Mitchel v. Gray

97 P. 160, 8 Cal. App. 423, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 174
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 23, 1908
DocketCiv. No. 454.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 97 P. 160 (Mitchel v. Gray) 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
Mitchel v. Gray, 97 P. 160, 8 Cal. App. 423, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 174 (Cal. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

*424 HART, J.

The plaintiffs brought this suit for the purpose of rescinding a certain contract by which the defendant bought from the appellant, Skillen, a mine known as the “Lanky Bob Quartz Mine,” situated in Siskiyou county.

The court, as advisory to it upon the questions of fact, called to its aid a jury, to which, upon the conclusion of the adduction of evidence and the arguments, it' submitted some forty special questions of fact, covering all the material points brought out by the evidence addressed to the principal issue tendered by the pleadings. To some of these questions the jury made affirmative answers and to the others negative. The court adopted a number of the answers and rejected the others, and made findings of its own in favor of the defendant. A decree was accordingly entered, and this appeal is by the plaintiffs from the judgment and the order denying plaintiffs a new trial.

1. Objection is urged by respondent against a consideration of the appeal from the order, because, as claimed, it does not appear from the record that an appeal from the order has been taken. The notice of appeal from the order, as it appears in the transcript, stated that “the plaintiffs above named do hereby appeal to the Supreme Court . . . from an order made and entered in the above-entitled cause in said above-entitled court on the 26th day of June, 1906, refusing and denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial herein and from the whole of said order.” The minutes of the court, as presented in the transcript, show that the judgment was entered on the ninth day of June, 1906, and that on June 13, 1906, a notice of motion for a new trial was served and filed; that on January 26, 1907, the motion for a new trial was heard and denied by the court; that on March 26, 1907, notice of appeal from an order “made and entered on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1906,” denying a new trial was served and filed.

There can be no doubt that the appeal from the order was intended to be from the order made on the twenty-sixth day of January, 1907, and that the statement in the notice of appeal that the appeal is from the order “made and entered on the twenty-sixth day of June, 1906,” is a clerical misprision. In fact, it is so clear that it is beyond dispute that the insertion of the word “June” in place of “Janu *425 ary” and the figure “6” instead of “7,” in designating the year in the notice of appeal, was due wholly to a clerical mistake, or to what may properly be termed ‘ absent-mindedness” on the part of the party writing the notice.

2. The contention of the appellants is, and the complaint alleges that, on the twenty-first day of July, 1905, plaintiff Skillen, in writing, agreed to sell to plaintiff, Mitchel, and that the latter in said writing agreed to purchase from the former, the said “Lanky Bob” quartz mine, and that before the expiration of the time within which said sale was, by the terms of said agreement, to be consummated, the defendant, Gray, by certain “false and fraudulent representations and statements,” made to plaintiff, Skillen, induced the latter to sell said mine to him (Gray) and thus violate the terms of the agreement between the plaintiffs. It is further argued by appellants that, if the agreement between themselves, as pleaded in the complaint, cannot be construed as an absolute sale of the mine by Skillen to Mitchel, it is at least an option, and that in that view the sale of the property to the defendant prior to the expiration of the time stipulated in said agreement was beyond the power of Skillen, and therefore said sale was void.

The answer admits the making of the pleaded agreement between the plaintiffs. It is, however, • alleged therein, and such is the contention of the respondent here, that said agreement was not one for the sale and purchase of the property, but that by the terms thereof Mitchel was simply invested with the power of an agent to sell the mine for Skillen upon a certain stipulated commission for his services in negotiating and consummating such sale; that, prior to the time at which Mitchel sold the mine, the defendant had purchased the same absolutely from Skillen, paying the latter under said contract of sale the sum of $5,000, and had been let into the possession of said mine; that, antecedently to said sale to Gray, Skillen had notified Mitchel of his rescission and cancellation of the contract by which Mitchel became the agent of Skillen.

The principal contention of appellants, arising in the form of an attack upon certain findings of the court, involves the construction of the agreements entered into between the plaintiffs relative to the mining property concerned in this con *426 troversy. The claim is that the construction of said agreements by the court below is incorrect.

It will not be necessary to deal extensively with the testimony, because we regard the point concerning the legal relations between Skillen and Mitchel, as established by their written agreements, as the most serious vital one presented, and, therefore, if it can be said that the construction by the court below of said agreements as to' their legal effect is correct, then, under our view of the entire record, nothing remains to be done but to uphold the findings, the judgment and the order of the court refusing appellants a new trial.

The evidence discloses and the court found that, on the twenty-first day of July, 1905, the plaintiff, Skillen, as the owner of the “Lanky Bob Quartz Mining Claim,” entered into an agreement with plaintiff, Charles A. Mitchel, by which the latter was giyen, to use the language of said agreement, “an option on the terms herein stated for the period of ninety days from date of this agreement” to purchase or sell said mine; that contemporaneously with the execution of said agreement, said parties entered into the following agreement in writing, the same having been written by the plaintiff Mitchel: ‘ ‘ George G. Skillen agrees to pay Charles A. Mitchel 10 per cent of all money received from any parties he gets interested in the Lanky Bob Mine within the time of an agreement made with this 21st day of July, 1905, said per cent, to be placed to his credit in the Siskiyou Co. Bank at time of each payment. Such per cent, is for payment of his effort to get parties to buy said mine.” The court further found that there was no consideration passed for these agreements, or for either of them, if considered separately.

As to these agreements between the plaintiffs, the court found, as a conclusion of law, “that the contracts made between Skillen and Mitchel July 21st, 1905, in relation to the Lanky Bob Mine, when taken together, constituted a contract of agency whereby Mitchel was given the authority within the time stated to sell the property described upon an agreed compensation of 10 per cent, of the purchase price. That such agency was not an agency coupled with an interest and therefore revokable at any time before a sale had been completed thereunder.”

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 160, 8 Cal. App. 423, 1908 Cal. App. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchel-v-gray-calctapp-1908.