BROWN, J.
This suit arises from an attempt to revoke an agency contract. D. H. Sphier, plaintiff herein, is an aged Armenian, a fellow countryman and a fellow church member of defendant John Michael, and, previous to the time the suit was brought, his intimate friend. Neither can read or write the English language, but Michael is a merchant, a banker for His countrymen, and has accumulated much wealth. The whole of plaintiff’s property is represented by the structure that bears his name and the lot on which it stands.
Michael testified that he entered into the contract with Sphier which forms the basis of this suit largely as a matter of sympathy; but the evidence discloses that when he was offered the return of all the money which he had put into the property, together with interest thereon, and his expenses, he refused to accept the same, claiming, in effect, as he had a right to claim, that the Bend property represented an investment and was not a donation to charity.
[301]*301The agency contract involved in this litigation constituted the plaintiff’s means of livelihood, and was based upon a valuable consideration paid by Sphier to Michael. For value, a part of which was the agency contract, plaintiff transferred to Michael the legal title to the Sphier block in the City of Bend, which constitutes the subject matter of that agency, but retained the equitable ownership of an undivided one-half interest in the property, and has a greater amount of money invested therein than has Michael.
From the evidence adduced upon the trial, the court found, in substance, that on and prior to February 5, 1920, the plaintiff was the owner of real property situate in Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, described as Lot 7, Block 10, and commpnly known as the Sphier block; that the value of the property at all times mentioned herein was $35,000; that on November 5, 1920, plaintiff, being indebted to divers persons, and particularly to the Western Loan & Building Company, set about to obtain the sum of about $20,000. The plaintiff negotiated a loan of $10,000 from the Title & Trust Company of Portland, Oregon, and arranged with defendant John Michael for an additional $10,000. In procuring the loans, it was agreed, owing to possible domestic difficulties between Sphier and his wife, that he should convey, and he did convey, the legal title to the Sphier block to the defendant John Michael, who agreed that he would invest, and who did invest, the sum of $5,000 in the property. In addition, Michael also procured from his brother, Peter Michael, a further loan of $5,000 on the property, secured by a second mortgage thereon.
It was agreed between defendant John Michael and plaintiff Sphier that as soon as the mortgages were paid out of the income from the property, [302]*302Michael was to reconvey to Sphier an undivided one-half interest in Lot 7, and that in the meantime Sphier was to have the management thereof, collect rents, pay the expenses of operation from the rents, and remit the net income monthly to John Michael, who agreed to pay the moneys to the holders of the mortgages in satisfaction of the accruing interest and the principal sums, when due. By reason of Sphier’s domestic infelicity, this agreement was reduced to writing in two separate instruments, a written contract embracing all the terms thereof except as to the appointment of D. H. Sphier as agent in the management of the property being embodied in one instrument, and that portion of the agreement evidencing the appointment of Sphier as agent, in another and distinct instrument. These contracts were offered and received in evidence.
It appears that on February 5, 1920, at Portland, Oregon, the plaintiff delivered the deed executed by himself and wife to John Michael, one of the defendants herein, who then and there delivered to plaintiff Sphier the contract hereinbefore referred to, which provided that the commission for handling the property should be deducted from the gross earnings thereof; and, at that time, and as a part of the same transaction, and contemporaneously therewith, and for a valuable consideration, D. H. Sphier, plaintiff, was appointed by Michael as agent and placed in charge of the property, said appointment reading as follows:
••“Mr. D. H. Sphier,
“Portland, Oregon.
_“Dear Sir:
“You are hereby authorized, as my agent, to collect the rents on the Sphier block, Bend, Oregon, [303]*303and to rent said property from time to time, for which, service to be rendered by you I agree to pay you ten per cent of the gross receipts.
“You are also instructed to remit to me the balance of the rents collected by you on the 10th of each month, after you have paid the current running expenses of said building and deducted your commission of ten per cent.
“Very sincerely yours,
“John Michael.”
It also appears that as a part of the same transaction John Michael executed and delivered to the Title & Trust Company a note for $10,000, secured by a mortgage on the Sphier block, and to Peter Michael a note for $5,000, secured by a mortgage on the same property; further, that he supplied the further sum of $5,000, all of which sums of money were used for the purpose of discharging the debts and liens outstanding against the Sphier block.
