Nielson v. Gross

118 P. 725, 17 Cal. App. 74, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 3
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 8, 1911
DocketCiv. No. 867.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 P. 725 (Nielson v. Gross) 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
Nielson v. Gross, 118 P. 725, 17 Cal. App. 74, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 3 (Cal. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

The complaint is in two counts, and it is made the basis for the recovery from defendants, Gross and McGraw, as mining partners, for work and labor performed as a miner, by plaintiff, for the partnership for a period extending from the tenth day of February, 1908, to the twenty-eighth day of September, 1909. It was also sought to foreclose a laborer’s lien on the property alleged to belong to L. D. Butt, but the court held that no" lien existed, and the correctness of that decision is not questioned on the present appeal. A demurrer was interposed to the amended complaint, but it was overruled.

E. W. McGraw is the only defendant that answered. He admitted that the services were performed and were of the value alleged, and that by virtue of the statutes of the state Gross and he were mining partners, prior to October 26, 1908, and he offered to pay plaintiff for the amount due for his work to that date, but he denied that at any time subsequent to said October 26th defendant Gross and he were mining or other partners. He averred that on October 26, 1908, all work on the mines was definitely abandoned and the mining partnership ended. That thereafter no mining work was done on the property by Gross and McGraw, and that from and after October 26, 1908, plaintiff did no work as a miner, but was employed by defendant Gross as a caretaker, except that from June 29, 1909, to and including July 30, 1909, defendant McGraw employed men, and among them the plaintiff, in prospecting the mine in question, and that defendant McGraw paid plaintiff in full for said labor and that Gross had nothing whatever to do with that work. The court found in favor of plaintiff, and the appeal is from the judgment on a bill of exceptions.

*77 The objection) to the complaint is that the facts are insufficient to show the existence of a mining partnership. The following is the allegation in that respect: “That during all the times hereinafter mentioned the defendants L. A. Gross and E. W. McGraw were a mining partnership working and operating ’as such, certain quartz mines, mining claims and properties hereinafter more particularly described as one mine, near Carlisle in Meadow Lake Mining District in the county of Nevada, state of California.” The statute defines a mining partnership as follows: “A mining partnership exists when two or more persons, who own- or acquire a mining claim for the purpose of working it and extracting the mineral therefrom, actually engage in working the same.” (Civ. Code, sec. 2511.) The point is that a mining partnership is the ‘‘creation of the statute,” that when reliance is had upon “a right or status created by the statute,” “the pleader must state all the facts necessary to bring the case within the statute” (Dye v. Dye, 11 Cal. 163), and that this requirement has not been observed by reason of the failure to allege that the defendants were working the mine for the purpose of “extracting the mineral therefrom.” We feel confident, however, that appellant had no difficulty in understanding, from the allegations of the complaint, that the foregoing was the identical purpose for which the mine was being operated. The complaint might have been more specific in tins respect, but the pleader could safely indulge the presumption that the defendants would use common sense in the construction of the complaint and would therefore easily reach the conclusion that the mine was being operated for the ordinary and general purpose for which such mines are developed.

There is another objection of appellant that is entitled to more serious consideration. It relates to the finding that the plaintiff was employed by the partnership. It is contended that “ on October 26 or 28, 1908, the mining operations ceased and there was no agreement to resume them in the future. By such cessation of work without any agreement for resumption, the mining partnership between Gross and McGraw was ipso facto dissolved, and thereafter they were merely tenante in common and as such had no power to bind each other by contract. (Wagoner v. Silva, 139 Cal. 562, [73 Pac. 433].) ” Many authorities are cited in support of the prin *78 ciple. Among these the following quotations are made from Chancellor Kent and note 7, page 228, volume 22, American and English Encyclopedia of Law: “If a partnership is formed for a single purpose or transaction, it ceases as soon as the business is completed, and nothing can be more natural or reasonable than the rule of the civil law that the partnership in any business should cease when there was an end put to the business itself.” (3 Kent’s Commentaries, 14th ed., p. 71.) Said note is as follows: “Where the actual working of the mine has ceased the relation of the co-owners is that of tenants in common, and not that of partners, and there is no longer any confidential relation between them. (Harris v. Lloyd, 11 Mont. 390, [28 Am. St. Rep. 475, 28 Pac. 736].)”

But, granting that appellant has stated the rule with substantial accuracy, it does not apply, as we view it, to a temporary suspension of the operation of the mine. There must be an abandonment of the work before it can be said that the partnership is at an end. If there was an understanding, express or implied, to resume at a later date, the mere cessation of labor would not result as a dissolution. This, as we understand it, is conceded by appellant. While he speaks of an agreement as necessary to continue the partnership, he does not contend that it may not be implied as well as ex-, pressed. And whatever may be required to prevent dissolution on the cessation of labor, the burden of proof, it would seem, must be borne by appellant to show that the partnership was terminated. This follows from the presumption arising from the admitted fact that the partnership existed prior to October 26, 1908. It would be presumed to continue unless the contrary were shown. While it may be said that there was some evidence that the work of joint operation of the mine was at an end, the court was not bound to hold that this evidence overcame the said presumption. But conceding that plaintiff was required to prove that the parties intended to resume operations, then, of course, this could be proven by direct or indirect evidence or both, and it cannot be said that such inference finds no valid support in the record. Indeed, some of the circumstances detailed by the witnesses are inconsistent with the view that the work of development had been abandoned by the partnership. It is at least a fair *79 inference that for a long time subsequent to October 28, 1908, appellant and Gross intended to go on with the work as before. We shall hot undertake a recital of all the evidence tending to show a continuance of the partnership, but will refer to some of the circumstances seemingly justifying the court’s conclusion. In the first place, it is perfectly clear that they had not abandoned the mine. Appellant admits that in the spring and summer of 1909 he spent $1,000 for work and prospecting in. the mine. This is entirely inconsistent with the theory of a previous abandonment of the property. There is no direct evidence why they discontinued operations on October 26 or 28, 1908, but it is fair to infer that it was on account of the approach of winter. There is nothing to show that the partnership operation was not profitable and agreeable to both parties.

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Bluebook (online)
118 P. 725, 17 Cal. App. 74, 1911 Cal. App. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nielson-v-gross-calctapp-1911.