Darknell v. Coeur D'Alene & St. Joe Transportation Co.

108 P. 536, 18 Idaho 61, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 8
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 108 P. 536 (Darknell v. Coeur D'Alene & St. Joe Transportation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Darknell v. Coeur D'Alene & St. Joe Transportation Co., 108 P. 536, 18 Idaho 61, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 8 (Idaho 1910).

Opinion

AILSHIE, J.

This action was commenced for the recovery of judgment for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant corporation. An amended complaint was filed and a demurrer to that complaint was sustained. A second 'amended complaint was filed, and it was upon that complaint that the [65]*65cause went to trial. It was alleged by the plaintiff that on the first day of April, 1905, he purchased thirty shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, and that he thereupon and on the same day entered into the contract with the defendant upon which this action is based. Paragraph 5 of the second amended complaint alleges the nature and character of the contact upon which the action is founded, and is as follows:

“That on, to wit, the first day of April, 1905, and after plaintiff had purchased said shares of stock, said plaintiff and defendant entered into an oral agreement, upon the terms whereof defendant agreed to employ and did employ plaintiff as the assistant general manager of said defendant, and agreed and promised to pay to plaintiff for his services as said assistant general manager, for such period of time as plaintiff should retain his said shares of stock, the same salary from time to time paid to and received by said J. C. White as such general manager, and thereupon, to wit, on the first day of April, 1905, plaintiff entered in .the employ of said defendant under and by virtue of said oral agreement, and performed services for said defendant as siieh assistant general manager at the monthly salary of one hundred dollars ($100), until the 6th day of October, 1905, wnen said defendant commenced to pay, and ever since said last-mentioned date to the present time, has paid to said J. C. White, as such general manager, the salary of three thousand dollars ($3,000) per annum, by reason whereof and under the terms and conditions of said oral agreement plaintiff became and was entitled to receive for his services as assistant general manager the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000) per annum from the 6th day of October, 1905.”

It is further alleged that under and by virtue of the contract set out in paragraph 5 the plaintiff performed services for the defendant as assistant general manager from the first day of April, 1905, up to and including the 6th day of October, 1905, at the monthly salary of $100, and that from the 6th day of October, 1905, up to and including the 6th day [66]*66of June, 1908, the plaintiff performed services for defendant continuously as assistant general manager at the salary of $3,000 per annum. Plaintiff alleges that the salary claimed by him is the same salary that the defendant was paying to its general manager, J. C. White, during the same period of time that plaintiff was in its employ, and that plaintiff was by the terms of his contract to receive the same compensation as the general manager might receive for the same period of time. •

In addition to the foregoing allegations as to the nature of the contract, plaintiff also alleges in paragraph 6 “that said services were reasopably worth” the sums alleged and claimed by him in his complaint.

When the case came on for trial, the defendant filed a motion “to require plaintiff to elect as between two causes of action to proceed upon and to strike.” The court appears to have sustained this motion, and made an order requiring the plaintiff “to elect between the two separate and distinct causes of action set forth in his complaint herein, and that all of said complaint relative to any cause of action other than the one plaintiff elects to retain in his complaint be stricken from said complaint.” The plaintiff protested against this action, took his exception, and thereupon elected to proceed upon the contract as set out in his complaint for the recovery of a stipulated salary. The trial thereupon proceeded, and plaintiff called his first witness, and began to examine him, whereupon the defendant objected to the introduction of any evidence in the ease “for the reason that plaintiff’s amended complaint .... as it now stands under the order of the court .... does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” This motion was sustained by the court, and the plaintiff excepted, and has preserved the proceedings in a statement and bill of exceptions. This appeal is from the judgment.

It was contended by the defendant on its motion to require the plaintiff to elect, and is contended in this court, that the plaintiff had improperly commingled two separate and independent causes of action in one count. In other words, it is [67]*67insisted that the complaint charged a pretended canse of action on the contract for a stipulated.salary and also a pretended cause of action on quantum meruit. This contention seems to have been based on the fact that the plaintiff inserted in his complaint the allegation that the services weré of the reasonable value of the amount alleged. If this contention be correct, still the proper method of reaching the objection would not be by motion to require the plaintiff to elect. The two causes of action would not be inconsistent. If improperly united and commingled in one count, the proper motion would have been to require the plaintiff to separately state his several causes of action. It is conceded, and the complaint so states, that the recovery sought was for a stipulated price for services rendered, — the services here rendered under contract. The only question which seems to arise in the case is whether the plaintiff could recover on a stipulated price or must recover on quantum meruit. The two theories are not inconsistent. Indeed, if the plaintiff should succeed in proving that he rendered the services and should be unable to prove that he had a contract for a specific salary, then he would be clearly entitled to recover the reasonable value of the services, provided his complaint contains a count on quantum meruit. Under the statute (subd. 1, sec. 4169) causes of action arising out of “contracts express or implied” may be joined. So a cause of action on an express contract for a fixed salary may be joined with a cause of action for the same service on an implied promise to pay the reasonable value thereof. (Cowan v. Abbott, 92 Cal. 100, 28 Pac. 213; Estrella etc. Co. v. Butler, 125 Cal. 232, 57 Pac. 980; Olmstead v. Dauphiny, 104 Cal. 635, 38 Pac. 505.)

It is argued, and the chief contention is made by respondent, that this contract is void, that as to the corporation it was ultra vires, and that it is also contrary to public policy, for the reason that it has the effect of divesting the directors and officers of their power of controlling, and managing the business and affairs of the corporation. However sound this argument may be, and whatever merit it may contain, it is clearly inapplicable to the present status of this case and the [68]*68facts on wbicb we must pass. The question of the power of the directors to discharge the appellant and absolve the corporation from a further continuance of the relation or longer recognizing the binding effect of the contract and accepting appellant’s services under the contract does not arise in this case. Here, according to the allegations of the complaint, appellant continued for several years in the service of respondent under the terms of this contract, and the only question which arises now is the liability of the company to pay for the service already rendered.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P. 536, 18 Idaho 61, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darknell-v-coeur-dalene-st-joe-transportation-co-idaho-1910.