After John Michael obtained title to the property, he became dissatisfied with Sphier and undertook to appoint and place in charge of the building for the collection of rents, the defendant J. P. Arnold, to whom he paid five per cent of the gross receipts instead of ten per cent which he had agreed to pay to plaintiff Sphier. The court found that the employment of Arnold as agent, for the purpose of collecting the rent and managing the Sphier block, was without authority and in violation of John Michael’s contract of agency with D. H. Sphier, but that the interest of all the parties in the Sphier block had been conserved by Arnold’s management, “Which should be commended, and not criticised,” and that the five per cent paid to Arnold should be charged as an operating expense in the management of the property.
[304]*304The evidence fails to disclose any valid reason for the revocation of Sphier’s agency contract. Further, Sphier never, at any time, consented to the appointment of Arnold as agent for the property, neither did he ever consent that his contract should be revoked.
Based upon their evidence, defendants invoke the doctrine that the contract of agency existing between the parties was terminable at will.
As a general rule, a principal is entitled to revoke the authority of his agent at any time, whenever there is no agreement, express or implied, between them as to its duration.
In Llanelly etc. Ry. Co. v. London etc. Ry. Co., 8 L. R. Ch. 942 (7 L. R. H. L. 550), Lord Justice James, in delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“I start with this proposition, that prima fade every contract is permanent and irrevocable, and that it lies upon a person who says that it is revocable or determinable to show either some expression in the contract itself, or something in the nature of the contract, from which it is reasonable to be implied that it was not intended to .be permanent and perpetual, but was to be in some way or other subject to determination.
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BROWN, J.
This suit arises from an attempt to revoke an agency contract. D. H. Sphier, plaintiff herein, is an aged Armenian, a fellow countryman and a fellow church member of defendant John Michael, and, previous to the time the suit was brought, his intimate friend. Neither can read or write the English language, but Michael is a merchant, a banker for His countrymen, and has accumulated much wealth. The whole of plaintiff’s property is represented by the structure that bears his name and the lot on which it stands.
Michael testified that he entered into the contract with Sphier which forms the basis of this suit largely as a matter of sympathy; but the evidence discloses that when he was offered the return of all the money which he had put into the property, together with interest thereon, and his expenses, he refused to accept the same, claiming, in effect, as he had a right to claim, that the Bend property represented an investment and was not a donation to charity.
[301]*301The agency contract involved in this litigation constituted the plaintiff’s means of livelihood, and was based upon a valuable consideration paid by Sphier to Michael. For value, a part of which was the agency contract, plaintiff transferred to Michael the legal title to the Sphier block in the City of Bend, which constitutes the subject matter of that agency, but retained the equitable ownership of an undivided one-half interest in the property, and has a greater amount of money invested therein than has Michael.
From the evidence adduced upon the trial, the court found, in substance, that on and prior to February 5, 1920, the plaintiff was the owner of real property situate in Bend, Deschutes County, Oregon, described as Lot 7, Block 10, and commpnly known as the Sphier block; that the value of the property at all times mentioned herein was $35,000; that on November 5, 1920, plaintiff, being indebted to divers persons, and particularly to the Western Loan & Building Company, set about to obtain the sum of about $20,000. The plaintiff negotiated a loan of $10,000 from the Title & Trust Company of Portland, Oregon, and arranged with defendant John Michael for an additional $10,000. In procuring the loans, it was agreed, owing to possible domestic difficulties between Sphier and his wife, that he should convey, and he did convey, the legal title to the Sphier block to the defendant John Michael, who agreed that he would invest, and who did invest, the sum of $5,000 in the property. In addition, Michael also procured from his brother, Peter Michael, a further loan of $5,000 on the property, secured by a second mortgage thereon.
