Parker v. Weber County Irr. Dist.

236 P. 1105, 65 Utah 354, 1925 Utah LEXIS 62
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1925
DocketNo. 4142.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 236 P. 1105 (Parker v. Weber County Irr. Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parker v. Weber County Irr. Dist., 236 P. 1105, 65 Utah 354, 1925 Utah LEXIS 62 (Utah 1925).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

A. F. Parker commenced this action in the district court of Weber county against the defendant Weber county irrigation district to recover for services pursuant to the terms of a certain contract of employment entered into between him and said district. After the action was commenced and pending, Parker died, and his son, the plaintiff named in •the caption, was substituted, as administrator of the estate of the deceased.

In the complaint, after stating the necessary jurisdictional facts and matters of inducement, it is in substance alleged that on the 16th day of December, 1920, the deceased entered into a contract with said district, by the terms of which he was to perform certain services as an irrigation engineer at a salary of $300 per month payable on the 1st day of each month; that said employment was to become effective and the mont-hy salary was to commence upon notice by said district, and was to continue for a period of six months, unless sooner terminated; that a notice to begin the work specified in said contract had been duly given and the deceased had entered upon said employment and had performed the conditions of said contract; that no part of said salary had been paid.

The prayer of the complaint was for $1,800, covering the salary for a period of six months.

A. copy of the contract is attached to and made a part of the complaint.

The defendant filed its answer, in which, after admitting *357 the jurisdictional facts and matters of inducement, together with the execution of the contract, it denied all other allegations contained in the complaint. The defendant also set up as an affirmative defense that the deceased had not performed any services under said contract; that it was agreed between him and said district that the contract should not become operative, and that no salary should be payable unless and until a certain loan was obtained from certain banks by said district; that said loan was never obtained, and that for that reason the contract never became operative and the deceased never performed any services for said district under it. It was further alleged that the deceased had never complied with any of the conditions of said contract.

The case was tried to the court without a jury. The court made the following findings:

“(3) That on December 16, 1920, the said A. F. Parker and said defendant entered into a contract, a copy of which is attached to plaintiff’s complaint, and that on said date said defendant notified in writing the said A. F. Parker to begin work under the terms and conditions of said contract.
“(4) The court finds that after said contract was made the said A. F. Parker did not do or perform any of the conditions or terms of said contract and did not enter upon the performance of any of his duties in said contract and. no work was ever done under said contract by the said A. F. Parker.”

Upon the foregoing findings, the court entered its conclusions of law favorable to the district, and rendered judgment accordingly. The plaintiff appeals.

The evidence is without conflict. Indeed, the court found that the notice to enter upon the employment, and from the service of which the salary should become payable, was duly given. There was also some evidence, both documentary and oral, that the deceased did in fact perform some services for the district. True, the evidence is not conclusive, but there is substantial evidence to that effect and sufficient to sustain, and as we think sufficient to require, a finding that the contract became operative and that the deceased entered upon his employment. While the district court found that *358 the required notice before mentioned was duly given, yet, in order to defeat a recovery, the court also found that the deceased “did not enter upon the performance of any of his duties in said contract.” Ordinarily, therefore, we should be bound by the court’s finding. In this case, however, we are of the opinion that, pursuant to the terms and under the law applicable the important question was whether the contract became effective. The contract provided that upon notice by the district the employment could be terminated at any time. It further provided that in case of such termination the deceased should be paid at the rate of $300 per month for the time the contract remained in force. .The salary, therefore, did not depend upon the amount or nature of the services rendered by the deceased, but upon whether he was in the employ of the district pursuant to the terms of the contract. The district court, however, it seems, held that the right to compensation depended upon the amount of services rendered rather than upon the employment under the contract. In so holding we are of the opinion that the district court erred.

While we do not agree with counsel for the plaintiff that the deceased was a public officer and hence was entitled to the salary for the full contract period, we are, however, of the opinion that the deceased, in view of all the evidence and under the terms of the contract, was entitled to salary for the time the contract was in force, regardless of whether he performed much or little or no services, provided he was able, ready, and willing to perform the services he had agreed to perform under the contract. The salary was, however, payable during the time the contract should be in force, and no longer. What that time was is not clear from the evidence. According to the evidence as it now stands, however, the contract was in force for at least some time, if only for a few days. Plaintiff was therefore entitled to a finding respecting the length of time the contract remained in force after the notice which made it operative was served.

The defendant, however, set up a complete defense in its answer, namely, that the contract never became effective. *359 At tbe trial tbe defendant offered to prove that tbe notice wbieb sbonld cause tbe contract to become operative was in fact delivered to tbe deceased upon the express condition that tbe contract should not become operative until tbe happening of a certain event, namely, tbe obtaining of a loan of money by the district from certain bankers with which to defray tbe expenses of tbe district. Further, that there was a special reason why the notice was given, and that tbe deceased fully understood and concurred in tbe conditional service of tbe notice. The offer was objected to by plaintiff, and tbe court sustained tbe objection and excluded tbe evidence. The defendant was therefore prevented from proving its defense. Tbe defendant excepted to tbe ruling of the court, and has presented tbe question by a cross-assignment of error. We are therefore required to pass upon tbe question.

It certainly is no longer an open question in this jurisdiction, if it is anywhere, that where a written instrument, regardless of its nature or conditions, is delivered upon tbe express agreement or understanding by tbe parties that tbe instrument shall not become effective except upon tbe happening of a certain event or not until some act or condition shall have been performed, tbe instrument does not become effective until tbe happening of tbe event or performance of tbe act or condition. Moreovor, tbe conditional delivery may always be shown by parol. See Central Bank

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Bluebook (online)
236 P. 1105, 65 Utah 354, 1925 Utah LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parker-v-weber-county-irr-dist-utah-1925.