Hekker v. Sabre Construction Company

510 P.2d 347, 265 Or. 552, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 451
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 24, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 510 P.2d 347 (Hekker v. Sabre Construction Company) 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
Hekker v. Sabre Construction Company, 510 P.2d 347, 265 Or. 552, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 451 (Or. 1973).

Opinion

McAllister, j.

This is an action at law brought by the plaintiff Hekker to recover commissions earned as a salesman for the defendant Sabre Construction Company. The case was tried sans jury and the trial court found for plaintiff. Defendant appeals and plaintiff cross appeals from the denial of his right to attorney fees and a penalty.

This is one of a disconcerting number of cases in which the appellant, in a case tried by the court without a jury, attempts to obtain a retrial of the facts by broadly criticizing the judgment instead of alleging precise assignments of error as required by *554 our rules. We decline to be taken in by this gambit and will not review de novo actions at law, whether tried by a jury or by the court.

The controlling issue is the construction of a provision in the contract between plaintiff and defendant. There is no dispute about the facts, which we will briefly summarize. Plaintiff was employed by defendant from June 3, 1968, until January 30, 1970, first under an oral agreement, and then under two successive written agreements, all of which provided that plaintiff was to be compensated only by a commission of the gross sales price of each sale. Plaintiff was entitled at the end of each accounting period to the commissions earned less his draw and any expenses paid on his behalf by the company.

The trial court found that plaintiff’s employment covered three accounting periods and that for period No. 1 defendant owed plaintiff net commissions of $1,098 and for period No. 2 $1,542. The court gave plaintiff judgment for these two amounts plus interest.

It appears that during accounting period No. 3, from October 1, 1969, to January 31, 1970, plaintiff’s draw and expenses exceeded his commissions and defendant contends that because this deficit in period No. 3 exceeded the net commissions earned in the first two accounting periods, it did not owe plaintiff anything. The answer to this contention depends on the construction of the following provision of the contract:

“Should the employee’s commission account show a deficit balance, he will not be required to repay the company the amount of the deficit.”

According to defendant this provision means that although plaintiff need not repay any deficit, the de *555 fendant could carry forward or back auy deficit and offset it against any net commissions earned in another accounting period.

As a general rule the construction of a contract is a question of law for the court. However, if the contract is ambiguous evidence may be admitted tending to prove the meaning intended by the parties and under those circumstances the meaning of the contract will be decided by the trier of fact. Rolfe v. N. W. Cattle & Resources, Inc., 260 Or 590, 600-601, 491 P2d 195 (1971); May v. Chicago Insurance Co., 260 Or 285, 292-294, 490 P2d 150 (1971).

In this case the contract from the defendant’s standpoint was at best ambiguous about defendant’s right to carry forward or back a deficit from one accounting period to another and extrinsic evidence bearing on the parties’ intent was admitted. The trial court expressly found that defendant could not carry forward or backward any excess of draw and expenses over earned commission and this finding is binding on us.

Defendant also contends that the court erred in crediting plaintiff with commissions earned from the date the purchase contracts were signed by the customers instead of when the jobs were “completed and accepted by the customer” as provided by the agreements. This contention was made despite testimony by defendant’s president that “in practice, plaintiff was credited with commissions on the dates the job contracts were signed by the customer”.

We need not determine, however, whether the trial court erred in this respect, as defendant’s own *556 computations show that the alleged error did not prejudice defendant. If plaintiff’s commissions were credited as of the date the individual jobs were completed and accepted by the customer, as, defendant argues they should have been, the total commissions for the third and final accounting period would amount to $9,305. Total draws and expenses during that same period were $6,354. For the final accounting period alone, then, net commissions due would amount to $2,951 under defendant’s computation. The trial court held plaintiff was entitled to a total of $2,640. As we have affirmed the trial court’s holding that deficits could not be carried forward from prior accounting periods, it is evident that the trial court’s method of computation is more favorable to defendant than that which it argued for here. If there was error, defendant has not been injured.

We turn next to the questions raised by plaintiff’s cross appeal. Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in holding that he was not entitled to recover attorney fees and the statutory penalty for failure to pay wages due upon termination of employment.

ORS 652.200 (2) provides:

“Tu any action for the collection of wages * * * the court shall upon entering judgment for the plaintiff, include in such judgment * * * a reasonable sum for attorney’s fees for prosecuting said action, unless it appears that the employe has wilfully violated his contract of employment.”

Plaintiff’s right to recover under this statute depends upon whether his compensation is included within the meaning of “wages” as used in the statute. The term is not defined by statute for purposes of ORS 652.200 (2).

Plaintiff refers us to definitions in ORS 652.320 *557 (applying to the statutory authority for the Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor to take assignments of wage claims and enforce them on behalf of the employees) and in ORS 652.210 (applying to statutory procedures in cases involving wage discrimination) which define wages broadly. These definitions, although they may give some indication of general legislative policy, are of no direct assistance in this ease. The right to attorney fees in actions for wages dates from 1907, and was originally part of an act which also regulated the payment of wages and provided that wages were due and payable immediately upon termination of employment under circumstances specified in the statute. The allowance of attorney fees was discretionary with the court until 1919, when it was made mandatory. The Commissioner’s authority to enforce wage claims dates from 1931,

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Bluebook (online)
510 P.2d 347, 265 Or. 552, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hekker-v-sabre-construction-company-or-1973.