Johnson v. Savage

1 P.2d 890, 163 Wash. 478, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 793
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 1931
DocketNo. 23148. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 P.2d 890 (Johnson v. Savage) 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
Johnson v. Savage, 1 P.2d 890, 163 Wash. 478, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 793 (Wash. 1931).

Opinion

Beals, J.

In his complaint, plaintiff alleged the sale and delivery, February 7, 1929, from himself to defendant, of ten thousand shares of the common stock of Bobby Anderson Group Mining Company, for which defendant agreed to pay $1,475; the prayer being for a judgment for that amount.

In his answer, defendant admitted the sale and delivery of the stock, but denied any indebtedness on his part to plaintiff. By way of an affirmative defense, defendant alleged that, on the day of the sale of the stock, plaintiff orally employed defendant to secure an option for the purchase of the “Amy Matchless” group of mining claims, an Idaho property, at the price of twenty-five thousand dollars, and orally agreed with defendant that, if defendant could procure such an option at the price mentioned, plaintiff would pay to the defendant as commission the sum of two thousand five *479 hundred dollars. Defendant alleged his accomplishment of the employment, and that he procured an option such as plaintiff desired, but that plaintiff did not avail himself thereof, and failed to purchase the mining property covered thereby.

Defendant further alleged that there became due to him from plaintiff, because of the oral employment and services rendered thereunder, the sum of $2,500, and that defendant sent plaintiff a written statement indicating that plaintiff was indebted to defendant in the sum of $1,025, being the difference between $2,500, due defendant for services, and the agreed price of the mining stock sold by plaintiff to defendant; that on some date after March 21, 1929, plaintiff and defendant met at Kellogg, Idaho, and that it was then agreed between them that defendant would accept, in full of his claim against plaintiff, the mining stock referred to in plaintiff’s complaint in this action, and that plaintiff and defendant then and there agreed that their mutual claims, one against the other, should be canceled, and that such cancellation would be a full and complete settlement between them of their respective claims, one against the other.

In his reply, plaintiff denied the affirmative matter contained in defendant’s answer; and the action proceeded to trial before the court sitting without a jury, resulting in the making of findings of fact and conclusions of law in defendant’s favor, pursuant to which a judgment was entered dismissing the action, from which judgment plaintiff appeals. •

When the case was called for trial, appellant moved for judgment in his favor upon the pleadings, stating, as his ground for the motion, the fact that respondent’s answer admitted the sale of the stock as alleged in the complaint, and pleaded as an affirmative defense an *480 oral contract for the payment of a commission, void under the statute of frauds. The trial court overruled appellant’s motion, which ruling is assigned as error.

Granting that the oral contract between the parties to pay a commission was unenforceable under Rem. Comp. Stat., § 5825, requiring such a contract, or note or memorandum thereof, to be in writing, respondent, in his affirmative defense, pleaded other facts, and alleged that, after he had earned the commission under the oral employment, the parties settled their difficulties by agreeing to mutually cancel their claims, one against the other. It is not the law that a contract, void under the statute of frauds, which has been fully performed, will not constitute a valid consideration for a subsequent agreement. In the case of Hutchinson v. Mt. Vernon Water & Power Co., 49 Wash. 469, 95 Pac. 1023, this court quoted from 8 Cyc. 505, the following:

“The rule is well settled that an agreement-of compromise is supported by a sufficient consideration where it is in settlement of a claim which is unliqui-dated, where it is in settlement of a claim which is disputed, or where it is in settlement of a claim which is doubtful. There are cases to the effect that in order to support a compromise in avoidance of litigation the claim must be an actual one, founded upon a colorable right about which there is room for honest doubt and actual dispute, and with some legal or equitable foundation, and not one which is without foundation, and is known to be so, or is in its nature an illegal claim out of which no cause of action can arise in favor of the person asserting it. The usual test, however, as to whether a compromise and settlement is supported by a sufficient consideration is held to be not whether the matter in dispute was really doubtful, but whether or not the parties bona fide considered it so, and that the compromise of a disputed claim made bona fide is upon a sufficient consideration, without regard to whether the claim be in suit or not. The law favors the avoid- *481 anee or settlement of litigation, and compromise in good faith for such purposes will be sustained as based upon a sufficient consideration, without regard to the merits of the controversy or the character or validity of the claims of the parties, and even though a subsequent judicial decision may show the rights of the parties to have been different from what they at the time supposed. The real consideration which each party receives under such a compromise is, according to some authorities, not the sacrifice of the right, but the settlement of the dispute. ’ ’

In 12 C. J. 324, the proposition is stated as follows:

“The settlement of a bona fide dispute or a doubtful claim, if made fairly and in good faith, is a sufficient consideration for a compromise based thereon. This rule is generally accepted, although there is some variance of authority as to what may constitute a bona fide dispute or doubtful claim. The real consideration which each party receives is, according to some authorities, not the sacrifice of the right, but the settlement of the dispute. Under other authorities it is to be found in the mutual agreement of the parties to abide by the result of the settlement, or in the mutual release of their respective rights, or in the avoidance of the expense and annoyance of litigation, or in the alteration in the position of the parties.”

In the case of Muir v. Kane, 55 Wash. 131, 104 Pac. 153, 26 L. R. A. 519, this court said:

“The moral obligation to pay for services rendered as a broker in selling real estate, under an oral contract where the statute requires such contract to be in writing, is just as binding as is the moral obligation to pay a debt that has become barred by the statute of limitations, and there is no reason for holding that the latter will support a new promise to pay while the former will not. There is no moral delinquency that attaches to an oral contract to sell real property as a broker. This service cannot be recovered for because the statute says the, promise must be in writing; not because it is illegal in itself. It was not intended by the statute to *482 impute moral turpitude to such contracts. The statute was intended to prevent frauds and perjuries, and to accomplish that purpose, it is required that the evidence of the contract be in writing; but it is not conducive to either fraud or perjury to say that the services rendered under the void contract, or voluntarily, will support a subsequent written promise to pay for such service.

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Bluebook (online)
1 P.2d 890, 163 Wash. 478, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-savage-wash-1931.