Goode v. Duke

283 P. 34, 131 Or. 488, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 298
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 P. 34 (Goode v. Duke) 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
Goode v. Duke, 283 P. 34, 131 Or. 488, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 298 (Or. 1929).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

This is a suit instituted by the plaintiff, Edith F. Goode, against defendant, R. Z. Duke, to reform a contract executed by them for the operation of plaintiff’s hotel Hoyt in Portland,, and for an accounting under the contract. The plaintiff was to receive a certain percentage of the gross income from the hotel with a certain fixed minimum. The court decreed a reformation of the contract so as to include a portion which had been omitted by mistake.

An accounting was rendered by the defendant and the court found the percentage of the gross business which the defendant should pay the plaintiff for the months of June to September, both inclusive. The court also found that the defendant, under the contract, should pay plaintiff for the taxes $2,085.55, which percentages and taxes due from defendant to plaintiff amounted to the total sum of $11,118.56, subject to certain credits and set-offs. These findings and figures, made by the court, are not questioned or objected to at this stage of the case.

*491 The court also found that the defendant is entitled to credits and set-offs against said amounts as follows:

“Damages for cancelling contract........$5,000.00
Replacements and improvements upon said hotel ................................ 4,180.89
Payment on mortgage on said hotel, August 18, 1927 ........................ 1,582.92
Fifty-five per cent of the amount of $164.50 collected by the plaintiff from the S. P. Ry Co., Sept. 1927 90.47
Total ..................................................$10,804.28,”

leaving a balance of $314.28 that the plaintiff should recover from defendant. From this decree the plaintiff appeals as to the items of counter-claim, or set-offs, namely, damages for cancelling contract, $5,000.00; replacements and improvements on hotel, $4,180.89; totaling, $9,180.89. These items -constitute the amount involved upon this appeal.

The contract in regard to the lease of the hotel, which was to run from the date thereof, December 29, 1925 to May 12, 1935, is set forth as an exhibit to the complaint.

The defendant alleges in his answer, after denying a portion of the complaint, in substance, that under and by virtue of the contract the defendant operated the Hoyt hotel and the property described in the agreement from the 29th day of December, 1925, to and including September 14, 1927, and that he had paid out for the use of plaintiff $7,441.22 in excess of all sums due plaintiff from defendant under the agreement Defendant also avers that shortly prior to September 14 plaintff, wrongfully and without legal cause or justification,

“terminated and repudiated said agreement and so notified the defendant and demanded that he forth *492 with quit and surrender the said property and premises and thereupon commenced litigation against the defendant to compel him to vacate and quit said premises. That by reason of the wrongful termination and repudiation of said agreement by the plaintiff the acts and conduct of the said plaintiff, the defendant was deprived of the use and enjoyment of said premises and property and required to quit and surrender the same, all to his great damage” in the sum of $10,700.

Issue was joined by the reply.

It appears that Mrs. Goode left the city of Portland for the East soon after the contract was signed, where she remained for some time. In addition to the percentages of the gross receipts from the hotel, which were to- be paid plaintiff, defendant Duke was to pay $1,000 of the taxes “levied upon the real property each year, beginning with the year 1925 and continuing during the terms of the agreement,” and was to pay all of the taxes on the personal property of the hotel during said period, and “for the purpose of .insuring and guaranteeing the faithful carrying out and performance of the conditions in this contract that the party of the second part (Duke) was to furnish a bond to the party of the first part in the sum of $10,000, said bond to be approved by the party of the first part. ’ ’

Mr. Duke had been operating the Hoyt hotel under a temporary agreement from May 12, 1925, up to the time of the contract of December 29,1925. This appears to have caused some confusion in regard to the payment of taxes, as for instance, whether they should be for the taxes paid during the year 1926, or for the taxes that were levied during 1926. This, however, makes no material difference, as the matter is settled by the decree of the lower court.

*493 Mr. Duke made reports to Mrs. Goode of the gross business of the hotel and of the amount of percentage due her for each of the months up to June, 1927. A bond was furnished, as provided by the contract, for the first year, running to May 18, 1926. The premium therefor was paid by Mrs. Goode and when the bond expired it was not renewed until May 17, 1927.

In his reports to Mrs. Goode, Mr. Duke included $1,065.55 and $1,190.00 as the amounts which he had paid for taxes on the property. It appears, however, that checks for the same in favor of T. M. Hurlburt, sheriff of Multnomah county, were mailed to “F. M. Hurlburt” and followed a man by that name for some time and were then sent to the dead letter office and returned to defendant Duke in July, 1927.

Mrs. Goode, on learning that the taxes had not been paid, as stated in the report, and being informed that the bond of defendant running from May 18,1926, had not been issued, caused her attorneys in Chicago on June 11, 1927, to write defendant the following letter:

“We represent Edith F. Goode, with whom you have a contract dated December 29, 1925, for the management of the Hoyt hotel, and have been asked by Mrs. Goode to take up with you the disposition and cancellation of this contract. You are hereby notified that this contract is declared at and end and terminated. This is done not at the election of Mrs. Goode, as provided in the contract, but on account of your failure to live up to your part of this agreement. In many respects you have failed to render the services which you agreed to render. You have likewise failed and apparently refused to post a bond in the sum of $10,000 to be approved by Mrs. Goode. We understand further that you have not devoted your entire time in the interests of the Hoyt hotel, and we believe all parties concerned will be better satisfied if some other arrangements were made for Ihe management of the hotel.

*494 “We hope you will see fit to withdraw from your activities at the hotel. We believe that 10 days time from the receipt of this letter is sufficient in which to. receive a response from you, and request that we hear from you within that time.

“If we do not hear from you it will probably be necessary for us to take other steps for your removal. ’ ’

Nothing appears to have been done in regard to terminating the lease or dispossessing defendant, as the matter is understood to have been explained and a second bond was furnished on May 18, 1927, and Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
283 P. 34, 131 Or. 488, 1929 Ore. LEXIS 298, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goode-v-duke-or-1929.