Emerine v. Yancey

680 A.2d 1380, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 157, 1996 WL 450850
CourtDistrict of Columbia Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 8, 1996
Docket94-CV-791
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 680 A.2d 1380 (Emerine v. Yancey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District of Columbia Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Emerine v. Yancey, 680 A.2d 1380, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 157, 1996 WL 450850 (D.C. 1996).

Opinion

RUIZ, Associate Judge:

The principal issue in this appeal is whether defendant-appellant Richard Emerine was denied his right to trial by jury after the trial court allowed amendment of the complaint, over Emerine’s objection, during a bench trial. We hold that because the amendment did not raise any issue that Emerine did not anticipate or could not have anticipated in fight of the allegations of the original complaint, for which he did not demand a jury trial, he was not denied his right to trial by jury. Because we find no merit in Emerine’s other contentions on appeal, we affirm.

I.

Appellant, Emerine, and two associates shared, through their ownership of stock in a firm called American Consolidated Financial Corporation, indirect ownership and control of Intercontinental Communications, Inc. In 1989, ICI was sold to another telecommunications firm in a stock-for-stock merger. In connection with the merger, appellee, Richard H. Yancey, was hired by Emerine to perform accounting work on behalf of ICI. Yancey brought this action to recover payment for his work. In his complaint, Yancey alleged,

Pursuant to an agreement entered into in 1989 ... and continuing thereafter until October of 1991, the Plaintiff [appellee] performed accounting and financial services for the Defendant [appellant] and other persons, for which the Defendant is both jointly and severally liable.

Neither party having demanded a jury, the case was tried to the court. During the trial, evidence emerged that in February 1990, Emerine and his associates had agreed to be personally responsible for Yancey’s fees. Emerine objected to reliance on the evidence as being a variance from the complaint. At the urging of the trial court, Yancey moved to amend the complaint to allow him to recover based on proof of the subsequent *1382 agreement. 1 The trial court granted the motion and allowed Emerine a two-week continuance to permit him time to secure the testimony of an additional witness he asserted was necessary to meet the evidence.

Following the trial, the trial judge made the following findings of fact, which neither party has challenged on appeal:

Following the sale of the corporation, in May 1989, Emerine and his associates, acting as officers of the corporation, hired Yancey to do post-closing accounting work for the corporation. No written contract or explicit arrangement was made regarding payment. Nevertheless, over the succeeding months, Yancey billed ICI for the work he performed, but was not paid.

In February 1990, Yancey advised Eme-rine and his associates that it would be to their advantage for them personally to pay for his work, because he would then not have to list his bills as a liability of the corporation, thereby reducing the value of the corporation’s stock. Emerine agreed to Yancey’s proposal. Based on the foregoing findings, the trial court concluded that Emerine was liable to Yancey for his fees at his usual rate.

On appeal, Emerine raises one substantive issue and several procedural issues. Substantively, Emerine asserts that the trial court impermissibly held him liable on an “implied” contract when there was already in existence an “express” contract with ICI. Procedurally, Emerine contends that Yan-cey’s complaint was insufficient to put him on notice of the claim against him, that the trial court improperly overruled his objection to amendment of the complaint to conform to the evidence adduced at trial, that the trial court should have acceded to his demand for a jury trial following its allowance of amendment of the complaint, and that the trial court failed to make adequate findings of fact. 2

II.

We first address Emerine’s substantive allegation, for our discussion of it will *1383 inform resolution of the remaining procedural issues. As we understand it, Emerine’s contention is that Yancey alleged an “express” contract with ICI regarding the accounting services when in his complaint he alluded to “an agreement entered into in 1989.” Emerine was not a party to the 1989 agreement. Instead, the court held him to be liable on the basis of an agreement made in February 1990, at least some of the terms of which were “implied.” Citing C.B. Snyder Realty Co. v. National Newark & Essex Banking Co., 14 N.J. 146, 101 A.2d 544 (1953), Emerine contends that the existence of the “express” contract precludes reliance by Yancey on an “implied” contract. We do not agree.

In C.B. Snyder Realty, the New Jersey Supreme Court said,

Having pleaded an express contract, the plaintiff cannot without showing a rescission, recover on a quasi contract. It is a well settled rule that an express contract excludes an implied one. An implied contract cannot exist when there is an existing express contract about the identical subject. The parties are bound by their agreement, and there is no ground for implying a promise. It is only when the parties do not agree that the law interposes and raises a promise. When an express contract exists, there must be a rescission of it before the parties will be remitted to the contract which the law implies, in the absence of that agreement which they made for themselves.

Id 101 A.2d at 558 (internal quotations and citations omitted).

We have no occasion to quarrel with the foregoing statement, for it does not apply to the circumstances in the present case. Emerine’s confusion arises from a semantic difficulty: There are two very distinct theories of recovery that are both frequently denominated, “implied contract,” or often, “quantum meruit.” The first of those theories is the “implied-in-fact” contract. As we have observed before, “ ‘[a]n implied-in-fact contract is a true contract, containing all the necessary elements of a binding agreement; it differs from other contracts only in that it has not been committed to writing or stated orally in express terms, but rather is inferred from the conduct of the parties in the milieu in which they dealt.’ ” Vereen v. Clayborne, 623 A.2d 1190, 1193 (D.C.1993) (quoting Bloomgarden v. Coyer, 156 U.S.App.D.C. 109, 116, 479 F.2d 201, 208 (1973) (citing Roebling v. Anderson, 103 U.S.App.D.C. 237, 241, 257 F.2d 615, 619 (1958))). In fact, it might be said that written or oral statements of express terms are themselves merely “conduct of the parties”; hence, the distinction between a so-called express contract and one that is implied-in-fact is simply that a contract implied-in-fact will only be enforced where there has been partial execution of the terms of the agreement. See Vereen, supra, 623 A.2d at 1193 (stating that recovery under contract implied-in-fact requires proof of “valuable services being rendered”).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
680 A.2d 1380, 1996 D.C. App. LEXIS 157, 1996 WL 450850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emerine-v-yancey-dc-1996.