Portland Section of Council of Jewish Women v. Sisters of Charity of Providence

513 P.2d 1183, 266 Or. 448, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 375
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1973
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 513 P.2d 1183 (Portland Section of Council of Jewish Women v. Sisters of Charity of Providence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Portland Section of Council of Jewish Women v. Sisters of Charity of Providence, 513 P.2d 1183, 266 Or. 448, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 375 (Or. 1973).

Opinion

HOLMAN, J.

Plaintiff is a charitable corporation organized by Jewish women. Defendant is a charitable corporation which operates the St. Vincent Hospital and Medical Center and is the successor in interest to the Sisters of Charity of Providence of St. Vincent’s Hospital. Plaintiff brought this suit to require defendant to perform a contract allegedly made in 1927 between plaintiff and defendant’s predecessor which required the hospital, in return for the payment of $5,000, to furnish ward accommodations and services in perpetuity to one person at a time, such person to be designated by plaintiff. Defendant appeals from the trial court’s decree specifically enforcing the agreement.

The first question raised by the appeal is whether there was such a contract with defendant’s predecessor. The evidence convinces us there was. No signed contract was found by either party. However, unsigned copies of two contracts were found, one dated February 1927 and the other dated March 16,1927. The two documents were identical except for some minor matters with which we are not directly concerned. Defendant’s records disclose an Annual Account of the Financial Archives, under date of December 31, 1958, which has the following entry:

“Received: $5,000 March 16, 1927, and additional $500.00 April 13, 1945. Obligation in per *452 petxáty with Council of Jewish Women for maintenance of free ward bed for Jewish patients.”

Opposite the entry is the following notation:

“This obligation is faithfully carried out, according to the terms of the agreement.”

In addition, defendant’s records disclose a journal which lists the names of patients whose charges were written off by St. Vincent’s Hospital to the “Jewish Endowed Bed.” The first page of the journal is headed,

“Jewish Endowed Bed 3/16/27.”

In addition, other correspondence and documentation were adduced tending to show that there was an agreement to give care to Jewish patients designated by plaintiff.

Defendant makes the argument that, even if some sort of an agreement did exist, there is no evidence of the specific terms of the agreement. We conclude, as the trial judge did, that the unsigned agreement of March 16, 1927, contained the terms of the agreement. It is obvious there was some agreement, and we believe it is not a mere coincidence that the date of the last contract, the date of the payment of the money, and the date at which defendant commenced its journal covering the patients whose charges were written off to the “Jewish Endowed Bed” are the same.

Defendant contends the statute of frauds prevents the agreement from being enforced because there was no writing signed by its predecessor. The payment of the full consideration by plaintiff and the money’s acceptance and retention constitute such per *453 formance of the contract sufficient to take the agreement out of the statute of frauds. Stevens v. Good Samaritan Hospital and Medical Ctr., 264 Or 200, 504 P2d 749 (1972); Luckey v. Deatsman, 217 Or 628, 632-33, 343 P2d 723 (1959); Howland v. Iron Fireman Mfg. Co., 188 Or 230, 308-09, 213 P2d 177, 215 P2d 380 (1950). Defendant argues that the performance is not exclusively referable to the contract of March 16,1927. As previously indicated, the records of the defendant show that it is so referable.

Defendant was incorporated in 1934. The agreement was entered into by its predecessor, the Sisters of Charity of Providence of St. Vincent’s Hospital. Since there was no written assumption of the contract by defendant upon defendant’s incorporation in 1934, defendant contends that it cannot be required to render specific performance. The evidence indicates that the reason for the reincorporation was a technical limitation on the amount of assets which could be held by the old corporation. After the reincorporation, defendant took over the operation of the hospital and all assets connected therewith including whatever remained of plaintiff’s $5,000 or whatever assets were purchased with it. Since the reineorporation was only a technical matter and was for the purpose of uninterruptedly carrying on the business of the old corporation, and since defendant took over all of its predecessor’s assets and continued to honor the agreement, defendant is liable on the contract to the same extent as was its predecessor.

In 15 Fletcher, Cyclopedia of Corporations § 7329, at 633-34 (rev. vol. 1961) it is stated:

“* * * [W]here a company is merely reincorporated, the new company is liable for the debts *454 of the old, as where it is formed for the purpose and with the intent of carrying on the business originally planned and intended to be carried on by the old corporation. * * (Footnotes omitted.)

Cf. Diamond Fruit Growers, Inc. v. Goe Co., 242 Or 397, 409 P2d 909 (1966); Dairy Co-Operative Ass'n. v. Brandes Creamery, 147 Or 488, 496-97, 30 P2d 338 (1934).

Defendant also contends the suit is barred by laches. This suit was initiated in August 1971. The evidence shows that plaintiff used the services of defendant’s hospital on a fairly regular basis, but to a gradually lessening extent, through 1959. Since that time no patient has been admitted under the agreement. There was a written request made by plaintiff in 1970 and a written refusal by defendant. At some point between September 1, 1966, and 1970 there had been a telephone request and an oral refusal. There is some evidence that there had been other oral refusals between 1964 and 1966, but the specific circumstances of the refusals were not known to the witness nor was there any written evidence of them.

Defendant’s contention, essentially, is that since the suit was not begun within six years of the first refusal, the applicable statute of limitations on an action at law would have run and, therefore, in equity prejudice to defendant is presumed from the delay, and the burden is upon plaintiff to show that such is not the case. Melver v. Norman, 187 Or 516, 545-46, 205 P2d 137, 213 P2d 144 (1949).

Before delay is a bar in equity, it must result in prejudice to another. McIver, supra at 524. The only way in which prejudice could have resulted from *455 the delay in this case is by the disappearance of evidence tending to prove there was no contract. Otherwise, the delay could only have benefited defendant by its being saved the expense it would have incurred in carrying out the agreement had enforcement of the contract been attempted sooner. It is extremely difficult in a case of this kind for plaintiff to prove now that, had the suit been brought sooner, no other evidence would then have been found to be in existence which would have been helpful to defendant. However, in view of the evidence that has been introduced, the original existence of such other evidence seems extremely unlikely. The evidence which most surely demonstrates the existence of the agreement is solely documentary and comes from the records of defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
513 P.2d 1183, 266 Or. 448, 1973 Ore. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/portland-section-of-council-of-jewish-women-v-sisters-of-charity-of-or-1973.