D. W. L., Inc. v. Goodner-Van Engineering Co.

1962 OK 121, 373 P.2d 38, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 424
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMay 23, 1962
Docket39431, 39528
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 1962 OK 121 (D. W. L., Inc. v. Goodner-Van Engineering Co.) 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
D. W. L., Inc. v. Goodner-Van Engineering Co., 1962 OK 121, 373 P.2d 38, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 424 (Okla. 1962).

Opinion

*40 BERRY, Justice.

This was an action on open account by vendor who provided restaurant equipment and supplies for the Holiday Inn Motor Hotel at Tulsa, Oklahoma. The parties waived a trial by jury, submitting the cause to the court. Plaintiff-vendor, Goodner-Yan Engineering Company, recovered a judgment in the sum of $38,539.91 against the defendant, D. W. L., Inc., the corporate lessee and operator of the hotel establishment. When it became apparent that defendant elected ⅛ appeal from this judgment without superseding it, plaintiff instituted below an ancillary proceeding in aid of execution. This proceeding culminated in an order appointing a receiver for the defendant. Upon trial court’s refusal to vacate this order, defendant perfected therefrom another appeal. The two separate appeals — each timely brought here by the defendant — were consolidated for disposition. The decisive question presented for our consideration is whether defendant, operator of the hotel, is legally liable to the plaintiff-vendor for the account in litigation. An outline of the record appears necessary to a proper determination of the issue.

The Holiday Inn of Tulsa owes its inception to an idea conceived and promoted by Dr. Charles E. McCracken, a Tulsa dentist and businessman, who secured a “franchise” license from the Holiday Inns of America, Inc., and purchased the building site upon which the hotel was erected. Seeking funds and aid for the venture, the doctor associated himself in the project with a group of Chicago investors composed of Messrs. Seymour N. Logan, Morris R. DeWoskin and Merwin S. Rosenberg. As a result of their financial arrangements, several different corporations were organized. The land upon which the facility was built is owned by the Creek Land Development Company; the buildings and improvements constructed upon the site are held by another corporation, the Turnpike Hotel Company, which has a long-term lease from the landholding company. The Turnpike corporation, which calls itself “the underlying landlord”, subleased the entire premises to yet another corporation, the defendant D. W. L., Inc., who assumed complete responsibility for the operation and management of the physical facilities. D. W. L., Inc. is wholly owned by the Chicago group named earlier in this opinion; the two major stockholders in the landholding company and the underlying landlord corporation were Dr. McCracken and Mr. Logan of the Chicago group. Each of these men was allotted an equal number of shares. Mr. Logan was also a principal stockholder and officer of defendant D. W. L., Inc.

Under the terms of its lease with the underlying landlord, it was defendant’s sole obligation to procure and acquire all necessary furnishings, both for the hotel and the restaurant. The defendant did not at first have any employees or representatives in Oklahoma, and it depended largely on Dr. McCracken, a resident of Tulsa, to assist it as a local contact man in finding “people who would provide furnishings for this area”. In course of this activity Dr. McCracken invited plaintiff’s sales engineer to design, recommend and submit plans for suitable restaurant arrangements. Initially, defendant intended to operate the restaurant as a part of its hotel business, but later decided to sublease this establishment to an independent concern. Dr. McCracken’s aid was then enlisted “to see if you could find someone in the local area to operate the restaurant”. Pursuant to this direction, Dr. McCracken located one David Gordon who expressed interest in “taking over the restaurant” but “he was not in a financial condition where he could do it by himself ”. Gordon prevailed on Dr. McCracken to participate with him in this business venture. The doctor agreed. They then organized another corporation, Catering Service, Inc., which, on March 3, 1959, subleased from defendant, D. W. L., Inc., the restaurant facilities of the hotel. Catering Service operated the restaurant until August or September of 1959, when it filed a *41 proceeding for involuntary bankruptcy and lost its lease under an automatic termination clause embodied therein.

As we view defendant’s brief, its chief argument is that the equipment purchased on the account sued upon in this action was procured by Dr. McCracken, acting as an agent of Catering Service, Inc., and not as representative for the defendant. It stands admitted that in his dealings with plaintiff Dr. McCracken was acting “in a disclosed representative capacity”. The point in controversy appears to be whether in law and in fact he was the agent for sublessee, Catering Service, Inc., or of the defendant-aotel operator.

The negotiations between Dr. McCracken and plaintiff’s engineer were initiated at Mr. Logan’s request in the summer of 1958, when defendant stood firmly committed to its original idea of operating the restaurant. Even the final agreement of purchase took place before the sublease of the restaurant premises to Catering Service was executed. According to the record, on February 13, 1959, plaintiff’s sales engineer outlined a detailed offer of sale in a letter forwarded directly to defendant’s office in Chicago. A short time later the sales engineer received a telephone call from Chicago, in which Dr. McCracken, then visiting in that city, accepted the offer on express instructions from Mr. Logan. So far as the record discloses, Catering Service was not then in the “picture”; nor was it even in existence as a corporate lessee of the restaurant. It, therefore, follows that up to the time of the outlined transactions Dr. McCracken was acting for no entity other than the defendant who had the sole responsibility of furnishing and equipping its restaurant facility.

The subsequent sublease agreement with Catering Service, Inc., did not effect a change in the obligation resting on the defendant. Nor did it require Catering Service to adopt the contract with the plaintiff. The responsibility for procuring the restaurant equipment charged on the account in question continued to be that of the defendant. Under the unmistakable terms of the lease, defendant undertook to pay $22,500.-00 in cash on the purchase price, and to advance and “make available” to Catering Service all funds up to the aggregate sum of $60,000.00. The equipment so acquired was “ * * * to be and belong to lessor, notwithstanding any contribution of lessee toward the purchase * * * Catering Service, as lessee, bound itself to contribute $37,500.00 by repaying this sum over a period of 30 months. The parties clearlv understood that the primary obligation to secure funds for payment of plaintiff's account rested on defendant and that the defendant would be the sole owner of the property so purchased. On March 9, 1959, defendant issued its check to plaintiff for $22,000.00, of which $20,150.00 was credited upon this account, and the remainder of $1,850.00 was refunded by plaintiff to apply on another purchase in connection with the same project. Dr. McCracken testified that defendant was “⅜ * * to put in the first $60,000.00, be responsible for the first $60,000.00 facilities” and Mr. Logan expressly approved the contract with plaintiff. Defendant construed its primary obligation in the same light. Mr. Logan’s letter of March 10, 1959, requesting a bank loan for payment of plaintiff's account, sets forth:

“DWL, Inc. is paying for restaurant and hotel equipment in cash * * *, the restaurant furnishings amount to approximately $60,000.00. We have paid twenty-five percent down on these purchases * *

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Bluebook (online)
1962 OK 121, 373 P.2d 38, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 424, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/d-w-l-inc-v-goodner-van-engineering-co-okla-1962.