Bush v. Mattingly

158 P.2d 665, 62 Ariz. 483, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 202
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1945
DocketCivil No. 4679.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 158 P.2d 665 (Bush v. Mattingly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bush v. Mattingly, 158 P.2d 665, 62 Ariz. 483, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 202 (Ark. 1945).

Opinion

LaPRADE, J.

This is an appeal from an order of the Superior Court granting’ defendant’s motion for a new trial. The appellant, plaintiff below, was successful in securing a verdict and judgment in the lower court. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court — plaintiff and defendant. The plaintiff was a real estate salesman employed in the office of the defendant, who was a real estate broker. Plaintiff in his complaint alleged that he had earned certain commissions as a salesman for the defendant, which the defendant denied. The complaint, among other things, alleges that it was verbally agreed between the said parties “that said plaintiff should take charge of sales and transactions pertaining particularly to farm lands, and verbally agreed to pay to the plaintiff upon and at the time of the consummation of any sale of farm lands upon which the plaintiff participated as a real estate salesman one-half of sales commissions earned and paid to the defendant by the owners or purchasers of said lands sold.” Subsequent to the filing of the answer, defendant secured permission from the court to file a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s complaint. The ground of the motion was that the contract sued upon was an oral contract and within the statute of frauds. The section relied upon is Sec. 58-101, Arizona Code Annotated 1939,- which in part reads as follows:

“No action shall be brought in any court in the following cases, unless the promise or agreement upon which such action shall be brought, or some memorandum thereof, shall be in writing and signed by the parties to be charged therewith, or by some person by him thereunto lawfully authorized:

*485 “7. Upon an agreement authorizing or employing an agent or broker to purchase or sell real property, or mines, for compensation or a commission; or, . . . .”

Before the trial court had an opportunity to rule on this motion, counsel for plaintiff secured leave to file an amended complaint and did so by adding a count in quantum meruit for the reasonable value of his alleged services. After presentation of the motion, the court granted the motion to dismiss as to the first cause of action, being the count upon the express oral contract, and denied the motion as to the second cause of action, being the count on quantum meruit.

The case was tried to a jury and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000. Judgment was entered on the verdict. On the hearing of the motion for a new trial, the trial court concluded that the facts pleaded did not fall within the prohibition of subsection 7 of Sec. 58-101, supra, because of the fact that plaintiff was the employee of defendant, and that the defendant as a broker had a written contract with the owner of the property to sell the same. The trial court concluded that it had committed error in sustaining defendant’s motion to dismiss as to the first cause of action. The trial court also concluded that it had committed error in submitting the case to the jury on the quantum meruit count. In this behalf the trial court stated:

“ ... if the plaintiff was entitled to recover, he was entitled to recover on an express contract, as alleged in the first cause of action. Upon this ground alone the motion for a new trial was granted, leaving the way open for the plaintiff to prosecute his remedy on an express contract if he so desired, and such statement was made to the attorneys for the plaintiff at the time. The Court did not in its order granting the motion for a new trial state the ground upon which the same was granted. The Court did not consider the sufficiency or insufficiency of the evidence in the case in granting the motion for a new trial.”

*486 Appellant assigned as error the granting of defendant’s' motion for a new trial. The appellee has made several cross-assignments of error, all of which go to the proposition that the trial court erred in refusing to sustain defendant’s motion to dismiss plaintiff’s second cause of action for the asserted reason that the foundation of plaintiff’s suit was for an agent’s commission within the statute of frauds.

An examination of our statute of frauds and many adjudicated cases leads us to believe that the trial judge was correct in his final appraisal wherein he came to the conclusion that the statute of - frauds did not apply to the first cause of action.

This court in the case of Hall v. Rankin, 22 Ariz. 13, 193 Pac. 756, 757, had occasion to consider the application of the statute of frauds to a comparable fact situation. We there held:

“The statute of frauds, of course, is binding upon us and must be obeyed and enforced whenever a case falls within its provisions, but it was remarked by Chief Justice Buchanan, in delivering the opinion in Lamborn v. Watson, 6 Har. & J., Md. [252], 255, 14 Am. Dee. 275, where the defense under the statute was successfully relied on, for the protection of a dishonest defendant, that the statute ‘probably generates as many frauds as it prevents.’ The subdivision of the statute referred to was clearly designed to protect owners of real estate against unfounded claims of brokers (Gorham v. Heiman, 90 Cal. 346, 27 Pac. 289) and contemplates a transaction between parties contracting with each other as principals. That is not the case here. In this case the plaintiff, as agent, undertook to perform for the defendant, who was not the owner of the mine, certain services, and the defendant undertook to make compensation therefor. ... ”

The statement of the rule in Gorham v. Heiman, 90 Cal. 346, 358, 27 Pac. 289, 292, is explicit and exact and entirely applicable to the facts in the instant case. *487 With reference to the applicable portion of the statute of frauds it was there said that “that provision was only designed to protect owners of real estate against unfounded claims of brokers. It does not extend to agreements between brokers to cooperate in making sales for a share of the commissions.” To the same effect are the cases of Baker v. Thompson, 14 Cal. App. 175, 111 Pac. 373; Hageman v. O’Brien, 24 Cal. App. 270, 141 Pac. 33; Kennedy v. Johnson, 109 Cal. App. 662, 293 Pac. 698; Jones v. Kehoe, 61 Wash. 422, 112 Pac. 497; Orr v. Perky Investment Co., 65 Wash. 281, 118 Pac. 19; and 9 C. J., Brokers, § 60, p. 560; 12 C. J. S., Brokers, § 62, p. 144.

Counsel for the appellee stresses with much fervor that the holding of this court in the case of Eads v. Murphy, 27 Ariz. 267, 232 Pac. 877, 879, is absolutely determinative of the issue here raised by the pleading of the statute of frauds.

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Bluebook (online)
158 P.2d 665, 62 Ariz. 483, 1945 Ariz. LEXIS 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-mattingly-ariz-1945.