Newton v. Van Dusen

50 N.W. 820, 47 Minn. 437, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 529
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 7, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 N.W. 820 (Newton v. Van Dusen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Newton v. Van Dusen, 50 N.W. 820, 47 Minn. 437, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 529 (Mich. 1891).

Opinion

Mitchell, J.

There was absolutely no conflict in the evidence in this case, and it fully justified all the findings of fact unless upon the single, and, as we think, immaterial, point as to the date of the delivery of the conveyance of the “mining claim” to the defendant corporation. The rights of the parties are wholly dependent upon the agreement and supplemental agreement of December 20, 1881, set out in the complaint; and all that preceded is relevant and important only for the purpose of aiding in the construction of that contract by showing the relations of the parties to each other and to the property at the time of its execution. Read in the light of the facts disclosed by the evidence and found by the court, the meaning and general scope of this contract are quite plain, although, having been drawn by the parties themselves, their intention is not always aptly expressed. Yan Dusen & Chadbourn had elected not to complete the purchase of one-half of the mining claim under the contract of February 11,1881, and consequently had the right, or at least were evidently supposed to have the right, to the possession of the mine for the purpose of reimbursing themselves for what they had expended and invested in it. The mine was practically undeveloped. Work on it had been abandoned by the defendant Newton. There were debts to the amount of $5,000 which were liens upon it, and upon which it was in danger of being sold. The Newtons had no means with which to pay their share of these debts. In this emergency all parties in interest united in entering into the agreement of December 20th, by which Yan Dusen & Chadbourn were to advance the money necessary to pay off these debts, and all the stock of the corporation, when issued, was to be transferred to them, and the possession and control' of the property turned over to [439]*439them, with the most plenary power to develop, work, or lease the mine, including the power to sell stock of the corporation to raise money for certain purposes; the Newtons, however, having the right, at their election, at any time before June 1, 1884, upon payment of all the moneys that Yan Dusen & Chadbourn-had theretofore or might thereafter expend on the property, including the $14,000 they had paid Robert A. Newton under the contract of February 11th, with interest at 10 per cent., to have all the unsold stock assigned to them; that is, the entire stock of the corporation not sold or disposed of by Yan Dusen & Chadbourn for the purposes specified in the contract.

There is no basis whatever for the proposition that this agreement contained two separable contracts, one of pledge by the Newtons of their own stock as security for future advances or expenditures by Yan Dusen & Chadbourn, and another for the purchase of their half of the stock. There was but one act to be performed on each side in case the Newtons exercised their option, viz., the payment by the Newtons of all the money expended or invested by Yan Dusen & Chadbourn in the mine, including the $14,000, and the transfer by the latter to the former of the whole stock of the corporation remaining unsold. In short, the contract evidently contemplated a transfer of the whole property to Yan Dusen & Chadbourn, with an option on part of the Newtons, within a specified time, to take it back upon payment to the former of the entire amount of money they had put into the enterprise, and that, if the Newtons did not exercise this option, all their rights in the property would be terminated. Whether the relation of the parties was that of pledgor and pledgee, or whether the Newtons had a mere option to buy, which had to be exercised strictly within the time limited by the terms of the contract, may admit of argument. The trial court adopted the construction first suggested, and held that, in the absence of any notice or demand by either party at a time fixed by the terms of the-contract, there was an implied extension of time for its performance until determined and ended by some notice, demand, or act having that effect. This was the view most favorable to the plaintiff, for [440]*440it kept the contract on foot up to the commencement of this action, in 1890, nearly six years after the expiration of the time named in the instrument; and if the contract was kept on foot for the benefit of the plaintiff, so as to enable her to exercise her option, it would seem self-evident that it was also kept on foot in favor of Van Dusen & Chadbourn, so as to entitle them to bring into the account expenditures made in developing and working the mine subsequent to June 3, 1884, as well as those made prior to that date. This was the theory upon which the trial court proceeded in taking the accounting to ascertain how much plaintiff should pay in order to entitle her to a transfer of the stock remaining unsold. In this the court followed the exact line upon which the plaintiff’s complaint was originally framed, and upon which the trial proceeded almost to its close.

But the plaintiff now claims that Van Dusen & Chadbourn were guilty of certain acts of omission and commission which amounted to a repudiation of the contract on their part, and which give her a right to rescind, so far as related to what she terms the purchase of Van Dusen & Chadbourn’s half of the stock, and to redeem what she calls her own half, by paying one half of the expenditures made by them in working or developing the mine up to June 1, 1884, less one-half of the rental value of the mine since that date. The line of reasoning by which she assumes thus to divide the agreement into two separate contracts, and also eliminate from the accounting all disbursements made in operating the mine since June 1, 1884, is, to say the least of it, rather difficult to be understood.

The first act on part of Van Dusen & Chadbourn which is claimed to amount to a repudiation of the contract is their omission on June 1, 1884, to present to the Newtons a statement of receipts and expenditures, and tender an assignment of the stock. It is not pretended that the Newtons ever demanded any such thing, or ever gave any notice of their election to exercise their option. Van Dusen & Chadbourn had no claim against the Newtons, and no right to make any demand of any sort on them, and, unless and until the Newtons gave notice of their election, there was absolutely nothing for [441]*441Yan Dusen & Chadbourn to do. They were only required to render an account in case the Newtons called for it, accompanied with notice of their election to pay up and take the stock.

Another act on part of Yan Dusen & Chadbourn, relied on as a repudiation of the contract on their part, is their arrangement in March, 1883, with one Field, an experienced and practical miner, to take charge of and superintend the development of the mine; and in consideration of his doing so they to pay him $75 per month in cash, and to transfer to him one-fourth of the stock of the corporation; but, in order to insure the faithful performance by Field of his part of the contract, the stock was not to be transferred to him until the expiration of two years. Field immediately entered upon his duties as superintendent, and has so continued ever since. The stock was transferred to him, in pursuance of this contract, in August, 1885.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.W. 820, 47 Minn. 437, 1891 Minn. LEXIS 529, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newton-v-van-dusen-minn-1891.