Diesel Service Unit Co. v. Bonbright

555 P.2d 452, 276 Or. 417, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 609
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 555 P.2d 452 (Diesel Service Unit Co. v. Bonbright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Diesel Service Unit Co. v. Bonbright, 555 P.2d 452, 276 Or. 417, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 609 (Or. 1976).

Opinion

*419 BRYSON, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit seeking specific performance of its contract with defendants and praying that defendants be required to (1) construct and operate a truck stop service station on their property adjoining plaintiff’s property; (2) complete a restaurant building for operation on its property; and (3) provide plaintiff’s property purchased from defendants under the contract with sanitary sewer facilities or pay damages in lieu thereof. The prayer for construction and operation of the restaurant was withdrawn by plaintiff during trial as defendants had proceeded to comply with that portion of the contract. Defendants generally denied and affirmatively answered each of plaintiff’s contentions.

The trial court rendered findings of fact and conclusions of law and decreed that defendants (1) immediately construct and open for business a truck stop service station on defendants’ property adjoining plaintiff’s property; (2) immediately provide plaintiff’s real property with adequate sanitary sewer facilities and that plaintiff pay defendants "the hookon and use fee established by the City of Pendleton and defendants”; and (3) "[i]f defendants fail to provide plaintiff’s real property with such sanitary sewer facilities by July 1, 1974, plaintiff shall have judgment in its favor and against defendants, and each of them, in the sum of $110,000. Upon payment of such judgment defendant shall be relieved of the duty of providing such sanitary sewer facilities * * The defendants appeal.

Defendants owned a 15-acre tract of land located five miles east of Pendleton, Oregon, at the Mission interchange on Highway I-80N. Defendants are jobbers handling Phillips Petroleum Company products in the Pendleton area. As part of that operation several service stations were operated, with one catering to highway truck traffic. During 1970-71,1-80N freeway was constructed east of Pendleton, by-passing that *420 part of Pendleton where defendants’ truck service station was located. Defendants Bonbright purchased the 15-acre tract of land for a proposed complete automobile and truck stop service station. The plans called for a restaurant, motel, service, and sales and repair operation on the property.

Plaintiff operated a Peterbilt sales agency in Portland together with service and repair facilities for all makes of trucks and desired to locate a second sales and service agency in eastern Oregon. It learned of defendants’ plans for the new truck service stop and negotiated for the purchase of a portion of defendants’ property.

On June 13,1972, plaintiff and defendants entered into a written contract whereby plaintiff purchased from defendants two of defendants’ 15 acres for the sum of $20,000. The contract also provided that the plaintiff would construct a building on the two acres "suitable for a truck sales and repair business”; "that it is a material consideration to the execution of this contract that the commercial development of the Bonbright [defendants’] property proceed as rapidly as possible and in an orderly manner, and with due regard to the rights and interests of other occupants of the said Bonbright development.” Plaintiff agreed, as per the contract, that it would "proceed as rapidly as possible in the development of the real property” and "make every reasonable effort to have its business thereon opened and in operation by one year from the date of this contract.” The contract further provided, "It is further a material consideration to the execution of this contract that a restaurant and a service station catering to trucks be constructed and operated on the said Bonbright property.”

In other words, it was agreed between the parties that the defendants would sell the two acres to the plaintiff and that plaintiff would build and operate a truck sales, service and repair facility; the defendants would build and operate a truck service stop (fuel and *421 oil) facility. The contract also provided that defendants had a lessee to build and operate a restaurant on the Bonbright premises.

The evidence shows that the construction and operation of the sales, service and repair business by plaintiff, the construction and operation of the truck service station by defendants, and the construction and operation of a restaurant by a suitable lessee were necessary for the success of the project and that all of said representations were material and induced the plaintiff to purchase the two acres and to build its truck sales and repair building.

Prior to the parties executing the contract herein involved, defendants showed plaintiff sketches of the proposed project. The sketches called for septic tanks and drain fields to be used for sewage disposal on defendants’ property and to be available for plaintiff’s building. As early as July 6, 1972, defendants knew that the Umatilla County Health Department had rejected the use of septic tanks and drain fields. Defendants did not advise or give notice to plaintiff of this fact prior to the time plaintiff started construction of its building. The testimony shows that plaintiff had invested in excess of $300,000 in its building and facilities at the time of trial.

Prior to argument on appeal, the plaintiff filed with this court its motion for an order dismissing the defendants’ appeal on the grounds that the defendants had complied with and acquiesced in the trial court’s decree. We denied the motion "with leave to renew upon argument.”

ON MOTION TO DISMISS APPEAL

When a judgment or decree is entered against a party, the payment or compliance therewith will not preclude the party from maintaining an appeal unless it satisfactorily appears that the payment or compliance was voluntary, not coerced, and made with the view of settlement. Housley et ux v. Linnton Plywood *422 Ass’n., 210 Or 520, 525, 311 P2d 432 (1957); Cottrell et ux v. Prier et ux, 191 Or 571, 231 P2d 788 (1951).

The record shows the construction of the defendants’ service station has been virtually completed and a restaurant, operated by The Charburger, Inc., has been built and is open to the public. The sanitary sewer connection to the city of Pendleton facilities, to serve defendants’ service station, the restaurant, and plaintiff’s truck repair and sales buildings, have been completed. Plaintiff has hooked onto and is using the sanitary sewer facility and defendants have billed plaintiff for its purported share of the costs of such facility.

Defendants’ continuation of the original development and construction of the project, subsequent to trial, was not undertaken with the intent to settle the litigation. Failure to proceed subjected the defendants to further liability. The decree also provided that defendants pay attorney fees to plaintiff pursuant to the terms of the contract. Defendants have not paid the judgment for attorney fees. If there remains a matter of payment of attorney fees to the successful party under the terms of the contract and thereby affected by the decision of this court, the appeal will not be dismissed. Pacific N. W. Dev. Corp. v. Holloway, 274 Or 367, 546 P2d 1063 (1976). The motion to dismiss is denied.

ON THE MERITS

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
555 P.2d 452, 276 Or. 417, 1976 Ore. LEXIS 609, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diesel-service-unit-co-v-bonbright-or-1976.