Hartman v. Selling

189 P. 887, 97 Or. 368, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 241
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 189 P. 887 (Hartman v. Selling) 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
Hartman v. Selling, 189 P. 887, 97 Or. 368, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 241 (Or. 1920).

Opinions

HARRIS, J.

1. The plaintiffs, it will be recalled, paid $5,000 for the option, and the purchase price was fixed at $295,000, making a total of $300,000. The plaintiffs transferred their beneficial interest in the land for an expressed consideration of $330,000. However, the plaintiffs did not actually receive $330,000 from the Parkrose Association; but they were reimbursed the amount paid for the option and also the amount of the first installment, totaling $50,000; and in addition the plaintiffs received $30,000. The plaintiffs were engaged by the Park-rose Association to act as selling agents, and for such services they received a commission from the Parkrose Association on all the lots and acreage sold by them. Receipt of these moneys from the Park-rose Association cannot prevent the plaintiffs from recovering a commission from the defendants. In his agreement,to pay a commission, Emanuel May says to the plaintiffs: “You are to form a syndicate for the purchase of this land.” The uncontradicted testimony is to the effect that the plaintiffs' told him that they could not undertake to handle the property, unless they were paid a commission by Emanuel May, and also “a 10 per cent cost for organizing” a company, or a “syndicate,” as they sometimes called it, to take over the property. In other words, May knew at the time he signed the writing promising to pay a commission exactly what the [379]*379plaintiffs planned to do, and that a part of such plan included the creation of a corporation to which the option was to be assigned; and, indeed, May understood that the plaintiffs would not attempt to handle the property unless they could do just what subsequently was done. Moreover, May was present and voted at the meeting of the stockholders of the Park-rose Association when, with a knowledge of the whole truth, a resolution was unanimously adopted authorizing the purchase of the option from the plaintiffs; and, afterwards, according to the uncontradicted evidence, May acknowledged that the plaintiffs had a just claim for a commission.

2. The other defense is founded upon the contention that the promise to pay a commission was conditioned upon the payment of all the purchase price within four years, and that, since all the purchase price was not paid within four years, the plaintiffs are not entitled to recover. The defendants argue that the four years period began on September 16, 1911, and that time was made the essence of the agreement. The plaintiffs go on the theory that the four years period began to run on October 10, 1911, the time when they transferred the option to the Parkrose Association. The option signed by the May Land Company and the plaintiffs, under date of September 15, 1911, does not make time the essence of the contract, except as to the payment of the first installment; the writing signed by May under date of September 16, 1911, and in which he agrees to pay a commission, does not declare that' time shall be of the essence of the agreement; no writing found in the record in terms speaks of time as of the essence of the contract, except the option; and in that paper, as already explained, only the time for the [380]*380payment of the first installment is declared to be “of the essence of this option”; and, therefore, it cannot be said that the parties expressly stipulated that time should be of the essence of the agreement for the payment of the commission.

When attempting to ascertain what Emanuel May intended when he wrote “on or before the end of four years,” the letter in which he used that language should be construed in the light of the provisions found in the option. Although the option was not delivered until September 21, 1911, it was evidently prepared on or before September 15, 1911, for on it appears that date; and in view of the fact that all the details had for a long time been discussed by May and Thompson, it is obvious .that May knew what the option contained, or would contain, when he signed the letter dated September 16th, which it will be observed is the day following the date of the option.- It is appropriate to add that the option was signed by May as president, and by Lowengart as secretary of the May Land Company.

In his letter, May agrees to pay a commission “on my interest in the May Land Company,” and he declares that his interest “now amounts to $184,000.” The litigants here agree that, if $295,000 is fixed as the purchase price, May’s share would amount to $184,000. The option fixed $295,000 as the price to be paid for the land, and manifestly May had in mind this price named in the option when in his letter he said to the plaintiffs: “You are to form a syndicate for the purchase of this land,” and “when this sale is negotiated” (sale to the syndicate), the commission of 5 per cent on $184,000 is due and payable on or before four years, provided “the $184,000 is paid” as provided in' the contract [381]*381of purchase, on or before the end of four years. Within the meaning of May’s letter a sale was negotiated on October 10, 1911, the date when the option was transferred to the Parkrose Association; bnt the commission, according to the letter, is not dne and payable unless “the $184,000 is paid as provided in the contract of purchase.” The language last quoted makes it plain that the option which, although not delivered and possibly not yet signed on September 16th, had on or before the previous date been prepared, was “the contract of purchase” to which May referred. If the four years period be calculated from the date of the option, or from the date of the transfer of the option to the Parkrose Association, the period within which the installments were required to be paid extended beyond four years; but if the time be calculated from October 20, 1911, the daté when the first installment was absolutely required to be paid, the four years period ended on October 20, 1915, the date when the final installment became due. It seems clear to us, however, from the language employed in May’s letter, that he in effect intended to say that if the purchase price fixed- in the option should be paid within the time fixed by the option, he would pay Hartman & Thompson a commission of 5 per cent on $184,000.

3-5. The plaintiffs’ alleged right to a commission is based upon a contract plus performance of it. The writing of September 16, 1911, is the contract, and in this contract the obligation to pay a commission is in effect made dependent upon the payment of the purchase price on or before October 20, 1915. The plaintiffs aver in unequivocal terms in their complaint that the Parkrose Association paid the balance of the purchase price on July 14, 1915. In [382]*382other words, the adjustment which was made on July 14th is relied upon by the plaintiffs as payment of the balance of the purchase price, and therefore as performance or fulfillment of the condition.

It is true that in their reply the plaintiffs say that Emanuel May consented to the adjustment made on July 14th, and that, therefore, the defendants, as his representatives, are estopped to deny payment. The plaintiffs do not claim that May personally consented to the adjustment, but they take the position that consent was given through his guardian Ben Selling. Having been adjudged incompetent May, of course, could not act for himself or for the May Land Company in the adjustment on July 14th. In the settlement made on July 14th, Ben Selling represented the May Land Company as vice-president, and as such he signed the release given by that company to Hartman & Thompson.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 P. 887, 97 Or. 368, 1920 Ore. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartman-v-selling-or-1920.