Warner v. Cochrane

128 F. 553, 63 C.C.A. 207, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3935
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1904
DocketNo. 112
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 128 F. 553 (Warner v. Cochrane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Warner v. Cochrane, 128 F. 553, 63 C.C.A. 207, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3935 (2d Cir. 1904).

Opinion

TOWNSEND, Circuit Judge.

The defendant in error, plaintiff in the court below, is the executor of the Countess of Dundonald, who was a subject and resident of Great Britain, and who brought this action to recover rents or royalties under the stipulations of a lease to defendants of certain asphalt properties in the Island of Trinidad. The defendants, at the time of the transaction complained of, were citizens of and residents in the state of New York. The agreement which is the basis of the action is in writing, and all the material dealings between the parties appear from the correspondence. The lease conferred upon the lessees the exclusive right for the term of four years and five months from February i, 1896, “to dig, work, search [554]*554for, and win all pitch and asphalt of good merchantable quality suitable for paving purposes, upon the certain lands of said lessor,” subject to a certain rental and royalties and other provisions, including a provision for renewal. The following quotations from the lease show the covenants of the parties material to the questions herein:

“If, on or before the first day of July, 1900, the lessees shall not since the commencement of the lease have won out of the said lands and paid royalty upon the total quantity of thirty four thousand tons of pitch or asphalt at the rate aforesaid, they shall subject to the provisions hereinafter contained on the said first day of July, 1900, pay to the lessor royalty at the rate aforesaid upon such number of tons as shall be the difference between the number of tons upon which royalty shall have been paid and the said number of 34,000 tons. * * *
“The lessees shall not assign or underlet the premises hereby demised or any part thereof without the consent in writing of the lessor. * * *
“The lessor also covenants with the lessees that if at the expiration of the said term the lessee shall have paid the rents hereby reserved and observed and performed the conditions herein contained and on their parts to be observed and performed and shall be desirous of renewing said terms, and shall give to the lessor, her heirs or assigns six months notice in writing, personally or by leaving the same at her, their or any of their usual or last known place of abode in England, then the. lessor will grant and the lessee shall take a renewed lease in respect of the said land and premises for a further term of ten years. * * *
“If any dispute or difference shall arise between the lessor or lessees concerning any matter or thing whatever herein contained or the operation or construction thereof or any other matter or thing in any way connected with these presents or the rights, duties and liabilities of either party under or in connection with these presents then in every such case the dispute or difference shall be determined in a manner to be .agreed upon between the parties and in ease of their disagreement. then by action or suit in Her Majesty’s High Court of Justice in England and not elsewhere and this clause may be pleaded against any action or suit or commenced by either party out of England.”

In March, 1896, the defendants, with certain other persons, formed á corporation known as.the Columbia Construction Company, and in April, 1896, a contract was entered into between said company and these defendants whereby the latter agreed to furnish to the Columbia Company an amount of asphalt equal to the amount to which they were entitled under said lease. The Columbia Company “covenants and agrees to take such asphalt and win and dig all the pitch or asphalt herein referred to and transport the same from the said Island of Trinidad, * * *” and “to pay for the rights, privileges, and asphalt hereby secured the further sum or sums of money required to be paid under said contract with Louisa Harriet Dundonald directly pr to the parties of the first part, at the option of said second party.” It does not appear that this contract was ever brought to the notice of. the Countess Dundonald. In May, 1899, a portion of the defendants executed an assignment of said lease to said Columbia Company.

. The record correspondence between the parties is evidently incomplete. In the correspondence between August 21, 1896, and February 21, 1898, the plaintiff, addressing her letters to the defendant Warner, referred to “your company” and “your engineer of Columbia Construction .Company”; and Warner, in his replies, referred to “the company” and “our company,” and signed all of said letters individually, with one exception.. The first payment, on January 1, 1897, was prom[555]*555ised by Warner, signing himself “C. M. Warner, Pres.” The payment was made by Columbia Construction Company, “the same being due you on lease * ⅝ ⅜ between yourself and C. M. Warner et al.” One later payment appears to have been made by Warner personally. Payments subsequent thereto were made by the Columbia Company to Lady Dundonald, and accepted by her. In her later letters Lady Dundonald repeatedly used such expressions as “my lease to the Columbia Construction Company,” “rent due by Columbia Construction Company,” “I have to call on you [the Columbia Construction Company] to carry out your covenants”; and on February II, 1889, she authorized the company at her expense “to protect or enforce my titles and rights of possession so as to assure your uninterrupted and peaceable working * * * of the lands * * * leased by me to you.” All claims and royalties were paid prior to June 30, 1900, except for the difference between amount of asphalt dug and 34,000 tons as specified in said agreement, and for this sum, amottnting to $14,061.79 and costs, the court directed a verdict in favor of plaintiff.

The questions raised by the assignments of error are the following: (1) That Lady Dundonald'consented to the assignment to the Columbia Company. (2) That she broke the covenant to renew the lease. (3)- That the agreement that any dispute or difference under the lease should be determined by “Her Majesty’s High Court of Justice in England” is a bar to this action.

A critical examination of the correspondence establishes the consent of Lady Dundonald to the assignment of the lease. In fact, her course is inconsistent with any other conclusion. In addition to the repeated recognition of the Columbia Company as her lessees, and her continued receipt of rents from it, the following statements made by her establish her waiver of her right to object to said assignment:

(1) In her letter of May 24, 1900, attempting to take advantage of said assignment, she refers to her letter of February n, 1899, in which, as she says, she wrote to the Columbia Company, her lessees, and authorized them to take legal proceedings on her behalf to insure their uninterrupted occupation at her cost, and says, “This letter [of February 11 th] was clearly revocable by me, and it has now been revoked.” Having thus admitted that she had recognized the Columbia Company as her lessees, and as entitled to enforce her rights as above, she fails to revoke the recognition in said letter until May 2d, or nearly six months after the Columbia Company had given her notice of its desire to exercise its option for renewal of the lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
128 F. 553, 63 C.C.A. 207, 1904 U.S. App. LEXIS 3935, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/warner-v-cochrane-ca2-1904.