McCowen v. Pew

96 P. 393, 153 Cal. 735, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 523
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4670.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 96 P. 393 (McCowen v. Pew) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCowen v. Pew, 96 P. 393, 153 Cal. 735, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 523 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This case was here before (McCowen v. Pew, 147 Cal. 299, [81 Pac. 958]) and was remanded for a new trial because an incorrect rule of law was applied by the trial court for the measurement of damages.

The action was brought in the superior court of Mendocino County. The complaint alleged that plaintiffs were the owners of about eleven hundred and sixty acres of land in said county and on October 16, 1899, entered into an agreement with the defendant, J. W. Pew (which agreement is set forth in the complaint), whereby an option was given to the latter to dispose of said property to others, or to purchase said property himself, within one year from: the date of the option, at the price of fifteen dollars per acre; that said Pew had not exercised his right under the option within the year given, but still asserted and claimed some rights thereunder. The prayer was for a decree adjudging the agreement to be void *737 and as of no validity and quieting the title of plaintiffs to the property.

The defendant Pew filed an answer; also an amended cross-complaint, which was answered by plaintiff. In the amended cross-complaint he alleged the making of the agreement, as set forth in the complaint, granting to him an exclusive option for twelve months to acquire said property from plaintiffs,. and then proceeds to further allege:

‘TV. That in the making of said agreement this defendant was not acting in his own interest and behalf, but for others associated with him, who were to construct the railroad hereinafter mentioned, and as to the interest of said persons, although made and taken solely in the name of this defendant, as party of the second part.
“V. That at the time said agreement and contract was made, this defendant, and the persons so associated with him, were contemplating and preparing for the building of a railroad from some point on the line of the railway of the San Francisco & North Pacific Railway Company into some portion of Mendocino County, in which timber and wood could be procured in large quantities; that at said time four different locations (or routes) for said proposed railroad were under consideration by them, and it had been determined by them to so build said railroad at some one of the said contemplated locations only, but it had not been decided at which one; that one of the said contemplated locations for said proposed railroad was from Ukiah, northerly to Willits in said county; that the building of said railroad at last-mentioned location would greatly increase the value of the lands herein-before described by making the timber thereon accessible to a market; but the building thereof at any one of the other proposed and contemplated locations would not increase the value of these lands; that the selection of a route or location depended largely upon securing options upon timber-lands along the line of the proposed railway; that all these facts were well known at the time to plaintiffs, and that the inducements and consideration moving the plaintiffs, and causing them to enter into said contract or agreement was the encouragement and inducement of the building of said railroad from Ukiah to Willits in preference over said other routes.
*738 “VI. That thereupon and thereafter this defendant, and the persons so associated with him, secured the selection of said route and location for said railroad from Ukiah to Willits in preference to said other routes and locations; and said-railroad was thereupon surveyed and laid out and is now in process of construction and being rapidly built and pushed toward completion, and will be built from Ukiah to Willitswithin a short time; and that the consideration and inducement causing preference to be given to said location thereof was the option given in said contract hereinbefore set forth,, giving this defendant the privilege of purchasing said land,, and similar options in similar contracts regarding other lands-adjacent thereto and in that portion of the county, and said options were all taken and said contracts all entered into, solely for the purpose of securing freight for said railroad,, and the added valuation that would be given to said lands-by the construction of the railroad in excess of the price set in said contracts respectively.”

Then follows allegations in the amended cross-complaint addressed to the subject of damages with which we are not concerned on this appeal, followed by a prayer for a specific-performance of the agreement to convey.

The pleadings thus stood when the cause came on again for trial, after being remanded as heretofore stated, and the-trial court directed that the issues raised by the cross-complaint and answer be first tried. When the cross-complainant, proceeded to put in his evidence in support thereof, counsel for plaintiffs objected to the introduction of any evidence in support of it on the ground that the cross-complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or defense-to the action of plaintiffs. The court sustained the objection, dismissed the cross-complaint and entered judgment in favor of plaintiffs quieting their title as prayed for in their complaint. From this judgment and an order denying their motion for a new trial the cross-complainant Pew appeals, and the only question necessary for consideration is the-refusal of the trial court to permit the introduction of anyevidenee by appellant in support of his cross-complaint.

While the particular ground upon which the trial court-based its ruling in that respect is not disclosed by the general objection of respondents interposed upon the offer of appel *739 lant on the trial, or from the ruling of the court upon it, it, however, appears from the exhaustive discussion in the briefs on both sides here, that the special point made was that from the allegations of the cross-complaint it appeared, that the contract sought under that pleading to be specifically enforced was contrary to public policy and void, and hence, specific performance of it could not be decreed.

The allegations of the cross-complaint upon which this contention was based are those which we have heretofore specially quoted, and particularly those alleging that at the time the agreement granting an option was entered into several routes from some point on the line of the San Francisco and North Pacific Railroad Company into some portion of Mendocino County were in view, including one from XJhiah to Willits; that the inducements and consideration moving from plaintiffs and causing them to enter into said agreement granting an option to cross-complainant was the encouragement and inducement of the building of the said railroad between the last-mentioned points in preference over said other routes; that having procured the option from plaintiffs, defendant and his associates secured the selection of the route of the railroad from Ukiah to Willits in preference to other locations and that the consideration and inducement causing preference to be given to said location was the option given in said contract heretofore set forth granting the appellant the privilege of purchasing said land, together with similar options and similar contracts regarding other lands adjacent thereto and in that portion of the county of Mendocino.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Crane Creek Country Club v. City of Boise
826 P.2d 446 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1992)
Stearns v. Williams
240 P.2d 833 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1952)
National Automobile Insurance v. Winter
136 P.2d 22 (California Court of Appeal, 1943)
Taylor v. Santa Fe Northwestern Ry. Co.
34 P.2d 1102 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1934)
Emanuel v. Engst
208 N.W. 840 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1925)
Conlin v. Southern Pacific Railroad Co.
181 P. 67 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
East San Mateo Land Co. v. Southern Pacific Railroad Co.
157 P. 634 (California Court of Appeal, 1916)
Chidberg v. Hegness
5 Alaska 168 (D. Alaska, 1914)
McCowen v. Pew
123 P. 191 (California Court of Appeal, 1912)
Peckham v. Lane
106 P. 464 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 P. 393, 153 Cal. 735, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccowen-v-pew-cal-1908.