Rogich v. Dressel

278 P.2d 367, 45 Wash. 2d 829, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 480
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1954
Docket32956
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 278 P.2d 367 (Rogich v. Dressel) 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
Rogich v. Dressel, 278 P.2d 367, 45 Wash. 2d 829, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 480 (Wash. 1954).

Opinion

*831 Donworth, J.

Defendant appeals from a judgment establishing an express oral trust in ten thousand shares of mining stock, declaring the trust ended by his disavowal of it and his consequent conversion of the stock, and awarding each of the two plaintiffs a money judgment for one third of the value of the stock at the time of the conversion, less certain deductions.

The facts which give rise to this lawsuit may be summarized as follows: Plaintiff Rogich (hereafter called Rogich when referred to individually) and plaintiff Folsom (hereafter called Folsom when referred to individually) were employees of the Pend Oreille Mines & Metals Company, a corporation, during all of the period involved in this action. Rogich was master mechanic for the company. Folsom was a diamond drill foreman.

Defendant (hereafter called Dressel) owned and operated a general store in Metaline Falls in 1938, when the incident which gave rise to this action occurred. He had owned and operated the same store since about 1914 and continued so to do until 1943. At that time, he sold the store to his son but continued to be in and work around the store thereafter during all of the period involved in this action.

Rogich had traded almost exclusively in Dressel’s store since 1920, when Rogich was married, and had spent approximately a thousand dollars a year in the store from that time until 1951. Rogich had confidence in Dressel and considered him a friend. Dressel likewise had enough confidence in Rogich to allow him to keep a running open account at the store during all of those years. When Rogich was paid by his employer, he usually cashed his pay check at Dressel’s store, and Dressel would apply some of the money from the check on Rogich’s account and pay the remainder over to him. Rogich had borrowed small sums of money from Dressel on a number of occasions. Dressel required no note from Rogich as evidence of such loans.

Folsom had known Dressel for only three years prior to 1938, and did not know him as well as Rogich did, though Folsom did trade at Dressel’s store prior to and after 1938.

*832 In June and July, 1938, a diamond drilling crew, employed by Pend Oreille Mines & Metals Company (hereafter called Pend Oreille Mines), of which Folsom was foreman, began diamond drilling on certain property owned by the Metaline Metals Company (hereafter called Metaline Metals), to determine whether the property contained ore of sufficient value to justify mining it. Pend Oreille Mines owned fifty-one per cent of the stock in Metaline Metals. Early in July, 1938, the diamond drilling disclosed the location of a fairly extensive ore body containing high grade lead ore (fifty to sixty per cent lead). Since it was profitable to mine ore containing ten per cent lead at that time, the discovery was considered a very rich one by everybody who knew about it. Rogich and Folsom, in the course of their employment, saw the diamond drill cores containing the rich ore. They asked a high official in Pend Oreille Mines if it would be all right for them to buy Metaline Mines stock and were assured that there was no objection to their doing so.

Neither Rogich nor Folsom had any money with which to buy stock. Rogich suggested to Folsom that they borrow five hundred dollars from Dressel to buy some stock, and the two men went to Dressel’s store sometime in the early part of July, 1938, to ask about borrowing money.

Concerning the meeting with Dressel, Rogich testified on direct examination as follows :

“A. Me and Folsom asked Mr. Dressel if we can borrow $500 to buy Metaline Metals stock. After he heard us, then he, Mr. Dressel said, ‘Well, what are you going to do with the money?’ Naturally we, me and Mr. Folsom, come up and told him we wanted to buy Metaline Metals stock, and one thing after another. I can’t recall if we had the diamond drill core to show that night but I am sure that Mr. Dressel know, . . . Q. Tell us as nearly as you can remember what you said about it. A. I told him that the core out of the diamond drill hole was very rich, and Mr. ■ Dressel said, ‘Well, that is the best news I ever heard.’ He didn’t say anything about the loan. Then he turns around, Mr. Dressel turns around and said, ‘Well, I tell you; I got $800 that isn’t working, what is the matter with me buying that stock, *833 Metaline Metals stock, and put on our names between the three of us?’ And then the conversation went on— Q. What did you say to that? A. I don’t believe I answered anything there. And Mr. Folsom, I presume he said something about it. And the conversation went on, and when we parted Mr. Dressel agree that he was going to buy the stock for us. Q. For ‘us.’ Whom do you mean by ‘us?’ A. Between us three, me and Dressel and Folsom. . . . ”

Folsom’s testimony on direct examination about the same meeting was as follows:

“A. He [Rogich] suggested we go down and see Mr. Dressel at his store. We went down after work and we went in and Steve addressed Mr. Dressel and told him we would like to buy some Metaline Metals stock but we were broke and we didn’t have any money so we came to see if we could make some arrangements so we could get some of this stock. So Ed [Dressel], he talked around a while about it and finally he says, ‘I got $800,’ he says, ‘that isn’t working—’ Q. Pardon me just a minute. Was there any mention as to how much you wanted to borrow? A. Well, we just— as I recall— I don’t just recall whether it was any specific amount, but it seems to me like we wanted to get some stock. Q. Go ahead. A. So we didn’t make any agreement as to about how much we wanted to get at that time, so we talked it over, and the next thing we knew Ed says, ‘Well,’ he says, T will get the stock.’ Q. Did he say anything at that time as to paying any money over? A. Yes, he saiid he had about $800 that wasn’t working at that time, as I recall the conversation, so he went to work and started buying this stock. Q. State the conversation. What did he say about buying the stock? A. Said that he would buy the stock for the three of us, Mr. Rogich, Mr. Dressel and myself. Q. And how much did he say? A. He didn’t say how much he was to buy. Q. Did he say how much money he was going to use? A. Eight hundred dollars that he had to use—not that he was going to use it, but that is what he said he had. Q. Was there anything said there at that same time and place in regard to whose name the stock would be bought in? A. No, there wasn’t. He was to buy the stock. Naturally it would be in his name. Q. At any rate, you assumed that? A. That is right. Q. Did you object? A. No. Q. Was that all of that conversation at that time? A. Well, as I recall that is about all there was.”

*834 In his testimony, Dressel said that Rogich and Folsom had asked to borrow money from him, possibly in 1938, to buy Metaline Metals stock, that he refused to loan them anything, and that he made no agreement with them to buy any stock for the three of them.

Prior to 1938, Dressel had purchased seven thousand shares of Metaline Metals stock. On July 12,1938, he bought a block of five thousand shares, paying 7% cents a share.

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Bluebook (online)
278 P.2d 367, 45 Wash. 2d 829, 1954 Wash. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rogich-v-dressel-wash-1954.