North American Car Corp. v. Green

1935 OK 1022, 52 P.2d 798, 175 Okla. 136, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 830
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 22, 1935
DocketNo. 25987.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 1935 OK 1022 (North American Car Corp. v. Green) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North American Car Corp. v. Green, 1935 OK 1022, 52 P.2d 798, 175 Okla. 136, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 830 (Okla. 1935).

Opinion

CORN, J.

This is an action by B. E. Green to recover for services rendered to the North American Car Corporation, a corporation, upon an oral contract of employment, alleged to have been made and entered into by the duly and authorized officers of said corporation.

The corporation filed a verified answer, expressly denying the allegations of plaintiff’s petition.

The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court, reverse to the order here.

The cause was tried to a jury, resulting in a judgment for the plaintiff.

The evidence of the plaintiff shows he entered into an oral contract of employment with N. L. Howard, president of the defendant corporation, to acquire certain oil properties for said corporation in the Oklahoma City field; that the said president and Mr. Roblee, vice president of the corporation, advised the plaintiff that it was necessary for the defendant corporation to acquire additional properties, and that if the plaintiff would acquire certain properties for the corporation he would be taken care of, and would be given stock in the corporation to be organized; that the title to the properties would be taken in the name of one Sherry or in the name of the Sherry Petroleum Company; that certain properties were acquired through the efforts of the plaintiff for the defendant and $30,000 cash was paid by the trustee of the defendant corporation to the Plains Petroleum Corporation, the owner of the properties purchased ; that the said officers of the defendant corporation told the plaintiff that he would be adequately taken care of and compensated for his services in procuring said property^ that the plaintiff, after finding that certain properties could be purchased from the Plains Petroleum Corporation, explained the proposition to the president of the defendant corporation, and the said president then orally employed the plaintiff to work up the deal for the purchase of these properties for the defendant corporation: that the deal was consummated with the Plains Petroleum Corporation on October 24, 1931; that the purpose of acquiring the property was to write off a corporation by the name of the White Oak Corporation and put these new prop *137 erties in the place of said corporation owned by the defendant corporation; that the plaintiff for the defendant helped to work out a deal with the Sherry Petroleum Corporation by which that corporation was to receive one-third interest in the properties and the defendant corporation a two-thirds interest; that according to the arrangement made between the defendant corporation and the Sherry Petroleum Corporation the Cen-torp Corporation, later to be organized, would hold the properties for the defendant corporation; that all of the matters respecting the title to the property and the holding of the property were discussed and agreed upon between the plaintiff and the president and vice president of defendant corporation ; that the defendant corporation desired to have the property put in the name of some- other corporation because the defendant corporation did not want to assume any indebtedness.

The evidence further shows that the plaintiff worked under this special contract, at nights, checking up on the various properties, and worked day and night for quite a long time in addition to carrying on his regular work with the White Oak Corporation; that plaintiff began working to acquire these properties for the defendant in the summer of 1931, and spent about two months at this work; that from time to time the plaintiff reported his progress to the officers of the defendant corporation, and received instructions from time to time from these officers; that after plaintiff checked the Plains Petroleum Corporation properties and reported them to the officers of the defendant corporation, the officers of said corporation told the plaintiff to go ahead and try to work up a deal for the purchase if these properties for the defendant corporation ; that the plaintiff spent two or three months investigating and checking, talking to engineers and geologists, working nights and Sundays, in addition to doing his regular work for another corporation; that after the properties had been checked, and after the plaintiff had spent two or three months in doing this work, he recommended to the defendant corporation that it would be a good plan to have Mr. Sherry take over these properties, supervise them, and assume the liability; that the officers of the defendant corporation accepted the plaintiff’s recommendation and Mr. Sherry did take over these properties; that upon the advice and instruction of the officers of the defendant corporation the plaintiff went ahead and consummated the deal with the Plains Petroleum Corporation and Mr. Sherry, and the property was taken in the name of Mr. Sherry, who assumed the obligations of the property; that no money was put into the properties except that advanced by the defendant corporation; that after the deal was made with Mr. Sherry the plaintiff continued to keep in touch with the situation for the defendant corporation pursuant to instructions from the officers of said corporation, although Mr. Sherry went ahead and closed the deal with the Plains Petroleum Corporation; that from time to time the plaintiff conferred with the officers of the defendant corporation as to the details of the whole transaction.

The evidence also shows that title to all or part of the properties acquired through the efforts of the plaintiff for the defendant corporation were transferred to the Centorp Corporation, a corporation organized for the purpose of holding properties of the defendant corporation.

The testimony of the witnesses for the defendant denies that it ever entered into a contract of employment with the plaintiff, or that he had anything whatever to do with the deal as finally closed.

The plaintiff in error sets up eleven specifications of error. The first three are argued together in its brief. They raise the one question that the verdict and judgment are not supported by sufficient evidence. The evidence of the plaintiff shows clearly that the authorized officers of the defendant corporation employed the plaintiff to procure certain oil properties for the defendant corporation, and that these officers agreed with the .plaintiff that he would be adequately compensated and given stock 'in a corporation which was to be organized to hold the properties purchased by the defendant corporation through the efforts and negotiations of the plaintiff.

It is also undisputed that the plaintiff was never paid anything for his services in investigating and procuring these properties.

These properties were procured for the defendant through the efforts of the plaintiff. There was no agreement as to the amount the plaintiff was to receive. The defendant accepted the benefits of the services rendered by the plaintiff, and the defendant in no way compensated the plaintiff for his services. Whether the plaintiff was to be paid in stock or in money we will treat as immaterial, for the reason that the defendant, after accepting the benefits of the plaintiff’s services, repudiated the *138 contract in its entirety and lias made no tender of money or stock as compensation for the services rendered by the plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
1935 OK 1022, 52 P.2d 798, 175 Okla. 136, 1935 Okla. LEXIS 830, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-american-car-corp-v-green-okla-1935.