $2,307.13.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
247 P. 1040, 139 Wash. 674, 1926 Wash. LEXIS 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-city-auto-stage-co-v-bothell-bus-co-wash-1926.