Scarlett v. Young

185 A. 129, 170 Md. 358, 1936 Md. LEXIS 106
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedMay 18, 1936
Docket[No. 12, April Term, 1936.]
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 185 A. 129 (Scarlett v. Young) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scarlett v. Young, 185 A. 129, 170 Md. 358, 1936 Md. LEXIS 106 (Md. 1936).

Opinion

Parke, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The defendant is the president and principal owner of two corporations of which the plaintiff was the treasurer until 1926. In his capacity as treasurer he prepared the income tax returns of both corporations, whose employment he left during the year 1926. The plaintiff is a lawyer and, in the spring of 1927, he became a certified public accountant, and has since been occupied in the practice of accountancy. It is not denied that in September, 1927, the plaintiff was engaged by the two corporations to make their federal yearly income tax returns and state tax report for an annual fee of $250, and that he satisfactorily performed this service and was paid the agreed compensation. The contract was evidenced by a letter in the possession of the defendant. On the margin of this letter, which was written in confirmation of a previous agreement and which contained an itemized statement of the services to be rendered by the accountant, were these words, one over the other, in lead pencil writing: “Also Personal Returns.” The defendant asserts that these words were added with the plaintiff’s assent for the purpose of establishing that the contract was to include, for the same reward, the plaintiff’s services in connection with the defendant’s personal income tax returns. The plaintiff denied that he had so agreed, and that he had seen or known of the penciled words, and maintained that the personal income tax returns of the defendant were to be made by him pursuant to a later oral contract entered into during December, 1931. These differences resulted in an action by the plaintiff, and the recovery of a judgment on November 15th, 1935, against the defendant for $533.40. The appeal at bar is by the defendant, and is from this judgment, in an action on the common counts in assumpsit brought by the plaintiff against the defendant to recover for services rendered.

The action was brought in Baltimore City under the *361 Speedy Judgment Act (chapter 184 of Acts of 1886). With the declaration was filed a statement of account for advice and services as an income tax consultant in connection with defendant’s income tax return for the years 1931, 1932, and 1933, under an oral agreement by which the plaintiff was to be compensated for this advice and services given by the plaintiff to the defendant by the payment of ten per centum on the amount of savings in taxes which would be effected in connection with these tax returns. The account represented these savings to the defendant to have been the aggregate amount of $5,014, for which the plaintiff claimed $501.40. The defendant pleaded the general issue, and the case was tried before a jury. Five exceptions were reserved to rulings on the evidence. The plaintiff offered no prayer, and the granted prayers of the defendant were those which instructed the jury. The defendant’s first prayer and his second prayer, as modified by the court, were granted, and his A, B, C, D, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, and seventh prayers were rejected, and to the court’s adverse action on these prayers the sixth exception was taken.

The defendant’s A prayer was a demurrer to the legal sufficiency of the testimony, and his B prayer asked for a directed verdict on the theory that the agreement which the testimony on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove was not binding because it was not sufficiently definite to enable the court to know its exact meaning. The court is of the opinion that both prayers were rightly refused. The testimony on the part of the plaintiff, if believed, was legally sufficient to prove an agreement on the part of plaintiff to render certain services to the defendant for reward; a performance of these services by the plaintiff; and a refusal of the defendant to pay the promised reward. The contention that the contract was too indefinite to be enforced is without foundation. There is no element of fatal uncertainty in the commonplace undertaking of an accountant to advise a person with respect to how income taxes might be reduced, and to prepare and state his federal income tax returns. Nor is the agree *362 ment avoided for indefiniteness because of the term that the measure of the accountant’s reward for performance would be a fixed percentage of the amount saved to the taxpayer as a result of the services of the accountant. The promise is made certain by reference to the taxpayer’s return under the federal law. The return affords the data from which the saving, if any, and its amount, will appear in the form contemplated by the contracting parties. Even if the promise should be within its terms uncertain, it is not too indefinite, if made certain, as here, by being made referable to some document or other transaction. Williston on Contracts (2nd Ed.) sec. 47; Alexander v. Capital Paint Co., 136 Md. 658, 668-674, 111 A. 140; Parks v. Griffith & Boyd Co., 123 Md. 233, 242, 243, 91 A. 581; Tidewater Oil Co. v. Spoerer, 145 Md. 151, 159, 125 A. 601. Furthermore, the portion of the agreement that it is argued was originally too indefinite has become definite by entire performance by the plaintiff. Williston on Contracts (2nd Ed.) sec. 49.

During the course of the testimony of the plaintiff, he produced a particular account of the savings effected in income taxes by the sale of securities which had been sold at various times during the period of three years upon the information furnished and advice given to the defendant by the plaintiff, according to the latter’s testimony. The account completely itemized and clearly showed in what manner the course adopted and pursued had resulted in a savings in- taxes of $2,297.36 for the year 1931, of $905.32 for the year 1932, and of $2,131.37 for the year 1933, which made the total savings $5,334.05, on which the fee of ten per centum was to be based.

After the introduction in evidence of this statement, the defendant admitted that the sales specified had been made and that by virtue of these sales the income of the defendant foir income tax purposes had been decreased to the amount of $5,334.05. The admission is a demonstration that neither by its terms nor from extrinsic circumstances is the agreement asserted on the part of the plaintiff incapable of enforcement because of vagueness. *363 Nor, because of the circumstances stated, was the defendant entitled to have its fifth prayer granted, since by it the defendant sought to have the jury instructed that there was no- testimony from which the jury could find the amount the defendant had been able to save in his income taxes by reason of losses sustained on the sales of his securities.

The defendant’s C, D, third and fourth prayers were properly refused. These prayers presented in varying form the hypothesis that if, at the time of their contract, the parties knew that the defendant could effect a reduction in the amount of his income tax by a sale of securities at a loss, and the deduction of the loss from his income, the savings thus effected were neither within the contemplation of the contract as stated by the plaintiff, nor were they causatively procured by the plaintiff. The knowledge of the parties, when they agreed that losses sustained on the sale of securities were lawful allowances in reduction of income, neither defines nor affects the explicit terms of the contract here asserted on the plaintiff’s evidence.

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Bluebook (online)
185 A. 129, 170 Md. 358, 1936 Md. LEXIS 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scarlett-v-young-md-1936.