Dial v. Inland Logging Co.

100 P. 157, 52 Wash. 81, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1078
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1909
DocketNo. 7756
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 100 P. 157 (Dial v. Inland Logging Co.) 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
Dial v. Inland Logging Co., 100 P. 157, 52 Wash. 81, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1078 (Wash. 1909).

Opinion

Gose, J.

This action was instituted by the respondent against the appellant to recover a judgment for the sum of $969.56, and to foreclose a laborer’s lien filed on certain personal property to secure the same, which amount and claim of lien were assigned to him by one A. F. Peters. From a judgment against the appellant for the sum of $400, but denying the lien, it prosecutes this appeal.

The complaint avers in substance, that on the 6th day of October, 1906, the appellant made an oral contract with the said Peters, whereby it agreed to pay him the reasonable value of his services as foreman of its logging camp; that pursuant to the contract Peters performed services for it as such foreman for a period of six months; that the reasonable value of such services was $150 per month, making in the aggregate $900; that under a similar contract Peters, upon the expiration of such period, performed services for it of the reasonable value of $69.56; that such claim had been assigned to the respondent.

The alleged claim grew out of the following facts: On the 8th day of October, 1906, the said A. F. Peters, C. O. Walston and G. A. Wahlstrom, the last two of whom were brothers, organized a corporation with a paper capitalization of $25,000, for the purpose of engaging in the logging and lumbering business. At this time Peters put into the corporation a fifteen hundred dollar note. Walston and Wahlstrom each paid the sum of $2,500. Later C. O. Walston put into the corporation an additional sum of about $4,500, and his brother about $2,500. In the articles of incorporation it is provided that C. O. Walston, A. F. Peters and G. A. Wahlstrom shall constitute the board of trustees for the first six months. A few days subsequent to the signing of the articles of incorporation, the three incorporators adopted and certified by-laws for the- government of the corporation, and elected the said Peters as president, C. O. Walston as secretary and manager, and G. A. Wahlstrom as vice president. [83]*83Art. 7, subd. 3 of such by-laws gives the president, subject to the advice of the trustees, the power to direct the affairs of the coi-poration. Art. 5, subd. 3, empowers the trustees “to supervise all officers, agents, and employes and see that their duties are properly performed.” Touching the compensation of the officers and trustees, it is provided in Art. 10, that “the board of trustees shall be allowed their reasonable traveling expenses when actually engaged in the business of the company, to be audited and allowed as other cases of demand against the company” ; and that “the officers shall receive such compensation as the board of trustees shall from time to time fix and determine.”

The evidence shows that Peters was the foreman of the logging camp for six months, and that he acted as a general Utility man for one month; that there was no express contract of employment between the appellant and himself; that a few days before the execution of the articles of incorporation, he had a conversation with C. O. Walston, in which the latter said to him, in substance, that in his business he always reckoned wages to be deducted before he computed a profit; that C. O. Walston devoted almost his entire time to the business of the corporation, and that a part of the brother’s timé was occupied in promoting its interests; that Peters at no time mentioned wages to his co-trustees; that he filed his claim for a lien in the sum of $969.56, and assigned it to the respondent for a consideration of $400, without making any demand for payment; that about five days after such assignment, in consideration of the payment to him of the sum of $375 by the appellant, he executed and delivered to it an instrument of writing as follows:

“I, A. P. Peters, for and in consideration of the sum of $375, to me in hand paid by the Inland Logging Company, the receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, do hereby assign, set over and transfer to the said Inland Logging Company, all my right, title and interest in and to the said Logging [84]*84Company and any and all claims which I may have at this date. Dated this 20th day of May, 1907. A. F. Peters

that at this time he said nothing to the appellant about the claim or its assignment; that the three incorporators were to have one-third each of the capital stock, and that its profits were to be divided on a like basis.

A careful reading of the by-laws of appellant and the evidence in the case makes it certain that it was the intention of each of the incorporators to devote his talent and energies to the prosecution of the corporate business, without wages, save such as they expected would result in the way of profits. What they believed would be a profitable enterprise terminated in a loss. The fact, however, that a profit did not result does not entitle Peters to make a charge for his services. The fact that Peters worked for seven months, filed a lien against the property of the appellant for $969.56, and sold it for $400 without either a demand for payment or any notice to the debtor that he asserted a claim against it, makes it reasonably certain that his demand was not made in good faith. We are not impressed with his explanation that he assigned the claim to the respondent for $400 for the reason that he was in need of money. The fact that he was in need of money, if his claim had an honest basis, would have induced him to undertake to settle the same with the appellant rather than to make such a sacrifice. Indeed, his several acts lead irresistibly to the conclusion that he was not to be compensated for his work except from such profits as might result from the enterprise. It is also worthy of observation that as a trustee the by-laws made it his duty “to supervise all officers, agents and employes and see that their duties were properly performed.” This was just what he did. It was his duty under such by-laws to do this without compensation other than reasonable traveling expenses when actually engaged in the business of the company, in the absence of evidence of an express or implied agreement to pay him. The law governing com[85]*85pensation in such cases is very clearly stated in Brown v. Republican Mountain Silver Mines, 17 Colo. 421, 425, 30 Pac. 66, in the following words:

“But even if the more liberal rule may be resorted to in some cases, it certainly should be held that a director cannot recover compensation for services rendered by himself to his corporation upon an implied contract unless it be established by a clear preponderance of the evidence, first, that the services were clearly outside his ordinary duties as a director, and, second, that they were performed under circumstances sufficient to show that it was well understood by the proper corporate officers as well as himself that the services were to be paid for by the corporation.”

This court, in Burns v. Commencement Bay Land & Imp. Co., 4 Wash. 558, 566, 30 Pac. 668, 709, recognizes the same view in the following language:

“It seems to us, however, that the better authority is the other way, and that a trustee or officer of a corporation cannot recover pay for such services without an express provision therefor, and this must come from the articles of agreement or by-laws, or from some other source or authority than the action of the trustees themselves.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 P. 157, 52 Wash. 81, 1909 Wash. LEXIS 1078, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dial-v-inland-logging-co-wash-1909.