McGraw v. Bill Hodges Truck Co.

1981 OK CIV APP 13, 629 P.2d 792, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 126
CourtCourt of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1981
DocketNo. 53385
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1981 OK CIV APP 13 (McGraw v. Bill Hodges Truck Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McGraw v. Bill Hodges Truck Co., 1981 OK CIV APP 13, 629 P.2d 792, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 126 (Okla. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinions

BRIGHTMIRE, Judge.

The pivotal question here is whether an employee possesses an enforceable claim to a bonus for a specified amount which is “given” for efforts put forth during a period ending three months earlier but because of a lack of current funds is not to be paid until the following year, save for hardship situations? We hold he does and affirm.

I

For over 10 years James McGraw had been a valuable and trusted employee of Bill Hodges Trucking Company and, consequently, each year since 1968 he had been given a bonus.

On September 24,1974, Hodges president, Jack Hodges, wrote McGraw a “Dear Jim” letter advising that “I am giving you a bonus for the work period between June 30, 1973, to June 30, 1974, which is our fisical [sic] year of $7,000.... This bonus will not be apid [sic] til [sic] next year, . . . [but] will be reflected in your earnings and [you] will be able to participate in the Profit Sharing Plan with this amount.”1

The following December, not long before Christmas, a dispute arose between Jack Hodges and McGraw over whether the latter had been working on his truck on company time. Hodges charged McGraw had and said he fired him. The employee, however, denied the allegation and insisted that he quit because of the attack. Hodges later refused to pay the promised bonus precipitating this lawsuit.

[794]*794Plaintiff’s pleaded theory was that the bonus was an obligation created in writing for previous work performance. Defendant, of course, denied this and answered that the “bonus alluded to was a gratuity from the employer and did not constitute any part or portion of plaintiff’s employment agreement.”

The dispute was tried to a jury which were instructed to determine whether the subject bonus was a part of plaintiff’s employment contract or merely a gratuity. By their verdict the jury found the former to be the fact and awarded plaintiff a verdict for $7,000. Judgment was entered on the verdict. Defendant appeals contending in its petition in error that the court reversibly erred in: (1) overruling its motion for a directed verdict; and (2) entering the judgment for $7,000 against it.

II

In support of its general contention the company argues that: (1) its president’s September letter is not an enforceable contract for a bonus; (2) the promise to pay the bonus is unenforceable for vagueness and for lack of consideration; (3) the bonus is no part of the original contract of employment; (4) a contract for a bonus does not otherwise exist for want of obligatory mutuality between McGraw and his employer; and (5) McGraw was not employed at the time the bonus was to be paid.

Highlighting Hodges’ contract theory is a principle alluded to in Eatmon v. Penland, 119 Okl. 180, 249 P. 387 (1926), namely, that “a past consideration, if it imposed no legal obligation at the time it was furnished, will support no promise whatsoever;” that is, “an executed consideration is no consideration.” But Eatmon was not a bonus case and a review of decisions indicates that a body of common law somewhat indigenous to employment bonuses has developed, thus eliminating the necessity of our having to spend time structuring the decision in this case on fundamentals of contract law.2

A bonus, it has been held, “is not a gift of gratuity, but a sum paid for services, or upon a consideration in addition to or in excess of that which would ordinarily be given.” Adams v. Mid-West Chev. Corp., 198 Okl. 461, 179 P.2d 147 (1947). In Adams the court quoted with apparent approval from 40 A.L.R. 1424 (1955), concerning the absence of cases holding that the corporate grant of a bonus is an ultra vires act and that “cases holding that the promise of a bonus is enforceable by an employee [are] set out in the annotation in 28 A.L.R. 331 and 346 [(1924), which] sustain, by implication at least, . .. the view that such a grant is not ultra vires.”

In this case justice requires enforcement of Hodges’ promise to pay the $7,000 bonus to plaintiff.

Contrary to Hodges’ contention, such enforcement is not at war with the holding in Cain’s Coffee Co. v. McNutt, Okl., 308 P.2d 651 (1957). In Cain’s no promise of a specific bonus had been made to any employee. All that had happened was that the board of directors approved a resolution in August setting aside a fund to be used to pay each employee a Christmas bonus. The amount of a given employee’s bonus was left up to [795]*795his immediate superior, to be decided as Christmas approached. Moreover, although the fund was of necessity appropriated on the basis of the company’s financial experience during its fiscal year ending June 31, the bonus was to compensate for the employee’s calendar year work period because it was given annually, near the end of the year. In Cain’s the employee, whose employment was terminated in October, sued to recover one-twelfth of his commissions for the previous fiscal year, which was the amount of the bonus he may have received had he remained on the job until Christmas.3 His claim was rejected because at the time he left the company a specific bonus had not yet been declared as to him and was not to have been until Christmas.

In the case at bar, unlike Cain's, the promised bonus was complete as to the work period covered and the amount being paid. To use a latin term, the obligation was one created in presentí and nothing in the September letter expressly or implicitly required the promisee to be an employee when the payment funds became available. The judgment appealed is affirmed.

BACON, P. J., concurs. BOYDSTON, J., dissents.

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Related

In Re Manchester Gas Storage, Inc.
309 B.R. 354 (N.D. Oklahoma, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1981 OK CIV APP 13, 629 P.2d 792, 1981 Okla. Civ. App. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcgraw-v-bill-hodges-truck-co-oklacivapp-1981.