Bouska v. Wright
This text of 621 P.2d 69 (Bouska v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiff brought an action against defendant, a former employee, alleging lost profits as damages for breach of a non-competition clause in an employment contract. The jury found on special interrogatories that the defendant had breached the contract, and plaintiff had a judgment for $4,372.80. Plaintiff joined in his complaint a suit to enjoin defendant from doing business in violation of the contract. After the jury’s verdict, the court granted an injunction. Defendant recovered a judgment for $700 on his counterclaim for unpaid wages, together with a penalty of $700 under ORS 652.150.
Defendant appeals and tenders three assignments of error, only two of which require decision on the merits. 1
Plaintiff had an exclusive license to use a bookkeeping system designed for service station operations. He hired defendant as a "field consultant” with the responsibility for servicing existing clients and developing new ones. Defendant’s service was completely successful and satisfactory. After about three years plaintiff and defendant began to negotiate for defendant to buy plaintiff’s Douglas County business. When those negotiations foundered, defendant quit. Shortly thereafter defendant and his wife opened their own bookkeeping and accounting business, and plaintiff sued. The complaint alleged that defendant had breached a written employment contract by which he had agreed not to compete with plaintiff for three years after terminating employment.
At the trial plaintiff first offered in evidence a set of miscellaneous documents consisting of the license agreement for the bookkeeping system, a number of written policies prepared by the licensor and a blank form employment contract. The exhibit was received without objection. Plaintiff then offered in evidence a photostatic copy of what purported to be the employment agreement in issue. *766 Defendant objected to its admission on the ground that it was not the "best evidence.” Plaintiff then testified about his unsuccessful search for the original 2 in his own files, his request to the licensor’s Seattle regional office for a search of the files and the failure to find the contract there and his similarly unproductive request to the licensor’s home office in Santa Barbara, California. The exhibit was then received; it was in some respects substantially illegible, so plaintiff had attached to it a copy of the blank employment agreement form that was a part of the first exhibit. 3 Defendant relies on ORS 41.610 4 and ORS 41.640(l)(b) 5 and argues that plaintiff totally failed to demonstrate that the absence of the original was not due to his default or neglect.
The trial court was satisfied from plaintiff’s testimony about his efforts to find the original that the statutory conditions for admission of the secondary evidence were *767 established. That particular determination generally lies within a trial court’s discretion. Stipe v. First National Bank, 208 Or 251, 262, 301 P2d 175 (1956). This is not an instance where we can say the evidence furnished no basis for the court’s exercise of that discretion. See Velasquez v. Freeman, 244 Or 40, 415 P2d 514 (1966).
The second assignment of error is that the employment agreement was unenforceable for lack of consideration. As best we can determine, if this issue was effectively tendered at all, it was done in a pre-trial memorandum wherein defendant said:
"*** The evidence will also reveal that the alleged agreement was entered into after employment had commenced and that the salary and benefits that were to accrue to Defendant had already been agreed upon.
"Testimony at trial will also reveal that there was no consideration granted to the defendant in return for his alleged acceptance of the agreement and the harsh restrictions imposed therein. ***”
It is by no means clear that the matter was raised again in the trial. Defendant denied that he ever signed the agreement at all. The jury was instructed 6 on what plaintiff had to prove about the existence of the agreement before it could find for him. 7 No exceptions were taken.
*768 Defendant now claims that because he started work on April 1, 1975, and the agreement is dated April 4, 1975, plaintiff had to prove a separate, new consideration for the obligations undertaken thereby. 8 He relies on McCombs, et al v. McClelland, 223 Or 475, 354 P2d 311 (1960) and Mail-Well Envelope Co. v. Saley, 262 Or 143, 497 P2d 364 (1972), but they are inapposite. In each of those cases it was clear that the non-competition agreement was separate from the original employment agreement. Here the evidence was sufficient for the jury to conclude that the promise not to compete and the initial employment were contemporaneous. So, even assuming the issue was before the trial court, it was properly disposed of in the jury trial phase of the case, and the court was entitled to make the same finding in determining to give equitable relief.
Affirmed.
Defendant’s third assignment of error asserts "that the trial court erred in specifically enforcing the agreement *** because the agreement lacked consideration and because plaintiff himself breached the agreement.” The first ground is disposed of under the second assignment of error, and defendant concedes that the second was not urged at trial. We will not consider it.
The photostatic copy, as well as the copy attached to the first exhibit, suggested that there had been duplicate executed originals. Neither was produced. There was no testimony that duplicate originals were in fact executed. How plaintiff happened to have a photostatic copy of the agreement but not the original was never explained.
Defendant denied signing the agreement or, if he did sign it at some time, that he had known and understood its contents. He also argued that if he did sign it, it was done much later than it showed on its face.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
621 P.2d 69, 49 Or. App. 763, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bouska-v-wright-orctapp-1980.