Fennell v. Hauser

14 P.2d 998, 141 Or. 71, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 195
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 P.2d 998 (Fennell v. Hauser) 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
Fennell v. Hauser, 14 P.2d 998, 141 Or. 71, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 195 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

*73 BROWN, J.

The defendants, appealing, assert that, in directing a verdict for the plaintiff and against the defendants, the trial court has overridden the fundamental law of this commonwealth, which reads:

“The right of trial by jury shall be preserved * * *.” Or. Const., Art. 7, § 3.

*74 See Crawford v. Cobbs and Mitchell Co., 121 Or. 628, 636 (253 P. 3, 257 P. 16); Farrin v. State Industrial Accident Commission, 104 Or. 452 (205 P. 984), and citations.

Was there an issue of fact as to whether these defendants had, through their participation in the Norblad campaign, directly or impliedly purchased, or consented to the purchase of, the wares and merchandise for the account of the committee?

The opening statement made by defendant T. B. Handley on his own behalf, and on behalf of his co-defendants, seems to be fair and candid. This statement, which was brought here by the bill of exceptions, reads, in part:

“The meeting proceeded and they organized the ‘Norblad for Governor’ Club or Committee of these one hundred men and women. Mr. Hauser was made chairman, and Mrs. Prankel, one of the leading women of Portland, a well known woman in club work, was made chairman of the Women’s Division of that committee, Mrs. M. H. Lamond was selected as secretary of the Women’s Division of that committee, and later Mr. Sam Powell was employed as the secretary, the executive or business secretary. Then a few days later they opened up headquarters at the Multnomah Hotel. * * * Thereafter, after the committee was formed and he became the chairman of it, the woman chairman and the woman secretary and the executive secretary were selected, and then Gus Moser, a defendant, Bill Banks, a defendant, Tom Sweeney, a defendant, myself, a defendant, and Senator Jay Upton later, from Eastern Oregon, all of us having had experience in politics and some of us in state-wide campaigns, formed ourselves into an advisory committee to Mr. Hauser, carrying out the representations that the governor had made to him that we would assist him in those matters. Nearly every day we met in secret session with Ken *75 neth Hauser and discussed matters political, and that continued for six weeks during the campaign. * * * During the course of the campaign and at the headquarters there was much supplies ordered. It was necessary.”

Concerning his selection as chairman of the committee, defendant Hauser testified:

“I was waited on by a group of men, including then Governor Al W. Norblad, and invited not only to become a member of their group, but to be chairman of the general campaign throughout the state. I said no at first. * * * I was assured by Governor Norblad there would be no financial responsibility on my part.”

He testified that it was his understanding “that a finance committee, working through and with Governor Norblad, would provide the funds to take care of the legitimate expenses.” Relating to the call for a meeting, he testified:

“The object of the call for a meeting to form a committee of one hundred — I guess it is customary in all political campaigns — it is more of a mass meeting, a rally meeting, with the purpose to form a committee, the so-called Committee of One Hundred, which did not mean it was necessarily limited to one hundred. If we didn’t have very good luck it would be a committee of seventy-five. If we had good luck it would be a committee of one hundred fifty or two hundred. ’ ’

He testified that he was chairman of the meeting.

When asked to state whether he had guaranteed the bills incurred in the Norblad campaign, he testified, in part, as follows:

“I always told every one that questioned the financial situation that if and when the money came in it would be paid out to them and distributed as fairly as we knew how to do it. ’ ’

*76 ■ However, lie testified that he did guarantee payment to “three or four — the Oregonian, the former Portland News, and two or three of :them refused to take an order unless I did give them a personal letter with a personal responsibility attached to it, and I gave them that, and I have since paid it out of my personal funds. * * * My telephone rang for a year and a half after the campaign was over, and I paid some in self-defense so I could do my own business or my own work.” He testified that the committee, which was sometimes styled the “Huddle Committee,” and of which all of the defendants were members, met nearly every day. He further testified that the slogan, “Hats off to the past, and coats off for the future,” as well as several other “good ideas,” originated with Governor Norblad himself. On being asked to name other persons who were acting as political advisors to Governor Norblad, he stated that Gus Anderson, Fred Gifford, Fred Brady, and Bardi Skulason were among the most prominent.

Defendant W. W. Banks, for many years a practicing attorney in Portland, testified that he had become acquainted with Governor Norblad “years ago” when they were both in the State Senate; that when he (the governor) decided to run for reelection to the office of governor in the spring of 1930 “he asked me to assist him in his candidacy for the Republican nomination to succeed himself, and I assured him I would be very glad to do anything that I could for him.” This witness testified that he, accompanied by Senator Moser, Governor Norblad and T. A. Sweeney, went to see Mr. Kenneth Hauser at the Multnomah Hotel, and that they requested Mr. Hauser to become chairman of “Norblad’s efforts * * * for reelection”; *77 that Hauser reluctantly accepted the appointment as chairman of the committee, and was assured by the governor that there would be no financial responsibility upon his part, “or upon any of us.” He testified that after that time a committee of one hundred was called at the Multnomah Hotel for the purpose of forming a general committee; that, at that meeting, more than one hundred persons were present, and that Mr. Hauser acted as chairman; that Governor Norblad addressed the meeting and outlined his plans for carrying on his campaign. Witness testified that “whatever has been done by myself I did for Governor Norblad,” and that “I also contributed, I think, something like a thousand dollars to his campaign fund.” He testified that he at no time directly or indirectly ordered any of the goods, wares and merchandise involved in this litigation.

Defendant T. B. Handley testified in relation to his association with Governor Norblad and his political committee, and stated that he “had absolutely nothing to do with the ordering of anything.”

Defendant Gus C. Moser testified that he had long been acquainted with Governor Norblad, and that he had volunteered his support to him in his effort to succeed himself; that, when witness and other defendants, accompanied by the governor, called upon Mr.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.2d 998, 141 Or. 71, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fennell-v-hauser-or-1932.