This action was originally brought against the defendant Oscar B. Perry to recover certain moneys, shares of stock and options to purchase stocks, which said Perry had received from the defendant corporation as compensation for services rendered to it, and of which he had agreed to deliver to plaintiff a part. The defendant corporation claims that it should recover the *866moneys, stock and options which plaintiff claims. Perry stands indifferent between these two, being content to make payment and delivery to whomsoever may be entitled thereto. The case involves no novel or abstruse questions of law, and but little dispute as to the material facts. What we really have to pass upon is the application of well-established rules of law to a somewhat unusual state of facts.
The Guggenheim Exploration Company, hereinafter termed the company, is a corporation engaged in acquiring and developing mining properties. During the times covered by .the transactions out of which this action arose it was a very compact organization, although carrying on large enterprises involving very considerable sums of money. A majority of its directors were members of the Guggenheim family, Daniel Guggenheim being president and executive head of the company. Mr. John Hays Hammond was also a director as well as general manager.
The plaintiff, a mining engineer, was assistant general manager and assistant consulting engineer. He was employed by the defendant corporation under a written contract drawn with great care and precision. He was required to perform such duties as he might be called upon to perform by the company, and especially to visit such places and perform such services in any part of the world as the officers of the company might from time to time designate. He was required to devote himself exclusively to the discharge of his duties to - the company and not to accept or enter upon any other business or employment whatsoever, except as otherwise specified in the contract. The exceptions are stated in great detail, but are not relevant to any question involved in this appeal. Then followed a general restriction upon the right of plaintiff to engage professionally as engineer, or to become interested as a stockholder in certain classes of securities. This provision, constituting the third general clause of the contract, originally read as follows: “ It is an essential condition of this agreement that the Manager will not at any time during the term hereof, except as hereby expressly permitted, directly or indirectly examine, investigate, advise, consult or report upon any mining, smelting or refining property, works, business or *867proposition or with respect to any business of like character, or permit his name to be affixed to or used in connection with any such property, business or proposition except for the Company, and that he will not be or become directly or indirectly interested in or connected with any person, partnership or corporation engaged in any such or similar business or owning or operating any such property either as principal, agent, employee, officer, director or stockholder in any such business or company, provided, however, that this shall not be construed to prevent the Manager from retaining shares now held by him in any companies the name of which is herewith disclosed to the Company by a letter of even date herewith, nor from purchasing in the open market the stocks of any company, the securities of which are now but not hereafter listed upon the regular lists of the London and New York Stock Exchanges; provided, further, that he may invest his personal moneys, in the shares or securities of the Company or of any corporations which are or shall be promoted by, or whose stocks or securities shall be sold or dealt in by the Company, but the Manager shall not have the right to perform services for any of such companies nor shall he have any duties or occupation whatever except as in this agreement specifically set forth.”
This clause was modified more than once, the proviso as to investments by the manager (plaintiff) being modified on February 26, 1903, so as to read as follows: “ Provided, however, that this shall not be construed to prevent the Manager from retaining shares now held by him in any company the name of which is herewith disclosed to the company by a letter of even date herewith, nor from purchasing in the open market the stocks of any company the securities of which are now quoted upon the regular lists of the London and New York stock exchanges, but this shall not include any stocks or securities not now but which may hereafter be dealt in and quoted on said exchanges; and provided further that he may invest his personal moneys in the shares or securities of the Company or of any corporations which are or shall be promoted by or whose stocks or securities shall be sold or dealt in by the Company; but the Manager shall not have the right to perform services for any of such companies, nor shall he *868have any duties or occupations whatever except as in this agreement specifically set forth.”
This clause assumes some importance in the case because of the claim put forward by the respondent company that it was violated in certain particulars by the plaintiff.
In the year 1905 the defendant corporation had under consideration a proposition to acquire certain mining rights in the Yukon District in Alaska. These properties had been brought to its attention by one Treadgold, from whom the company had taken options to purchase. The defendant Perry, an engineer having an office in San Francisco, was sent to examine the properties under an arrangement which left his compensation to he agreed upon thereafter. Perry’s reports were so favorable that plaintiff was directed to proceed to Alaska, also to examine the properties. The result was that both Perry and plaintiff advised the acquisition of the properties then under option as well as certain outlying properties not then under option. The officers of the company were not satisfied to accept the terms offered by Treadgold, and refused to complete the purchase upon those terms, expressing the desire, however, before finally abandoning the project, that Treadgold, Perry and plaintiff should come to New York to discuss the matter further.
