Tevis v. Ryan

233 U.S. 273, 34 S. Ct. 481, 58 L. Ed. 957, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1288
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1914
Docket189
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 233 U.S. 273 (Tevis v. Ryan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tevis v. Ryan, 233 U.S. 273, 34 S. Ct. 481, 58 L. Ed. 957, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1288 (1914).

Opinion

Me. Justice Pitney,

after making the foregoing statement, delivered the opinion of the court.

The trial judge in submitting the case to the jury *280 adopted the following construction of the contract of November 29,1902: That it provided for a general scheme to be carried out within the period of two years; that control of the Turquoise Company was to be given to defendants McKittrick and Tevis, and with a board of directors of their own choosing they were to carry on the business of the company, and within two years were to carry out the plan for the rehabilitation of the company according to the stipulations of the agreement; that they did not guarantee successful results, but were simply to use their best endeavors to carry out the plan; that if there was a failure on their part to do the things contemplated within the two years, this of itself did not raise any legal obligation on their part to the plaintiffs; but that if at the end of the two years the scheme contemplated by the contract had not been accomplished, then defendants agreed to reinvest plaintiffs with the interest they had at the time of entering into the contract, provided plaintiffs demanded that reinvestment. The jury were instructed that they should first determine whether at the expiration of the two years specified in the contract the situation was such that defendants were obligated to reinvest plaintiffs with the four-sevenths interest in the company that they formerly held. That if so, the next question was whether plaintiffs ever demanded that they should be so reinvested, for if there was no demand there was no liability on the part of defendants; but that if plaintiffs did make such demand -within a reasonable time after the expiration of the two years it was the duty of defendants to comply with it; that certain evidence introduced to show a written demand made at a time in the summer of 1906 should be rejected because such demand, if made, came too late; but that if the jury should find [as, in fact, certain other evidence tended to show] that a demand was made on defendants by plaintiffs a few months following the expiration of the *281 two years and in the early part of 1905, that was a reasonable time in which to make the demand. The further instruction was that if there was a breach of the agreement by defendants in failing to reinvest plaintiffs as they ought to have done, the next question was the amount of the damages; and as to this, that what defendants agreed to do was to put plaintiffs back as nearly as might be in the situation they were in when the contract was made; that at that time the property was about tó be foreclosed, and subsequently nloney was raised to redeem it from the judgment, and the money thus used became a debt against the company, and this should be considered by the jury, because plaintiffs ought not to be put back in possession of their interest in the property free and clear of any such incumbrance as stood upon it when the contract was made; “So if you should come to this question of damages at all, you should ascertain the damages in this way: You should ascertain the value of this mining property— this property that was owned by the Turquoise Copper Mining & Smelting Company — at the time the demand of the Ryans to be reinvested was made, if any such demand was made at all — ascertain first the value of that property. Then deduct from that value the amount of this claim of the Western Company which loaned this money, with interest, which at that time amounted to at least $39,000. Then take that balance, if there is any — :the value of the property, from which deduct the $39,000, and if there is any balance left — that belongs to the plaintiffs and defendants in the proportion that they owned the property— that is, the Ryans four-sevenths and Tevis and McKittrick three-sevenths. So the Ryans would be entitled to four-sevenths of the balance after you deduct from the value of the property the amount of this Western Company’s claim — this $39,000. So of course, it follows that if the value of the property was not so much as $39,000 they would not be entitled to anything.”

*282 There were no requests for particular instructions, and no specific objection to the instructions as given. •

In the Supreme Court of the Territory the principal question raised was as to the correctness of the instruction respecting the measure of damages. In passing upon this, the appellate court interpreted the contract as binding defendants (in the event of the failure of the scheme, and a demand made for reinvestment) to turn over to plaintiffs, not a four-sevenths interest in the mining property, but a four-sevenths interest in the capital stock of the company. At the same time it was held that the trial court, in apparently adopting as a measure of damages the four-sevenths interest in the property of the corporation, did not actually construe the reinvesting clause to extend to the property or the mines of the corporation; but that the instruction was tantamount to an instruction that plaintiffs were entitled to the value of four-sevenths of the capital stock, which was the equivalent of, and was to be. ascertained by determining from the evidence the value of, four-sevenths of the net assets of the corporation. And the appellate court held, as to this, that the result was right, and hence the judgment ought not to be reversed, though the-instruction as given might be open to criticism as to its form, and even though the jury might have based their verdict upon an incorrect theory. •

But it was held that the measure of damages as applied by the trial court was erroneous in failing to deduct from the valuation of the four-sevenths a proper allowance for the 279,500 shares of stock of the Turquoise Company that had been retained by the Ryans under the terms of the contract, and were still owned by them.

The court overruled certain minor contentions on the one side and on the other, and, finding that the proximate damage resulting from the breach of the contract was the loss of the value of the stock that Was agreed to be returned, and that the loss of the-value of the 279,500'shares *283 retained (attributed, as it was, to subsequent mismanagement of the company by Tevis and McKittrick), was only a remote and indirect consequence, and not such as was in contemplation at the time of the making of the contract as a probable result of such breach, held that there was error (and error only) in including in the allowance of damages the loss of the value of the retained shares. The court further found that the evidence and the verdict of the jury afforded a basis for computing the correct sum to be awarded, in that the jury by its verdict found in effect that the value of the entire capital stock of 1,000,000 shares of the Turquoise Company at the time of the breach of the contract was $231,000 (four-sevenths of this sum being $132,000, the amount of the verdict). Taking four-sevenths of the entire number of shares (or 571,428 shares) and deducting the 279,500 shares retained by the plaintiffs, there remained 291,928 shares, which, computed 'upon the basis afforded by the verdict of the jury, yielded $67,435.37 as the proper apaount of the recovery. And under the provisions of paragraph 1588 of the Revised Statutes of 1901 and the practice approved in Kennon v. Gilmer,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 U.S. 273, 34 S. Ct. 481, 58 L. Ed. 957, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tevis-v-ryan-scotus-1914.