Lentz v. Oregon Growers Co-Operative Ass'n

242 P. 826, 116 Or. 683, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 49
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 8, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 242 P. 826 (Lentz v. Oregon Growers Co-Operative Ass'n) 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
Lentz v. Oregon Growers Co-Operative Ass'n, 242 P. 826, 116 Or. 683, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 49 (Or. 1925).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

It appears that on April 22, 1920, August Lentz entered into a contract with the .defendant association whereby the association agreed to purchase and August Lentz agreed to sell and deliver to the association all of the agricultural or horticultural products of the varieties specified at the end of the contract, grown by or for him during the years 1920 to 1924, both inclusive, that he intended to sell or market or deliver for sale or marketing. A copy of the contract is set forth verbatim in the ease of Oregon Growers Assn. v. Lentz, 107 Or. 561 (212 Pac. 811), commencing on page 566 of the former Report. The notation at the end of the contract, on page 573 of the Report, reads in part as follows:

“Growers present acreage in Oregon of products subject to this contract: 15 acres of Logans. B. located at Salem. 4 acres of Logans. N. B. located at Salem."

It appears that in the early part of January, 1922, August Lentz, who had the marketing contract with the association, leased the premises to his son Benjamin Lentz, the plaintiff. The son was to cultivate and harvest the berries and pay all the expenses thereof and divide the net proceeds with his father. In 1922, Benjamin Lentz, the lessee, delivered the loganberries, not only grown on the nineteen acres referred to in the contract between the association and August Lentz, but also all the berries grown upon the twenty-six acres bearing loganberries upon the premises; for the reason, as he asserts, that the decree was not specific as to what nineteen acres were involved, and to avoid any violation of the injunction.

*688 - There was no suggestion by the defendant in its answer that it has paid anyone for the berries in question or that it has any offset or counterclaim to the demand made by plaintiff, either as against August Lentz or Benjamin Lentz.

Upon the trial of the equity suit the Circuit Court, after reciting the execution of the contract found, among other things, in effect, that Benjamin Lentz was then a minor of the age of about nineteen years, residing at the home of his father, August Lentz, and that he had knowledge of the signing of the marketing contract by his father with the association. That August Lentz made deliveries .under the contract in 1921; that:

“5th. About the month of January, 1922, the defendants (August Lentz and Benjamin Lentz)-entered into a working agreement by the terms of which the defendant Benjamin Lentz was to work the same for the year 1922, pay all bills, receive wages and thereafter divide the proceeds received equally with his father August Lentz, and under such an agreement the defendants claim the farm was being operated at the time of the commencement of this suit.”

The court further found, after reciting the purpose of the association, that the defendants knew that the association had incurred financial and other obligations in reliance upon the expected faithful performance by the defendants and other members of their respective agreements similar to that of August Lentz; that during the year 1922 the defendants “produced loganberries on nineteen acres of the land owned by the defendant August Lentz, which loganberries were subject to the obligation on the part of the defendants, to deliver to the plaintiff” association under the terms and provisions of the marketing *689 agreement. That they had refused to so deliver. That “plaintiff (association) is entitled to the delivery of loganberries from 19 acres of defendants” and entered a decree enjoining both the defendants, August Lentz and Benjamin Lentz, from delivering any loganberries produced or grown by or for them, or either of them, upon the nineteen acres of land mentioned, covered by the contract “to any other person, firm or corporation than the plaintiff or its order until the first day of January, 1925.”

This decree was affirmed on appeal to this court: See Oregon Growers, etc., v. Lentz, supra. A careful examination of the record in the former litigation referred to leads us to believe that upon the trial of that suit it was found that August Lentz was the owner of the land upon which the loganberries were raised and that under the terms of the contract with the association, in view of the fact that his son cultivated the land for him during the season of 1922, had knowledge of the execution of the contract and the terms and conditions under which the berries were to be marketed, although he did the work, paid the expenses of raising and harvesting the berries and had an interest in the net proceeds, still he and his father August Lentz were both under obligation to deliver the berries to the association or its order.

We do not find that the absolute ownership of the berries raised during the season of 1922 was found to be in the .elder August Lentz. It appears that both had an interest in the berries.

Plaintiff assigns error of the court in directing a verdict for defendant. The testimony is all before the court. It is the contention of defendant that it was determined in the former case that August Lentz was the owner of the berries in question and that the *690 decree in the former case is a bar to this proceeding, and that the payment therefor is a matter to’ be adjusted between August Lentz and the defendant association. Plaintiff asserts that defendant’s claim is in the nature of a plea of abatement and was waived by a failure to plead the same, and have it determined as such prior to a hearing upon the merits.

In Simon v. Trummer, 57 Or. 153, 160 (110 Pac. 786), an opinion by Mr. Chief Justice Moore, it is stated, in substance, that some contrariety of opinion exists as to whether the question of a plaintiff’s want of interest in the subject matter constitutes a plea in abatement or in bar. Citing several authorities. He then states thus:

“Whether such a defense should be set up by a plea in abatement or in bar is not necessary to a decision herein, for, whatever practice is adopted, the rule seems to be well settled that an answer or plea interposing such an objection must be special and allege in direct terms that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest: Pomeroy, Code Remedies (3 ed.), § 711. This author, at the section noted, says: ‘ The defense that the plaintiff is not the real party in interest is new matter. A general averment, however, to that effect, is not enough. The facts must be stated which constitute the defense, and which show that he is not the real party in interest.’ ”

That opinion is authority for the statement that an action cannot be prosecuted for a principal in the name of a “mere” agent who has no personal interest in the subject matter. Citing Mitchell v. St. Mary, 148 Ind. 111, 115 (47 N. E. 224). If, however, an agent has a part in the contract to which he is made a party, or has a particular property in the subject matter of the agreement, the legal interest *691 and the right of action are vested in him. Citing cases.

Section 27, Or. L., provides as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
242 P. 826, 116 Or. 683, 1926 Ore. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lentz-v-oregon-growers-co-operative-assn-or-1925.