Among the outlying properties not under option to the defendant company were certain claims known as 89-104 Below Discovery — Bonanza Creek. Treadgold was in a position to secure options on these claims, and was greatly in need of ready money to meet certain obligations, which he had hoped to meet from moneys to be paid by the company if it had exercised its option on the larger proposition. Perry and plaintiff were of the opinion that if the company finally decided to exercise its options and acquire the properties it then had under consideration, it would be greatly to its advantage also to acquire the claims 89-104 Below Discovery. It had no option on these, however, and unless these properties were in some way secured or tied up there was imminent danger that they would he acquired by other interests. Perry was also of opinion that even if the company finally decided not to exercise its option and acquire the properties it was then con*869sidering, still the claims 89-104 Below Discovery might be profitably developed by themselves as a small enterprise. He, therefore, arranged to acquire from Treadgold options upon these claims, for which he agreed to pay $45,000 by October 1, 1905, and not less than $115,000 by May 1, 1906. With this money Treadgold was to secure the claims for Perry’s account. Treadgold, however, retained the right to repurchase the claims from Perry by repayment of the money advanced, and a certain proportion of the preferred and common stock of any company which might acquire the claims. Perry was not financially in a position to provide the whole amount of the initial payment of $45,000 to Treadgold, so plaintiff, who shared in Perry’s valuation of the property, agreed to advance and did advance $35,000 of the amount. Plaintiff seems to have been in some doubt whether the company would consider it violative of his contract of employment if he became a partner or coadventurer with Perry in the purchase of these properties, so it was agreed between him and Perry that he should share in the enterprise unless the company objected to his doing so, but if it did object that his contribution of $35,000 should be deemed as a loan to Perry.
On December 5, 1905, in New York, Treadgold came to an agreement with the defendant company for the acquisition of the properties held or controlled by him, including the claims 89-104 Below Discovery, as to which he had exercised the right to repurchase from Perry, repaying him the $45,000 advanced. Perry has repaid to plaintiff $7,700 of the amount advanced by the latter, leaving due to plaintiff in any event $27,300, now held by Perry awaiting the outcome of this action, and the recovery of which is part of the relief sought herein, and the only part which he has been permitted to recover.
At the same time that the contract was made with Tread-gold, the exploration company made a contract with Perry engaging his services for two years as manager of the Yukon properties, and providing for his compensation for his services in examining and reporting upon those properties and assisting in their acquisition. The amount of this compensation was entirely a matter of negotiation, as he had no contract with the company covering these services, and could exact no more *870than the company was willing to pay. This compensation was fixed at four per cent of the shares of the common and preferred stock of a company to be formed to take over the Yukon properties, and an option to purchase an additional four per cent of such shares, and a further option to purchase two per cent of the stock of another projected company to be known as the Northwest Hydraulic Mining Company. The compensation was testified to by the officers of the company and was found by the court to have been “fair and reasonable.” Before Perry had concluded the agreement as to his compensation, he and plaintiff had a conversation or several conversations in which it was agreed that in consideration of the aid which plaintiff had extended to Perry, he, plaintiff, should share in Perry’s compensation, and there is no doubt that Perry would have been satisfied with a less amount of “ free ” stock, if he had not intended to give some part of it to plaintiff. He also would have been content with options to purchase a less amount of stock, because he was not sure that he would be able to take and pay for so much as was allotted to him. After Perry’s agreement with the company was reached, it was agreed between him and plaintiff that plaintiff should receive one and one-quarter per cent of the free stock, and Perry retain two and three-quarters per cent, and of the options to purchase stock plaintiff should receive three per cent and Perry retain one per cent. In the meantime Treadgold, out of the cash which he received from the exploration company, paid Perry $45,000, apparently in lieu of the stock which he had agreed to secure to Perry, but which could not be issued because of the sale to the exploration company. Of this sum representing the profit arising out of the purchase by Perry, with the assistance of plaintiff, of options upon the claims 89-104 Below Discovery, Perry proposed to pay to plaintiff $27,300. For this sum plaintiff has been refused a judgment and Perry has been directed to pay it to the exploration company.
The respondent company relies upon and has argued with much elaboration two principles of law which are so well established that they require no argument. These are that a person holding such relations as plaintiff held to the company owes to his employer the utmost good faith, and that an agent may *871not secretly make and retain any profit directly or indirectly flowing from business intrusted to him by his principal.
The first breach of faith charged against plaintiff is that he joined with Perry in the agreement to acquire from Treadgold options upon the claims 89-104 Below Discovery. It is not argued, or even suggested, that Perry was guilty of any wrongdoing or breach of faith in seeking to acquire these properties, and it is apparent that he was not. He was not at the time a general employee of the company, and his employment extended only to an examination and report upon properties other than those above mentioned. He was of the opinion that these claims "would be valuable to the company in connection with the larger properties, if the company finally decided to undertake it, and he also concluded that the claims might be profitably developed by themselves if the company decided not to embark in the larger scheme. How it would decide was still uncertain, and there was imminent danger that rival interests might acquire the claims if some action was not taken regarding them. So he decided, and as the event proved decided wisely, to secure the claims himself, to be saved to the company if it decided to embark in the contemplated enterprise; to be retained and developed by Perry himself if the company did not wish to acquire them.
