Fisher v. Berg

290 P. 984, 158 Wash. 176, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 692
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 12, 1930
DocketNo. 22325. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 290 P. 984 (Fisher v. Berg) 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
Fisher v. Berg, 290 P. 984, 158 Wash. 176, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 692 (Wash. 1930).

Opinion

*177 Fullerton, J.

The respondent, Fisher, brought this action against the appellants, Berg,'to recover on an assigned claim incurred for designing, constructing and installing a machine intended for use in splitting wooden blocks into suitable sizes for the manufacture of wood pulp. There was a trial by the court sitting with a jury, in which a verdict was returned in favor of the respondent for the sum of $2,800. A judgment was entered^ on the verdict, and it is from this judgment that the appeal before us is prosecuted.

The appellants make a number of assignments of error, but, as many of them raise the same question in different forms, they can be noticed under more general heads. It may be stated here also that, on almost every material fact, the evidence is flatly contradictory, but, as it was the privilege of the jury to determine the facts, we shall, in our recitals of the facts, accept that version of the evidence as true which is most favorable to the respondent’s contentions, without noticing the contradictions.

Although not in the order in which the appellants present them, the first of the assigned errors to be noticed is that there is not sufficient evidence to justify the finding of the jury that the respondent is the real party in interest; that is, that he has a valid assignment of the claim on which he sues from the parties with whom the contract for constructing the splitting device was made, or from any party entitled to collect on the contract. The facts necessary to an understanding of the point involved are in substance these: In the year 1927, the appellant Thorwald Berg was a contractor under the Washington Pulp & Paper Corporation, engaged in cutting and loading for transportation pulp wood at Neah Bay; the timber being cut into four-foot lengths and then split into suit *178 able sizes. Tbe work of splitting tbe timber was done by hand labor.

During the same year, one Frank McDonald and one C. E. Carpenter were copartners, owning and operating machine shops, one at Port Angeles and the other at Seattle. In the early summer of the year named, Berg came to the machine shop at Port Angeles and inquired of the copartners whether they could construct a machine that would split the blocks by mechanical power. A machine used for that purpose was, in operation at a nearby plant, and this was visited by the parties. After visiting the machine, the appellant expressed his approval of it and his desire for a machine built after that design.

The copartners then visited the appellant’s place of work, examined the locality, the timber and the surroundings, and then undertook to design a machine which would answer the appellant’s purpose. Specifications and blue prints were prepared for such a machine and submitted to Berg. These he approved, and a verbal contract was entered into for its construction. The preliminary work took up the greater part of the summer and fall, and the contract for its construction was not entered into until sometime in November, 1927. In the meantime, the copartners had reorganized their business, by forming a corporation and turning over to the corporation their partnership business and property. The corporation thereafter constructed the machine, and the assignment to the respondent of the claim for its construction was made by the corporation.

It is first claimed that there is no evidence that the corporation had any interest in the contract. But the evidence is that it actually constructed the machine, and that all of the interest which the copartners had in the contract was turned over to it. The evidence is *179 oral, it is true, but the evidence was ample to show the facts, and since this was not the material part of the cause of action, but in the nature of a collateral matter, it could be shown by parol. There was a formal assignment in writing made of the contract by the corporation founded upon a valuable consideration, and this, we think, vested in the respondent the beneficial interest therein.

The appellants make the further contention that the contract was one that was not assignable by the copartners because of its nature. It is argued that the contract was entered into with them because of their skill and ability as mechanics and their known reliability as business men, and because of the trust and confidence the appellants had in them, and that they could not assign the contract of construction to a third party so as to make the appellants liable to such third party. But the principle sought to be invoked is, we think, inapplicable to the facts here presented. In this instance, the copartners, as members and agents of the corporation, superintended the construction of the machine and the selection and adjustment of the materials, and it is hardly possible that they could have done more had the actual work been done in their shops while they were operating as a copartnership. The appellants cite and rely upon the case of Bleecker v. Satsop R. Co., 3 Wash. 77, 27 Pac. 1073, in support of this branch of their case, but the facts of the case differ so widely from the facts of the present case that we cannot think it in point. The facts of the case are too complicated to be even briefly stated, but the court did say that an agent employed to do a particular act could not usually delegate the duty to a subagent and thus bind the principal for a wrongful act committed in its performance. But, after so saying, it further said that it recognized “. . . the doctrine that no inflexible *180 rule can be applied to all cases, but that each case depends largely upon the circumstances surrounding it, . . .” We think it can be fairly questioned whether the present case presents the situation there involved, but if it does so, it is sufficiently differentiated by the circumstances under which the work was performed. See King v. West Coast Grocery Co., 72 Wash. 132, 129 Pac. 1081.

The next contention to be noticed is that the trial court erred in not sustaining some one of the challenges the appellants interposed to the sufficiency of the evidence. We shall not, however, review the evidence in detail. We have, because of the earnestness with which the appellants ’ counsel present the contention, examined the evidence both from the abstracts presented by the parties and from the original transcript, and, while we are convinced that the jury could well have found for the other side, we find substantial evidence on every material matter necessary to be found by the jury in order to sustain their verdict. This is as far as we have the right to inquire. The case was one triable by jury, in which their findings on contradictory evidence are conclusive upon us.

Of the errors thought to require a new trial, the first relates to the admission of evidence. It is objected that the court erred in admitting in evidence the assignment of the claim to the respondent. But this question we have perhaps already sufficiently noticed. It could be objectionable only on the theory that the corporation executing it had no interest in the contract, and could pass nothing’ to the respondent by assignment to him. But, as we read the evidence, the jury were entitled to take and did take the other view. The assignment therefore was material as a part of the respondent’s chain of title.

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Bluebook (online)
290 P. 984, 158 Wash. 176, 1930 Wash. LEXIS 692, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-berg-wash-1930.