Drew-Warren Radio Electric Co. v. Western Loan & Building Co.

269 P. 496, 148 Wash. 435, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 890
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 1928
DocketNo. 21184. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 269 P. 496 (Drew-Warren Radio Electric Co. v. Western Loan & Building 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
Drew-Warren Radio Electric Co. v. Western Loan & Building Co., 269 P. 496, 148 Wash. 435, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 890 (Wash. 1928).

Opinion

Holcomb, J.

— Respondent sued to recover of appellant the sum of $1,920.75, the balance due upon the sale of a set of radio equipment installed in an apartment house belonging to F. F. Travis in Tacoma, for which the lower court gave respondent judgment. The contract price of the radio equipment was $3,051.85. $551.85 was agreed to be paid in cash as an initial payment and the balance to be paid in monthly installments of $270, with eight per .cent interest by Travis. The initial payment was not made. At various times in January, February, and April, 1926, Travis paid upon the “lease contract” $493, which was credited to his account by respondent. Title to -the radio equipment was reserved by a conditional sale and “léase contract” in the vendor until full payment of the purchase price.

Appellant had advanced $125,000 in two loans of $75,000 and $50,000 for the purpose of constructing the apartment house. At the request of appellant’s mortgagor, respondent installed the equipment during construction under the “lease contract”. Later, appellant and Travis found that $35,000 more was required to complete the building. The state supervisor of savings and loans objected to the placing of another loan to appellant on the incompleted building. Appellant then arranged with its president, R. W. Madsen, to advance the $35,000 needed on a third mortgage, it having been determined that that sum, with the returns which would be available from the finished portion of the building, would be sufficient to entirely finish the building.

*437 The theory upon which respondent endeavors to hold appellant liable for the balance of the purchase price of the radio equipment, as alleged in the complaint, is briefly that in April, 1926, appellant took over the further construction of the building, and shortly thereafter respondent insisted upon payment and threatened legal action, if not paid; that appellant then entered into an agreement with respondent to the effect that respondent would retain certain loud speakers included in the radio equipment and credit the account of Travis and the “lease contract” with the whole cost price of the loud speakers, and. would permit the remainder of the equipment to remain in the building and waive its daim to immediate payment and its right to legal action, in consideration of which appellant would adopt the contract and pay to respondent the balance which would remain due thereunder, payments to be in installments in such amounts, as appellant might determine prior to October, 1926; and commencing with that date, and thereafter, at the rate provided in the “lease contract” of $270 per month; that the contract was adopted by appellant, partly by writing and partly by oral agreements, the persons representing the company in so doing being Joe O'. Huff and V. E. Madsen, its vice president and general manager; that Huff thereupon in May, 1926, notified respondent that he had taken charge of the building and was working to the best advantage possible and would be able to reach the claim of respondent in the course of thirty days without fail, and that thereafter everything would be straightened out as rapidly as possible.

It was then alleged that the agreement to pay by appellant was made partly in writing, and partly orally by Huff and Madsen,and that the consideration of the agreement was as hereinbefore stated. . It was then *438 alleged that, in accordance with the agreement with appellant, respondent retained the loud speakers, which were of the whole value of $638.10, and thereafter, in conformity with the agreement, entered the credit against the “lease contract” of that amount on August 2, 1926, which credit, together with prior payments, left a balance then due of $1,920.75; that plaintiff permitted the remainder of the equipment to remain in the building, and waived its claim to immediate payment and its right to legal action otherwise, and fully performed the agreement on its part.

Issues were formed by an answer and affirmative defense and a reply to the affirmative defense, upon which issues trial was held to the court without a jury.

At the conclusion of the trial, the trial court made an oral memorandum decision, which succinctly summarizes and analyzes the issues and the evidence in the case and which we will here reproduce:

“I think this much is fairly definite, that some time in the early part of 1926, and after the execution of the mortgage by Travis to Mr. Madsen, this agent, Mr. Huff, gave assurance to the plaintiff here that he would take care, of the contract. Later Mr. Huff wrote to the plaintiff on the stationery of the Western Loan & Building Company, and at the request of Mr. Drew, that he had taken charge of the building, was working everything to the best advantage possible, and he would be able to reach the Drew claim in the course of the next thirty days without failure, at which time ‘I will do whatever possible. I can assure you the matter can be straightened out shortly thereafter.’ At that time the third mortgage of Mr. Madsen had been filed and was a matter of record. Later in June, Mr. Haskell has an interview with Mr. Madsen, who was the vice-president of the defendant company, in which he testifies Madsen advised him that the Travis note will in time be paid in full. Mr. Madsen says two thousand dollars would finish the building, that they are foreclosing the mortgage, and during the year it takes *439 to foreclose they are going to apply the rent to the payment of snch bills as the one in question, that there will be a small payment made in the next month, and at the end of ninety days the regular payment of $270 would be made regularly; that he is recognizing the lease contract and expects to pay it out. Now, those facts constitute the substance of the agreement on the part of the defendant to pay this debt. Mr. Huff, according to the testimony of the defendant, and that I believe is undisputed, came up from Salt Lake at the request of the third mortgagee to look after the distribution of this third mortgage fund. He was an auditor of the defendant company. Likewise Mr. Paskill was the agent, the local agent of the defendant company. Upon those two men was placed the burden of seeing to the proper distribution of the third mortgage fund. It happens that they were employees of the defendant.
“Now, in order to take this case out of the statute of frauds, and it is admitted that there is no sufficient writing to comply with the statute, it is necessary that there be a consideration for this promise, this oral promise. The defendant company had a mortgage on the property in question which was prior to the Madsen mortgage. It is not necessary for me to recite the conditions under which that Madsen mortgage was created, because there is no dispute about it. It does appear from the testimony that the mortgage company had desired and intended for reasons good and sufficient to itself to advance money on the third mortgage, but was stopped by the order of the state authorities, which forbade the placing of more building loan funds against that security. Then this other plan was adopted. I think it is fairly apparent that the reason that Mr. Madsen took a third mortgage here was to protect the interests of his company which was already involved in this uncompleted building.

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 496, 148 Wash. 435, 1928 Wash. LEXIS 890, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/drew-warren-radio-electric-co-v-western-loan-building-co-wash-1928.