Plaintiff’s part in the enterprise was to advance some of the necessary money, and he was careful to have it thoroughly agreed that his advances should be treated solely as a loan to Perry, if it should be found that he, plaintiff, could not under his contract embark in the enterprise of developing the claims as a business enterprise. Up to this point I am quite unable to see that plaintiff committed any fault. If Perry had a right to contract with Treadgold for an option on the claims, certainly no wrongdoing can be attached to plaintiff for having loaned him money to use. That the company did not consider in 1906 that plaintiff had acted adversely to its interests in advancing money to secure the claim is best evidenced by the fact that the directors, in consideration of the services he had rendered in that particular, and expressly because these services had. resulted favorably to the company, voted to give him an option to purchase 180 shares of its stock, then in *872the treasury unissued, at a price below the market price. This, as it seems to me, is a most emphatic approval and indorsement and ratification of plaintiff’s action in advancing the $35,000 to Perry, and completely estops the company from attributing that act as one of treachery to its interests.
If plaintiff was guiltless of wrongdoing in advancing the money to Perry, his fault, if he committed one, must be found in inducing Perry to share the compensation which he was to receive from the company. Ordinarily Perry, having been accorded certain stocks and options to buy stock as compensation for his services, would be entitled to dispose of them as he saw fit, unless forbidden to do so by some provision of his contract. There is no such provision, however, and consequently Perry was at liberty to deal as he would with the stocks and options, unless there was something in plaintiff’s relations to the company which rendered it improper that any part of such stocks and options should go to him alone out of all the world. Much is made in this connection of the restrictions embraced in the contract between plaintiff and the company as to his investment in the stocks of other corporations. By that contract, however, as amended by the agreement of February 26, 1903, it was expressly “ provided further that he [plaintiff] may invest his personal- moneys in the shares or securities of the Company or of any corporations which are or shall be promoted by, or whose stocks or securities shall be sold or dealt in by the Company.” The obligation to notify the president before investing in securities was added to the original contract between plaintiff and the company by an agreement dated March 4, 1904, and expressly had reference only to securities as to which the original contract had absolutely forbidden plaintiff to buy, and had no reference whatever to securities of the defendant corporation or of corporations promoted by it as to which he had the right from the beginning to invest at will. Finally it is said that defendant was ignorant when it agreed upon the compensation to be given to Perry, that he intended to give any part of it to plaintiff, and that Perry asked for higher compensation than he would otherwise have done because he had agreed to give part of it to plaintiff.
That the same officers who agreed with Perry upon Ms com*873pensation knew at the time that Perry professed to give a part of it to plaintiff is certain. Hammond, director, general manager and chief engineer, testifies explicitly that he knew it, and Daniel Guggenheim, the company’s president and chief witness upon the trial, testified as follows: “He [Hammond] told me —he said to me at one time that Mr. Beatty wants to get some of the stock, or wishes to get some of the stock that was allotted to Mr. Perry, and whether I would have any objection to his getting any of that stock. I told Mr. Hammond that I did not object, but he should be very careful and see that Mr. Beatty did not take too much of Mr. Perry’s stock and told him that I did not think Mr. Beatty needed a guardian, hut I thought perhaps Perry did.” It is said also that Perry would have been satisfied with a smaller compensation if he had not intended to share with plaintiff, and so Perry testified. The significance of this evidence is not apparent. • Perry and the company were dealing absolutely at arm’s length. He had no contract wfith it as to his compensation, and was in no position to insist on any particular compensation, but must be satisfied with what it was willing to give, and the compensation finally awarded to him was regarded by the officers of the company and has been found by the court to have been “very fair.”
The case we have then is that plaintiff advanced moneys to secure options upon property which would in all probability have been lost to the company if he had not advanced the money. His action in this regard was clearly to the advantage and not to the disadvantage of the company and was so recognized by the company by its act, by formal resolution, of granting an option to purchase stock in express recognition of the value of his services in this regard. So far as concerns his agreement with Perry to receive a portion of the latter’s compensation for services, it clearly appears, from the evidence of the company’s president and the general manager who fixed the compensation to be given to Perry, that they knew perfectly well at the time that Perry proposed to give some part of his compensation to plaintiff. They probably did not know just what proportion, and apparently were not interested to inquire, their chief anxiety being, for Perry’s sake, that he should not give away too much.
*874In all this we are unable to discern on plaintiff’s part any bad faith, violation of confidence or breach of contract, nor is there a trace of any attempt on his part to keep secret from the company his action in aiding Perry to secure options upon the claims, or his agreement with Perry as to sharing his compensation. If any fault could be attributed to plaintiff, and we do not say it could, it would have been in joining with Perry in purchasing the option to the claims 8 9-1 Of Below Discovery. But in advancing money for that purpose he was careful to have it agreed that he should be committed to nothing contrary to his contract with the company, and his part in that action was not only disclosed to the company, but was distinctly recognized by it as a benefit, as it undoubtedly proved to be.
After a most careful examination of the evidence and the briefs we are unable to find legal justification for the judgment appealed from, which must accordingly be reversed, with costs, and a judgment entered in favor of the plaintiff, with costs, and an allowance of $2,000 as against the exploration company. Order to be entered on notice, at which time the findings to be reversed and the new findings to be made will be settled, and the precise amount of the recovery determined.
Clarke and Hotchkiss, JJ., concurred; Ingraham, P. J., and McLaughlin, J., dissented.