Northwest Poultry & Dairy Products Co. v. A. C. Fry Co.

176 P.2d 324, 27 Wash. 2d 35, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 254
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 1947
DocketNo. 29851.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 176 P.2d 324 (Northwest Poultry & Dairy Products Co. v. A. C. Fry Co.) 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
Northwest Poultry & Dairy Products Co. v. A. C. Fry Co., 176 P.2d 324, 27 Wash. 2d 35, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 254 (Wash. 1947).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

In November, 1944, the A. C. Fry Company, a corporation, owned as its sole asset a building in Seattle which had been rented for several years to certain persons doing business as Olympic Sausage Company. By its terms, its lease was to expire in December.

The Fry Company had five thousand shares of stock. In November, 1944, Raymond R. Fry held 1,667 shares, his brother, Earl A. Fry, 1,666, and Oliver Hulback, a Seattle attorney, held 1,665 shares, not, however, as owner thereof, but as a nonintervention executor of the will of A. C. Fry and Annie R. Fry, the deceased father and stepmother of the two brothers above named. Mr. Hulback, who had been attorney and a director of the company for more than forty years, and Martha G. Fry, wife of Raymond R. Fry, each had one share, qualifying them as directors. Upon a settlement and closing of the estates of A. C. Fry and Annie R. Fry, the 1,665 shares held by Mr. Hulback as a fiduciary will be equally divided between Raymond Fry and his wife Martha, and a former wife of Earl A. Fry. At the time that this controversy arose, Raymond Fry was president of the corporation, Martha Fry was secretary, and these two, with Mr. Hulback, constituted the board of directors.

Mr. Lee Newman, an attorney and a member of the then firm of Hill, Newman & Cook, now Newman & Cook, was Earl Fry’s attorney, having been so employed about three months before. Earl Fry lived in Cbnnecticut. At some time not shown in the record, he gave Mr. Newman a general power of attorney. Earl Fry was of the opinion that there had been unnecessary delay in closing the estates of his father and stepmother, and Mr. Newman was employed to take the matter up with Mr. Hulback. Newman did so, and states that there were some “caustic conversations” *37 between Mr. Hulback and himself. Mr. Newman’s client also thought that the building should be sold and the corporation wound up. Mr. Newman had some conversations with Raymond Fry and found him of that opinion also, provided, however, a price of forty thousand dollars could be obtained. These conversations occurred sometime in November.

On November 21st, Newman learned from Henry Broderick, Inc., a long-established real estate firm, that a client of theirs, who turned out to be the Northwest Poultry & Dairy Products Company, the plaintiff in this action, desired to rent, or might possibly buy, the Fry building. A day or two thereafter, Mr. Pauli, an agent of the plaintiff, went to see Mr. Newman, he says, at the suggestion of Raymond Fry. This would seem highly probable, since Raymond Fry knew that his brother Earl was advocating a sale of the building and was pressing the matter through Mr. Newman, his attorney. Furthermore, Mr. Pauli’s evidence is corroborated by Mr. O’Brien, a member of the Broderick staff, who was called as a witness for the plaintiff. He testified that, about the twenty-third of November, Mr. Pauli, who desired to purchase the building for the plaintiff, made an offer of $32,500 to Raymond Fry in their office, and that Raymond Fry expressed an opinion that it was not enough, but said that he would take the matter up with Mr. Newman. This was the first time the Broderick office knew that Newman had any connection with the matter. On examination, Mr. O’Brien testified as follows:

“Q. Did Mr. Raymond Fry at any time in any of the conversations, which you have just testified to, indicate that you, or say to you specifically that Mr. Newman was the attorney for the A. C. Fry Company? A. No, sir. Q. Did he say he was his attorney individually? A. No, sir. Q. Nothing about attorney, did he? A. He said that he would take the matter up with Mr. Newman.”

The above testimony is quoted for the reason that Mr. Pauli’s supposition that Mr. Newman was attorney for the A. C. Fry Company seems to have been based entirely upon the suggestion of Raymond Fry that he see Mr. Newman. *38 There is no evidence in the record that anyone other than Mr. Newman ever told Pauli that Newman was attorney for the corporation.

The Broderick firm now began to work on Mr. Newman. A Broderick agent telephoned him the next morning, and, at his request, furnished him a memorandum of what was said and done at the meeting in their office. This memorandum stated that they had had a conversation with Raymond Fry and Pauli the day before, and that Mr. Pauli had offered three hundred seventy-five dollars per month for a five-year lease, stating further particulars and interpolating:

“Mr. Fry stated that he thought the rent should be $400.00 per month and that he would rather sell for $40,000.00 as far as he individually was concerned, and requested that the writer get in touch with you.”

Mr. Pauli testified that Mr. Evans told him that Mr. Newman would like him to call at his office, and he did so. Mr. Newman, having been informed that Raymond Fry wished to sell if forty thousand dollars could be obtained, and his own client, Earl Fry, also wishing to sell, urged Pauli to make an offer to purchase. Pauli indicated that he would offer. $32,500. Newman at once told him that that would not be considered. Pauli returned in a day or two, and, according to his testimony (while under examination by Mr. Newman) , about the twenty-fifth or twenty-sixth of November, or two or three days later, and after some conversation, Newman said:

“ ‘Let’s stop kidding along, what is your top offer?’ and I made the offer then of $35,000, and us to pay whatever commission was necessary to take care of the Henry Broderick Company. . . . and we made the various stipulations in this first agreement, that you drew up for me on December 1st. Q. And then you made the offer of fees, first; and we agreed to type it for you in my office? A. That is right. . . . Q. (By Mr. Newman) Was the first offer signed December 1st or 2nd, Mr. Pauli? A. December 1st, I believe. Q. And the check was written when? A. December 2nd. Q. And what did you do with that check? A. There were a couple of stipulations in this December 1st agreement that I didn’t like, and we drew up a subsequent *39 agreement in another meeting, under date of December 4th .” (Italics ours.)

The offer was formally written up by Mr. Newman for Mr. Pauli on the letterhead of the then firm of Hill, Newman & Cook, and was executed by Mr. Pauli for his principal. It is in the record as exhibit No. 1, and reads as follows:

“A. C. Fry Company “December 1, 1944

“Mr. Oliver HulbacIi, Executor

“of the Estate of A. C. Fry and

“of the Estate of Annie R. Fry

“Mr. Earl Fry

“Mr. Raymond R. Fry

“Re: Purchase of A. C. Fry Building “Gentlemen:

“The Northwest Poultry and Dairy Products of Oregon, a Corporation, hereby offers Thirty-five Thousand Dollars ($35,000.00) cash for the following described real estate: [Here follows a legal description of the property] together with the building thereon, and all refrigeration equipment and all other equipment therein, and any and all other improvements and appurtenances thereunto belonging, owned by you, subject to the right of inspection and approval by Mr. C. W. Norton, and subject to a survey at our expense, showing the A. C. Fry building to be on said lot.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Colville Confederated Tribes v. Somday
96 F. Supp. 2d 1120 (E.D. Washington, 2000)
State Ex Rel. Olsen v. Sundling
281 P.2d 499 (Montana Supreme Court, 1955)
Larson v. Bear
230 P.2d 610 (Washington Supreme Court, 1951)
PEOPLES NAT. BK. OF WASH. v. Brown
221 P.2d 530 (Washington Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
176 P.2d 324, 27 Wash. 2d 35, 1947 Wash. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwest-poultry-dairy-products-co-v-a-c-fry-co-wash-1947.