Bartlett v. STERLING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY

1972 OK 67, 499 P.2d 425, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 25, 1972
Docket43176
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1972 OK 67 (Bartlett v. STERLING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bartlett v. STERLING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, 1972 OK 67, 499 P.2d 425, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 384 (Okla. 1972).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Justice.

This appeal arises in an action in which the appellee, A. G. Bartlett, as the plaintiff, sought a judgment in the amount of $24,600.00 against the appellant, Sterling Construction Company, a corporation, as the defendant, as the unpaid balance claimed to be due him as salary under an alleged contract of employment.

A jury trial resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of $20,075.00. Judgment was rendered accordingly. After its motion for a new trial was overruled, the defendant appealed to this court on the original record and a transcript of the proceedings at the trial.

The appeal was assigned to the Court of Appeals, Division No. 2, for opinion. That court reversed the judgment and remanded the cause to the trial court with directions to enter judgment for the defendant. In doing so, it sustained the defendant’s first proposition, treating the action as being one for damages for breach of contract and holding that the contract was not enforceable because of lack of mutuality of obligations and failure to specify the duration of its effectiveness. That court denied the plaintiff’s petition for rehearing. The plaintiff filed a petition for certiorari *427 for a review by this court of the decision of the Court of Appeals. Certiorari is granted; the decision of the Court of Appeals is reversed, and the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.

In his amended petition, the plaintiff pleaded the execution and delivery of an instrument in writing (hereinafter referred to as the “memorandum”), in words and figures as follows:

“STERLING CONSTRUCTION COMPANY Telephone Jackson 4-1633 Post Office Box 9733 Oklahoma City 18, Oklahoma January 28, 1960
Mr. A. G. Bartlett
3519 South Wheeling Street
Tulsa, Oklahoma
Dear Mr. Bartlett:
Confirming our conversation of Wednesday, January 27, 1960 in your office at the above address, we agree to pay you $300.00 a month starting February 1, 1960 as an employee of this corporation.
The salary of $300.00 per month will be adjusted in accordance with the salary of J. E. Peterschmidt and L. H. Brown, president and vice president respectively. For example, Mr. Peterschmidt’s and Mr. Brown’s salary are now $600.00 a month but should these salaries be increased to $800.00 a month your salary would automatically be raised to $400.00 a month.
It is also agreed that any assistance that you render to the corporation in bonding contract work will be paid at the same rate as charged by the bonding company. As an example, we would like to bid a job amounting to $300,000.00 but have bonding capacity equal to only $100,000.00. The additional $200,000.00 in bonding would be paid as a separate fee to you. To further detail this matter, we pay the bonding company $750.00 for each $100,000.00 of bond, so your fee, in this particular instance, would be $1,500.00.
If you agree to the conditions outlined above, will you so indicate by signing your name in the space provided below.
Approved: Approved:
/s/ J. E. PETERSCHMIDT /s/ L. H. BROWN
J. E. Peterschmidt, President L. H. Brown, Vice Pres.
Approved:
/s/ A. G. BARTLETT A. G. Bartlett”

The plaintiff then alleged that, at the time the memorandum was signed, the salary of the president, Peterschmidt, was $600 a month and the salary of the vice-president, Brown was $600 a month; that, as of October 1, 1960, Peterschmidt’s salary as president was increased to $800 a month and Brown’s salary as vice-president was increased to $700 a month, and that, under the contract, this automatically increased the plaintiff’s salary from $300 a month to $400 a month, as of the same date. He also alleged that, as of May 1, 1961, Peterschmidt’s salary as president was increased to $1,000 a month, and that, under the contract, this automatically in *428 creased the plaintiff’s salary from $400 a month to $500 a month, as of the same date.

Under those allegations, the plaintiff was entitled to salary in the total amount of $13,700 for the 32-month period from February 1, 1960, through September of 1962 — $300 a month for the first eight months, $400 a month for the next seven months, and $500 a month for the next seventeen months. The plaintiff alleged that the defendant paid him $300 for each of those 32 months, for a total of $9,600, leaving an unpaid balance of salary due under the contract in the amount of $4,100 as of September 30, 1962.

The plaintiff alleged that the last salary payment of $300 was made to him on October 10, 1962; that the defendant paid him nothing under the contract after that date; and that, during the period from that date until February 22, 1966, the officers Peterschmidt and Brown told him, from time to time, he would ultimately receive all of his salary according to the contract and that it would continue to accrue on the corporation’s books as a liability. He also alleged that, as the result of relying upon those officers’ statements and actions, he was lulled into a feeling of security and did not press his claim for salary due him under the contract; and that those officers fraudulently concealed from him the fact that their salaries had been increased as he alleged, and he did not learn about such increases until March 1, 1966.

The amended petition further alleges that, on February 22, 1966, “the defendant breached said contract entirely and arbitrarily terminated the same” and advised the plaintiff that he would be paid nothing further on the contract; and that, as of that time, salary in the additional amount of $20,500 had accrued under the contract for the 41 months from October 1, 1962, through February of 1966, making a balance of salary in the total amount of $24,600 which is “justly due, owing and unpaid” under the contract. He prayed for judgment in that principal amount, with interest and the costs of the action.

Concerning his duties as an employee of the corporation, the plaintiff testified that he did not office with the company, had no specific routine duties, and his principal function was “basically as an advisor or consultant jointly with Mr. Peterschmidt or Mr. Brown,” and that he got together with them “quite often.”

Each of the seven Oklahoma cases cited by the defendant in its argument under its first proposition involved an action for damages for breach, or breaches, of the contract involved. They do, for the most part, support the principles of law relied on by the defendant, as applied to actions for damages for breach of contract. However, the cases cited in support of its argument that an agreement which is indefinite in its provisions concerning the duration or termination of the agreement does not meet the requirements of an enforceable contract, do not support that argument. Those cases — Arkansas Valley Town & Land Company v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Railway Co. (1915), 49 Okl. 282, 151 P. 1028; Rogers et al. v. White Sewing Machine Company (1916), 59 Okl. 40, 157 P. 1044; Foster v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1972 OK 67, 499 P.2d 425, 1972 Okla. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bartlett-v-sterling-construction-company-okla-1972.