Rossiter v. Thompson

226 P. 806, 66 Cal. App. 491, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 503
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 11, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4352.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 226 P. 806 (Rossiter v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rossiter v. Thompson, 226 P. 806, 66 Cal. App. 491, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 503 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

HOUSER, J.

This is' an appeal from a judgment in favor of plaintiff and against defendant, arising out of an action brought on an alleged breach of contract.

Each of the parties is a physician and surgeon. From the record herein it appears that for several years prior to October 1, 1918, defendant had been engaged in the prac *493 tice of his profession in the city of Burbank; that for a period of some seven or eight months prior to said date plaintiff had been practicing medicine in the town of La Brea; that at about that time defendant either had received, or was about to receive, a commission in the medical corps of the United States Army; and in anticipation of such appointment, defendant initiated negotiations with plaintiff looking to an arrangement whereby plaintiff would abandon his medical practice at La Brea and take over defendant’s medical practice at Burbank. The result of the negotiations was that an oral agreement was entered into between the parties, which, according to the finding of the judge of the trial court, was as follows:

“That on said 14th day of October, 1918, said parties entered into an agreement wherein and whereby plaintiff agreed to surrender and abandon his said residence and practice in said town of Brea and to take up his residence in said city of Burbank, and defendant agreed to employ plaintiff to take and assume full management and control of said defendant’s practice and to maintain, carry on and conduct the same for the period of one year beginning October 14, 1918; and it was further agreed that plaintiff should receive as compensation a portion of the income derived from said practice computed as follows, to-wit: The necessary operating and running expenses connected with said business, together with plaintiff’s house rent, and also together with a sum of money sufficient to pay such income tax as should be levied upon the income derived during said period, should be first deducted from the income of said practice during said period and of the balance remaining plaintiff should receive ninety (90%) per cent and defendant ten (10%) per cent. That by the terms of said agreement it was further agreed that defendant should not be obligated to render any services in the prosecution of said practice for one year and should be privileged to remain away from said practice for the entire term of said agreement ; and that defendant would allow plaintiff to remain and continue in the full management and control of said practice for said period and upon the terms above mentioned.”

The terms of the agreement were complied with by each of the parties to the agreement until on or about the four *494 teenth day of January, 1919, when (again to quote the findings of the trial court) : “defendant wrongfully and in violation of the terms of said agreement and without any cause therefor resumed the management, control and conduct of his said practice and wrongfully and without any cause therefor discontinued the said employment of plaintiff and wrongfully and without any cause therefor excluded plaintiff from said practice and from the management, control and conduct thereof, and wrongfully and without any cause therefor excluded plaintiff from participation in any of the income from said practice, and continued to so wrongfully and without cause exclude plaintiff from said practice and from the management, control and conduct thereof and from participation in any of the income of said practice, from said 14th day of January, 1919, for the balance of the term of said agreement.”

Defendant’s first contention is that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The basis of the objection is that, in addition to stating what is concededly unobjectionable as a cause of action, the complaint contains matter which it is claimed precludes plaintiff from a recovery of any judgment against defendant. The language of the complaint to which appellant’s attack is directed is as follows: ‘ That on or about the 14th day of October, 1918, it was agreed by said parties that plaintiff should surrender and abandon his said residence and practice in said town of Brea and take up his residence in said city of Burbank; that plaintiff should assume and undertake the burdens and responsibilities of and conduct and carry on the said practice of defendant for the ensuing year, and give to the same such time and effort as should be necessary, and that defendant should absent himself from said city of Burbank and the immediate vicinity thereof, and abandon his said practice and patients for said period of time, and allow and permit plaintiff to remain in the sole and exclusive management and control thereof for said period of time, so far as concerned the activities and professional efforts of defendant.”

Appellant urges that the allegation that it was agreed “that defendant should absent himself from said city of Burbank, . . . and abandon his said practice and patients for said period of time” presents a situation inimi *495 cal to the provisions of section 1673' of the Civil Code, by which any contract whereby anyone is restrained from exercising a lawful profession “is to that extent void.” The contract between plaintiff and defendant was one of employment, the compensation for which was based upon a percentage of the remuneration received for the work which was to be done. The apparent intention of the parties was that the employee was to do all the work and the employer was not expected to be present even for the purpose of overseeing it. The language of the contract that the employer “should absent himself . . . and abandon his practice” was more in the nature of a privilege extended to the employer than that it was mandatory or compulsory that he should do so. The employer was “to allow and permit plaintiff to remain in the sole and exclusive management and control thereof for said period of time, so far as concerned the activities and professional efforts of defendant.” In the very nature of things, it would not be expected that an employer would abdicate all authority in the premises which might ensue from an enforced absence from the place where the work was to be performed. The terms of the contract, if strictly followed, might preclude the employer from visiting his family residing within the territorial limits of the city of Burbank, or even go so far as to prevent the employer from passing through the city on a train or an automobile. Such an absurd result, of course, was never contemplated by the parties. The principal and controlling feature of the agreement was “that plaintiff should assume and undertake the burdens and responsibilities of and conduct and carry on the said practice of defendant for the ensuing year.” The provision that defendant should absent himself and abandon his practice was merely incidental to the main object of the agreement. The contract was composed of several severable parts. If it be assumed (without necessarily deciding the point) that that part of the agreement by which defendant was “restrained from exercising a lawful profession” was in contravention of the provisions of section 1673 of the Civil Code, and was “to that extent void,” yet the remainder of the contract having to do with the employment of plaintiff by defendant, being complete in itself and not in any manner relating to or *496

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
226 P. 806, 66 Cal. App. 491, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 503, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rossiter-v-thompson-calctapp-1924.