Cruickshank v. Lich

291 P. 485, 158 Wash. 523, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 962
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1930
DocketNo. 22154. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 291 P. 485 (Cruickshank v. Lich) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cruickshank v. Lich, 291 P. 485, 158 Wash. 523, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 962 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

Millard, J.

The purpose of this action is to recover three thousand dollars advanced to the defendants and balance due for services rendered to the defendants. Plaintiff alleged that, by contract of November, 1922, he agreed to purchase a five-thousand-dollar interest in the ranch of the defendants, who agreed to employ the plaintiff on that ranch at a salary of one hundred dollars monthly. From November 1, 1922, to July 1, *524 1926, plaintiff paid in cash, to the defendants and earned in wages a total of seventy-four hundred dollars. Defendants refused to comply with the contract and paid to plaintiff, on account of wages due, four thousand and seventy dollars. For a second cause of action, plaintiff alleged a balance due for boarding employees of the defendants.

Answering, defendants counterclaimed for merchandise supplied to, and house used by, the plaintiff, and pleaded a defense in the nature of a confession and avoidance as follows:

Admitting they entered into the contract of November, 1922, the defendants allege that the agreement was canceled by mutual consent of the parties in January, 1924, plaintiff releasing any claim he had to an interest in the ranch. Thereupon, the plaintiff and defendants entered into a copartnership to carry on a dairy business. Plaintiff agreed to contribute to the partnership the balance due for wages and the money paid by him to defendants on the original agreement. Plaintiff was to have the management of the dairy, the profits and losses of which were to be shared equally. Plaintiff abandoned the business about July 1, 1926. Defendants pray for an accounting of the copartnership affairs and for judgment on the counterclaim.

The trial resulted in findings of fact, conclusions of law and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for thirty-three hundred and fifty-six dollars and seventy-five cents paid to defendants for the purchase of stock; and in favor of the defendants for two hundred and twenty-one dollars and forty-five cents as a counterclaim against the plaintiff. The defendants have appealed.

The facts, summarized as follows, disclose that appellants accepted as a loan money advanced to them by respondent for stock in a proposed corporation, *525 that appellants and respondent were not partners, and that the relationship of respondent towards appellants was at all times that of an employee:

■ The “ J. P. Ranch” in Grant county is owned by the appellants, a marital community. In November, 1922, appellant husband, a man of considerable business experience, represented to respondent, a farm laborer, that he was forming a corporation, to be known as the “J. P. Ranches Company,” to take over his ranch,, which was valued at one hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

The court expressed the view that Lich had had a large business experience and “was a ‘smooth talkery and a shrewd dealer, . . . plaintiff who had the greater part of his life worked as a farm laborer, but who, outside of farm work, was a child in experience.”

Respondent was induced by Lich to enter into a contract for the purchase of shares of stock, to the extent of five thousand dollars, of the proposed corporation. The stock was to be issued to respondent upon the payment of four thousand one hundred and sixty-six dollars and fifty cents represented by two notes. One of the notes was the personal note of respondent for twenty-one hundred and sixty-six dollars and fifty cents in favor of Lich. The other was for two thousand dollars drawn by G. J. Egbert in favor of respondent, who assigned the note to Lich and guaranteed payment thereof.

The contract also provided that respondent and his wife were to be employed on the ranch at an agreed wage of one hundred dollars monthly, which was to be applied on the payments for the stock. A man named Shepard, who later upon demand received refund of a part of his money, also purchased stock in the proposed corporation. Appellants were unsuccessful in their endeavors to sell stock to others. The *526 names of respondent and a number of other persons as directors were printed, under the heading of “ J. P. Ranches Co.,” on the proposed corporation’s stationery ordered by Lich. With the exception of the appellants, the names were printed on the stationery without the knowledge or consent of any of the parties concerned. An account was opened in a local bank under the name of the “J. P. Ranches Company.” The foregoing constitute the only attempts ever made by appellants to incorporate their ranch.

From the date of the execution of the contract in 1922 to January 1, 1924, respondent was paid about three hundred dollars in wages although he had earned approximately fourteen hundred dollars. During this period, the respondent paid to appellants one thousand dollars in cash on his personal note, and appellants collected a large part of the Egbert note. On January 1, 1924, respondent demanded of Lich his stock in the corporation. The excuse offered by Lich for not issuing the stock to respondent was that “he would have to go over his books.”

The repeated demands of respondent for his stock resulted in a proposal by Lich, February 1, 1924, that the respondent and the appellants form a partnership for the purpose of conducting a dairy business on the ranch. Respondent’s share was to be the amount of money he had paid on the stock. The appellants were to contribute an equal amount, to be used for the purchase of cattle. The proposal was rejected by respondent, who refused to sign the articles of partnership ; in fact, respondent at all times refused to enter into any partnership agreement, oral or written, with the appellants.

Without the knowledge or consent of the respondent, Lich opened an account in a local bank for the dairy company, had cheeks prepared with the name of *527 the company printed thereon, and ordered the stationery on which appear the names of Lich and the respondent under the heading “Cruickshank Dairy Company.” Respondent continued in the employ of the appellants, his duties being divided between the ranch proper and the dairy. He worked where assigned by the appellants, and, as was required of the other ranch employees, filled out time slips showing the distribution of his labor.

As proof of the partnership, appellants stress the fact that respondent signed with Lich a certificate of assumed name reading as follows:

“This is to certify that J. P. Lich and George Cruickshank are and have been since the 1st day of January, 1924, conducting a dairy business at or near Wilson Creek, Grant county, Washington, under the name of Cruickshank Dairy Company.”

It appears that, in December, 1924, an action was commenced in Spokane county by the “Cruickshank Dairy Company” against another dairy company. A demurrer was interposed on the grounds that the plaintiff had no legal capacity to sue, and for defect of parties plaintiff. Respondent was called to Spokane and informed that the suit could not be prosecuted unless a certificate of assumed name was filed in the office of the county clerk. It is manifest that the respondent signed the certificate with Lich for the purpose of assisting his employers.

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Bluebook (online)
291 P. 485, 158 Wash. 523, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cruickshank-v-lich-wash-1930.