Perry v. Hillman

280 P. 346, 153 Wash. 689, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 968
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1929
DocketNo. 21440. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 280 P. 346 (Perry v. Hillman) 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
Perry v. Hillman, 280 P. 346, 153 Wash. 689, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 968 (Wash. 1929).

Opinion

Millard, J.

By amended complaint, plaintiff seeks recovery for services performed for the defendant under an oral agreement. The defendant, by answer, entered a general denial, pleaded the statute of frauds and the statute of limitations as affirmative defenses and, by cross-complaint, prayed recovery for certain moneys converted by, and for money loaned to, the plaintiff. The cause was tried to the court without a jury, resulting in findings and conclusions that all of plaintiff’s claims for compensation, except those affecting the Cathcart properties, were barred by the statute of limitations; and in favor of the plaintiff on defendant’s cross-complaint. Judgment was entered in plaintiff’s favor for seven hundred fifty-nine dollars and eighty cents on the Cathcart claims. The plaintiff has appealed.

In July, 1920, W. H. Perry and C. D. Hillman entered into an oral agreement under which Perry was employed to manage, as assistant, the business, affairs and properties of C. D. Hillman. During the course *691 of that employment, five deals were consummated, as follows:

The TTa.milt.on transaction, concluded on September 29, 1920, involved the transfer by Hillman of a ranch to one Hamilton. The Wineman settlement, consummated in November, 1920, was a deal in which appellant claims respondent agreed to pay him ten per cent of whatever was saved out of certain litigation. Sale of certain Hillman lands to one Bardshar. The Baker transaction, which involved the exchange of certain lands and personal property, and consummated in March, 1922. The Cathcart transactions consisted of sales of numerous lots and parcels of lands in respondent’s Cathcart holdings made by appellant while acting as general agent or manager of respondent and prior to appellant’s departure in June, 1922, for California. Respondent orally agreed that appellant would receive his compensation out of cash which was paid in under contracts of sale, the appellant to receive one-half of all cash paid in, as and when paid, until the full compensation of ten per cent had been liquidated. Various payments were made to the respondent upon the sales by the purchasers, part of which were remitted by respondent to appellant, the last remittance being made during the year 1924. There was due, at the beginning of this action, from the respondent to the appellant, upon account of sales to nine persons, a total of seven hundred fifty-nine dollars and eighty cents.

Under an oral modification in June, 1922, of the oral agreement of July, 1920, Perry was transferred from Hillman’s Seattle office to California. Perry claims that he assisted in consummating, in October, 1922, the Whitley deal in California, which involved the sale by Hillman to Whitley of the Estrella Ranch.

*692 The appellant’s expenses, necessary in connection with the management of the respondent’s business, were paid by the respondent. The appellant’s compensation was contingent upon the amount of business in making sales or exchanges of properties, the percentage to be an amount equal to five per cent of the purchase price or value of the property when the transaction was consummated partly through the efforts of the appellant, and an additional five per cent if the deal was consummated solely through appellant’s efforts. By his amended complaint, the appellant alleged that the efforts of the parties were to be directed to the preservation and protection of the large holdings of the respondent and to discharging the incumbrances and tax liens against the same; that all moneys, property or other profits derived by the respondent through the sales, exchanges or transactions,

“. . . falling within the agreements aforesaid, or otherwise, should be devoted primarily to the purposes aforesaid, and that payment of plaintiff’s compensation, accrued and to accrue, save that as resulting from sales heretofore alleged, should be deferred until the defendant, by reasonable diligence and efforts and within a reasonable time, should accomplish, or be placed in a position reasonably to accomplish, the purposes aforesaid, and be placed in funds or in a position reasonably to obtain funds available for the payment of such compensation.”

Appellant further alleged that his unpaid compensation, which should be computed on the transactions mentioned above, became due in July, 1923, when the primary purposes of the employment were accomplished and the respondent placed in funds available for that compensation.

The trial court found that, under the oral agreement, the appellant performed services in the nature of those *693 of a general agent, and performed many services inconsistent with the idea that appellant was merely a broker or agent for the sale of the real properties. The original complaint was filed May 3, 1926. For many months prior to May 3, 1923, Hillman was the owner of large parcels of unincumbered real property and also a large amount of unincumbered personal property of the estimated value of one hundred and fifty thousand dollars. Hillman also received one hundred and twenty-five thousand dollars in cash in the "Wineman settlement of November, 1920. The court concluded that, for many months before May 3, 1923, the respondent had funds or was in a position reasonably to obtain funds available for the payment of appellant’s compensation, and that, by reason thereof, all of the claims of appellant for compensation other than those affecting the Oathcart properties are barred by the statute of limitations (Rem. Comp. Stat., § 159).

Our determination of the question raised by the assignment that the court erred in applying the statute of limitations to the appellant’s cause of action, will dispose of the other assignments of error.

Appellant argues that the services were rendered under general and continuous employment, but that, by agreement, payment of appellant’s compensation, save that part resulting from sales, should be deferred until respondent, by reasonable diligence and within a .reasonable time, should accomplish the primary purposes of the employment, and be placed in funds or in a position reasonably to obtain funds available for payment of such compensation, and that that part of appellant’s compensation resulting from sales should be paid to him from time to time as the purchasers made their payments to respondent.

As recited above, there were six transactions for which appellant claimed compensation. The last was *694 the Whitley deal, which was consummated in September, 1922. Appellants original complaint was filed May 3, 1926. A painstaking examination of the entire record convinces us that the appellant did not, subsequent to the year 1922, perform any services for respondent entitling him to compensation. It is likewise clear that the respondent’s affairs were in excellent financial condition the latter part of 1922. The respondent, at that time, was in a position reasonably to obtain funds available for payment of any compensation due to the appellant; and, manifestly, the primary purposes of preservation and protection of the large holdings of the respondent had been accomplished prior to May, 1923. Appellant Perry testified:

“In the latter part of 1922, Mr. Hillman had the balance of the Estrella, about 30,000 acres, and arrangements had been made whereby Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 P. 346, 153 Wash. 689, 1929 Wash. LEXIS 968, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-v-hillman-wash-1929.