It was agreed between defendant John Michael and plaintiff Sphier that as soon as the mortgages were paid out of the income from the property, [302]*302Michael was to reconvey to Sphier an undivided one-half interest in Lot 7, and that in the meantime Sphier was to have the management thereof, collect rents, pay the expenses of operation from the rents, and remit the net income monthly to John Michael, who agreed to pay the moneys to the holders of the mortgages in satisfaction of the accruing interest and the principal sums, when due. By reason of Sphier’s domestic infelicity, this agreement was reduced to writing in two separate instruments, a written contract embracing all the terms thereof except as to the appointment of D. H. Sphier as agent in the management of the property being embodied in one instrument, and that portion of the agreement evidencing the appointment of Sphier as agent, in another and distinct instrument. These contracts were offered and received in evidence.
It appears that on February 5, 1920, at Portland, Oregon, the plaintiff delivered the deed executed by himself and wife to John Michael, one of the defendants herein, who then and there delivered to plaintiff Sphier the contract hereinbefore referred to, which provided that the commission for handling the property should be deducted from the gross earnings thereof; and, at that time, and as a part of the same transaction, and contemporaneously therewith, and for a valuable consideration, D. H. Sphier, plaintiff, was appointed by Michael as agent and placed in charge of the property, said appointment reading as follows:
••“Mr. D. H. Sphier,
“Portland, Oregon.
_“Dear Sir:
“You are hereby authorized, as my agent, to collect the rents on the Sphier block, Bend, Oregon, [303]*303and to rent said property from time to time, for which, service to be rendered by you I agree to pay you ten per cent of the gross receipts.
“You are also instructed to remit to me the balance of the rents collected by you on the 10th of each month, after you have paid the current running expenses of said building and deducted your commission of ten per cent.
“Very sincerely yours,
“John Michael.”
It also appears that as a part of the same transaction John Michael executed and delivered to the Title & Trust Company a note for $10,000, secured by a mortgage on the Sphier block, and to Peter Michael a note for $5,000, secured by a mortgage on the same property; further, that he supplied the further sum of $5,000, all of which sums of money were used for the purpose of discharging the debts and liens outstanding against the Sphier block.
After John Michael obtained title to the property, he became dissatisfied with Sphier and undertook to appoint and place in charge of the building for the collection of rents, the defendant J. P. Arnold, to whom he paid five per cent of the gross receipts instead of ten per cent which he had agreed to pay to plaintiff Sphier. The court found that the employment of Arnold as agent, for the purpose of collecting the rent and managing the Sphier block, was without authority and in violation of John Michael’s contract of agency with D. H. Sphier, but that the interest of all the parties in the Sphier block had been conserved by Arnold’s management, “Which should be commended, and not criticised,” and that the five per cent paid to Arnold should be charged as an operating expense in the management of the property.
[304]*304The evidence fails to disclose any valid reason for the revocation of Sphier’s agency contract. Further, Sphier never, at any time, consented to the appointment of Arnold as agent for the property, neither did he ever consent that his contract should be revoked.
Based upon their evidence, defendants invoke the doctrine that the contract of agency existing between the parties was terminable at will.
As a general rule, a principal is entitled to revoke the authority of his agent at any time, whenever there is no agreement, express or implied, between them as to its duration.
In Llanelly etc. Ry. Co. v. London etc. Ry. Co., 8 L. R. Ch. 942 (7 L. R. H. L. 550), Lord Justice James, in delivering the opinion of the court, said:
“I start with this proposition, that prima fade every contract is permanent and irrevocable, and that it lies upon a person who says that it is revocable or determinable to show either some expression in the contract itself, or something in the nature of the contract, from which it is reasonable to be implied that it was not intended to .be permanent and perpetual, but was to be in some way or other subject to determination. No doubt there are a great many contracts of that kind; a contract of partnership, a contract of employer and employed in various modes —all of these are instances of contracts in which, from the nature of the case, we are obliged to consider that they were intended to be determinable. All the contracts, however, in which this has been held are, as far as I know, contracts which involve more or less of trust -and confidence, more or less of delegation of authority, more or less of the necessity of being mutually satisfied with each other’s conduct, more or less of personal relations between the parties.”
[305]*305We have seen that the agency contract was entered into for a valuable consideration, and that the agent owns an interest in the property constituting the subject matter of the agency. Under the facts, the following is a correct statement of the law.
