Phelps v. Union Central Life Insurance

88 P.2d 58, 108 Mont. 78, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 74
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1939
DocketNo. 7,825.
StatusPublished

This text of 88 P.2d 58 (Phelps v. Union Central Life Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelps v. Union Central Life Insurance, 88 P.2d 58, 108 Mont. 78, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 74 (Mo. 1939).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE STEWART,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause was previously before this court. (105 Mont. 195, 71 Pac. (2d) 887.) Reference to the former opinion obviates the necessity for an elaborate statement of facts. We shall not reiterate what was there recited, except where it becomes necessary to develop a particular point. The judgment of the district court was reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial. The new trial occurred on the original pleadings. Verdict and judgment were again for plaintiff, and defendant has appealed.

Numerous specifications of error were assigned on this appeal. It is not necessary to discuss all of them.

At one stage of the proceedings the defendant presented a motion for a continuance. The court refused to grant the continuance, and one of the specifications is based upon that ruling. *80 It is not necessary to discuss the matter at length, as we believe the case of Baker v. Tullock, 106 Mont. 375, 77 Pac. (2d) 1035, is controlling in the premises.

Another specification of error involves the demand of the defendant to require an amendment to the complaint by the addition of the name of one of plaintiff’s counsel as a party plaintiff. This was apparently brought about by the fact that counsel had asserted an attorney’s lien against the cause of action for more than half the amount thereof. It was the contention of defendant that counsel thereby became a real party in interest as contemplated by section 9067, Revised Codes. In this we think counsel for defendant was in error. (See Lefebure v. Baker, 69 Mont. 193, 220 Pac. 1111.) The lien mentioned was given to counsel by section 8993, and regardless of the amount it was incidental to plaintiff’s cause of action.

The complaint alleged that a copartnership, consisting of David Y. Phelps, plaintiff, and his son, did and performed certain work and services in the matter of plowing for the defendant; that such were done at the special instance and request of defendant, and that defendant promised to pay the co-partnership at certain specified rates therefor. It further alleged the reasonable value of the work and services and the non-payment therefor. The complaint contains the necessary allegations for a suit on quantum meruit, and in addition contains allegations of an express promise to pay a certain sum per acre for the plowing. (Compare Brown v. Crown Gold Min. Co., 150 Cal. 376, 89 Pac. 86; Merywethers v. Youmans, 81 Kan. 309, 105 Pac. 545.) The objection urged here against the sufficiency of the complaint was urged on the previous appeal. We did not then deem the matter of sufficient merit to constitute reversible error, and we do not now.

In the former opinion we did not attempt to pass upon the question as to whether agent Sowter actually did enter into the contract in question, because we believed that certain relevant testimony, bearing directly on that question, had been erroneously rejected by the court.

*81 A comprehensive examination of the records seems to us to establish the undisputed fact that defendant owned a number of farms in Fergus county; that Sowter was its field man or some kind of an agent with authority to negotiate sales and leases, subject to the approval of his superiors, to collect rent and to protect the company’s interests generally. This much both sides admit Sowter could do. Authority beyond that point is where the difficulty arose. On one hand the company asserted that Sowter had no authority or right to consummate any contract for the sale of land, the leasing thereof, or to in any manner dispose of the company’s interests or property without specific approval. In other words, the defendant company claims that Sowter was authorized to do little more than contact prospective tenants, negotiate with them and, finally, if in his opinion a prospect, met the company’s requirements, he could recommend him to it on a particular land deal. Plaintiff, however, alleged an independent contract involving the payment of money by' the company to him in exchange for work and labor, material and machinery furnished in the plowing of certain company-owned lands. This was an act which the company expressly asserts their field agent had no authority to do.

Under our view of the questions presented, this controverted issue becomes unimportant, it being admitted by both parties that Sowter actually did have power to make preliminary negotiations and recommend various farm deals which were incidentally concerned with plowing and a system of payment therefor. Likewise, as will at once appear obvious, the question of the admissibility of. deceased agent Sowter’s asserted statements also becomes unimportant in arriving at a decision, because of the much broader ground upon which the issues must ultimately be determined, namely, the evidence as a whole.

It appears that David Y. Phelps, one of the assignors of the claim to plaintiff, had had previous dealings with the defendant company through field agent Sowter; in fact, Sowter secured his written application to purchase certain of the company’s farms on a crop payment plan contract. These farms were referred to in the testimony as the “home place.” Such plan *82 contemplated payment of a certain base price for land, to which were to be added, in ascertaining the ultimate purchase price, certain advancements made to the tenant to enable him to carry on farming operations. These advancements consisted of fuel, machinery, living expenses and, in fact, everything necessary to finance the occupant and get the cultivation and farming of the land under way.

Upon Sowter’s recommendation, David Phelps was given a written contract to purchase the home place on such a crop payment basis. This was in 1929. The next year one Fred Triepke, also operating some of defendant’s lands under a similar cropping contract, gave up his contract. When this occurred one H. B. Smith, who was defendant’s Assistant Montana Financial Correspondent, suggested to Sowter that he interest David Phelps in taking over the Triepke contract in addition to the one he already had, with the idea that the places could be operated together. Presumably with this plan in mind, Sowter called upon Phelps in an effort to work out a deal along the lines suggested. Thus it will be observed that Sowter did call at the Phelps home, and that some character of negotiations occurred. What these negotiations were is the difference that furnished the grounds for this lawsuit.

The parties advance different theories as to what agreement or arrangement, if any, was actually discussed or entered into with relation to the Triepke land. -Defendant claims that Phelps & Son formed a partnership for the express purpose of taking over the land, and that they understood they were to take it over on the basis of the Triepke contract, which, as before noted, was one to purchase the land on a crop payment basis. The Triepke contract apparently also provided for certain advancements for plowing. It is plaintiff’s contention that through the efforts of Sowter, Phelps & Son were hired to plow the Triepke place at a definite price of four dollars per acre for new sod, and two dollars per acre for rebreaking.

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Related

Brown v. Crown Gold Milling Co.
89 P. 86 (California Supreme Court, 1907)
Baker v. Tullock
77 P.2d 1035 (Montana Supreme Court, 1938)
Phelps v. Union Central Life Insurance
71 P.2d 887 (Montana Supreme Court, 1937)
Merywethers v. Youmans
105 P. 545 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1909)
Lefebure v. Baker
220 P. 1111 (Montana Supreme Court, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 P.2d 58, 108 Mont. 78, 1939 Mont. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-union-central-life-insurance-mont-1939.