Sunset Pacific Oil Co. v. Clark

17 P.2d 879, 171 Wash. 165, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 519
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1933
DocketNo. 24201. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 879 (Sunset Pacific Oil Co. v. Clark) 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
Sunset Pacific Oil Co. v. Clark, 17 P.2d 879, 171 Wash. 165, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 519 (Wash. 1933).

Opinion

Steinert, J.

This action was instituted by Sunset Pacific Oil Company against C. A. Clark and wife to recover a balance' of $5,955.95 alleged to be due on an account growing out of the sale and delivery of gasoline and other petroleum products by plaintiff to defendant Clark. The complaint alleged a sale and delivery of goods, wares and merchandise according to a detailed statement of account thereto attached as an exhibit, which also itemized the payments made thereon.

The answer admitted the sale and delivery of the goods, but denied that the exhibit was a true and accurate account of the transactions between the parties, or that there was anything due or owing to the plaintiff from the defendants. By an accompanying and included cross-complaint, the defendants pleaded five causes of action, the first of which was also made an affirmative defense, against the plaintiff. In the first cause of action, it was alleged that, on February 3, 1930, plaintiff and defendant C. A. Clark entered into a written contract, a copy of which was made a part of the pleading by reference, wherein said defendant became the exclusive sales agent for plaintiff’s products in Lewis county for a period of five years, which, by supplemental agreement, was extended for an additional period of five years. The contract was comprehensive in its terms and conditions, and was explicit as to the prices to be paid by the defendant for the gasoline and other petroleum products supplied by plaintiff.

*167 It was further alleged in the cross-complaint that, before either of the parties had entered upon the performance of the contract, it was modified by an oral agreement in which defendant agreed to purchase additional equipment for the expansion and promotion of the business, to the mutual interest of the parties, and that, in consideration therefor, plaintiff agreed to allow defendant certain reductions in the price of gasoline sold and distributed by him; that defendant performed his part of the agreement, as modified, but that plaintiff refused to give defendant credit for the reductions in price, considered as additional commissions, amounting to $6,889.50, and further refused to render any accounting therefor upon defendant’s repeated demands.

The second cause of action alleged a further oral modification of the written contract, in that plaintiff agreed that, if defendant would secure a certain other valuable retail gasoline agency in Lewis county, he would be allowed an additional reduction in price on all gasoline sold by defendant to such agency; that defendant performed his part of such agreement, and was, by reason thereof, entitled to a further credit, or commission, amounting to $476, which plaintiff refused to allow. The third cause of action alleged an over-charge of $882.35 upon certain shipments of gasoline between specific dates mentioned. The .fourth cause of action alleged that there was due the defendant, upon various credit memoranda, gas coupons and freight invoices, the sum of $1,329.90. The fifth cause of action sought the recovery of damages from plaintiff in the sum of $105,000 for breach of contract by plaintiff and its refusal to further supply defendant with its gasoline and other petroleum products.

The reply admitted the execution of the written *168 contract, but denied tbe other allegations of the cross-complaint. The reply further alleged that plaintiff cancelled the written contract because defendant had failed and refused to make payments thereunder as agreed. By a supplemental complaint, plaintiff sought to increase the amount of its recovery from $5,955.95 to $7,114.15, on account of a gasoline tax imposed by the state of "Washington, which, it was alleged, the defendant had agreed to pay.

Issues having been joined, the cause was tried before the court without a jury, resulting in a judgment for plaintiff in the full amount prayed for and dismissing the cross-complaint. Defendants have appealed.

The appellants’ first assignment of error is to the court’s refusal to allow a trial by jury. After the answer and cross-complaint had been filed, appellants made the statutory demand for a jury trial. Despondent subsequently moved for a trial before the court without, a jury. Argument having been had upon the demand and motion, the court filed a memorandum decision stating that it was apparent, under the pleadings, that an accounting was being sought. An order granting respondent’s motion for trial without a jury was accordingly entered, to which appellants excepted.

In determining the nature of an action, the court looks to the entire pleadings. Lindley v. McGlauflin, 57 Wash. 581, 107 Pac. 355; Reed v. Reeves, 160 Wash. 282, 294 Pac. 995. When the trial court passed upon the demand and motion, it had before it only the pleadings, and, finding that the action was one of equitable cognizance, an accounting being suggested, it was not error to deny a jury trial. Santmeyer v. Clemmancs, 147 Wash. 354, 266 Pac. 148.

*169 Appellants contend that, upon the trial, the issues were so limited by admissions and stipulations as to make the case purely a law action. But no further demand for a jury trial was made by them at that time. An examination of the record and an inspection of the many hundreds of written documents, including invoices, credit memoranda and journal entries, convinces us that whatever question there may originally have been as to the equitable cognizance of the action, was wholly removed by what was made to appear upon the trial. Peabody v. Pioneer Sand & Gravel Co., 164 Wash. 26, 2 P. (2d) 714.

Appellants’ next assignment of error is based upon the refusal of the court to permit the introduction of evidence touching the alleged oral modifications of the written contract. Appellants made a lengthy offer of proof in support of their pleading. The offer was refused by the court.

The written contract between the parties, with its extension, was, by its terms, to cover a period of ten years. It was, therefore, within the statute, in that it was not to be performed in one year. Rem. Rev. Stat., § 5825. Appellants contend, however, that there was a substantial performance by them of the terms of the modified agreement and an acceptance by the respondent of the services and performance rendered and made by the appellants, sufficient to take the case out of the statute.

Many cases are cited by appellants in support of their contention, the principal one of which is Gerard-Fillio Co. v. McNair, 68 Wash. 321, 123 Pac. 462. In that case, the rule was laid down, and has since been consistently followed, that an executed oral agreement to modify or abrogate a written contract required by statute to be in writing, or the performance or the substantial part performance of such oral agreement, *170 may be successfully pleaded as a defense to an action on the written contract. To hold otherwise, it was said therein, would make the statute itself an instrument of fraud.

All of the cases cited by counsel, however, arose either out of a different section of the statute of frauds or else out of a clause of that section different from the one involved in the present action.

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Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 879, 171 Wash. 165, 1933 Wash. LEXIS 519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sunset-pacific-oil-co-v-clark-wash-1933.