“Where a,n authority or power is given for a valuable consideration, it may not lawfully be revoked by act of the principal alone, in the absence of a stipulation that it shall be revocable, and this is true, although the authority is not expressed to be irrevocable.” 2 C. J. 535.
As coming within the exception of the general rule relating to the determination of an agency contract, the following is in point:
“The most important exception to the general rule above stated that an agency is revocable at the pleasure of the principal, exists in the case of a power of attorney, coupled with an interest in the subject matter thereof. In the absence of a .stipulation that the power may be revoked, it is, from its nature, irrevocable by act of the principal without the agent’s consent, whether so expressed or not. To bring a case within the exception it is necessary: (1) That the power and the interest should be coupled or united in point of time; that‘they should coexist. Hence, the interest must exist in the subject matter of the power, and not merely in that which is produced by an exercise of the power. * * (2) That the power and the interest should be coupled with reference to their subject matter. They must exist with reference to the same thing. For this reason also it is necessary that the agent’s interest should exist in the subject matter of the power, and not merely in that which is produced by an exercise of the power. (3) That the power and the interest should be coupled with reference to the person in whom they are vested. They must be united in the [306]*306same person. And (4) that the power and the interest should be coupled with reference to their source. They must be derived by the agent from the same person.” 31 Cyc. 1297, 1300.
See, also, Hunt v. Rousmainer, 8 Wheat. (U. S.) 174 (5 L. Ed. 589, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes); Frederick’s Appeal, 52 Pa. 338, 342 (91 Am. Dec. 162); Louque v. Dejan, 129 La. 519 (38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 389, 56 South. 427); Todd v. Superior Court, 181 Cal. 406 (184 Pac. 684, 7 A. L. R. 938).
However, the plaintiff has mistaken his remedy. An action for damages is the remedy for the breaching of the foregoing contract.
“In a leading case before the United States Court of Appeals, it was said by Mr. Justice Harlan : ‘The rule, we think, is without exception that equity will not compel the actual, affirmative performance by an employee of merely personal services, any more than it will compel an employer to retain in his personal service one who, no matter for what cause, is not acceptable to him for service of that character. * * If the quitting in the one case, or the discharging in the other, is in violation of the contract between the parties, the one injured by the breach has his action for damages; and a court of equity will not, indirectly or negatively, by means .of an injunction restraining the violation of the contract, compel the affirmative performance from day to day or the affirmative acceptance of merely personal services. Eelief of that sort has always been regarded as impracticable.’ ” 1 Mechem on Agency (2 ed.), § 642.
The record in this case shows that defendant John Michael is amply able to respond in any judgment of damages that plaintiff may recover on account of the breach of the agency contract.
It is said in 3 Williston on Contracts, at Section 1317:
[307]*307“The plaintiff is entitled” to damages which will compensate him for all the consequences which naturally follow the breach, and therefore the damages for the loss of the entire contract. This is no different principle from allowing a plaintiff in an action of tort for personal injuries to recover the damages he will probably suffer in the future. If the cause of action has accrued, the fact that the damages or all of them have not yet been suffered is no bar in any form of action to the recovery of damages estimated on the basis of full compensation.”
As bearing upon plaintiff’s right to recover on account of the breach of his agency contract, the following authorities are in point: Schell v. Plumb, 55 N. Y. 592; Schiffan v. Peerless Motor Car Co., 13 Cal. App. 600 (110 Pac. 460); United, States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bidge (Mo. App.), 179 S. W. 791; Bredemier v. Pacific Supply Co., 64 Or. 576 (131 Pac. 312); Pierce v. Tennessee Coal Co., 173 U. S. 1 (43 L. Ed. 591, 19 Sup. Ct. Rep. 335, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes); Wakeman v. Mfg. Co., 101 N. Y. 205 (4 N. E. 264, 54 Am. Rep. 676); Wallace v. American Life Ins. Co. (Or.), 225 Pac. 192.
This case is reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion, neither party to recover costs in this court.
Reversed and Remanded.
McBride, O. J., and Bean and McCourt, JJ., concur.
Former opinion modified on rehearing October 14, 1924.