Treat v. Ogden

132 P.2d 493, 56 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 172
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1942
DocketCiv. 12158
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 493 (Treat v. Ogden) 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
Treat v. Ogden, 132 P.2d 493, 56 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 172 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

BRAT, J. pro tem.

Appeals by both parties from the decree of accounting in a partnership dissolution, the plaintiff appealing from the entire decree, as well as from parts of it, the defendant appealing from portions of the decree.

The case concerns the division of fees of a partnership for the practice of law. The partnership arrangement between the parties up to the year 1930 is undisputed. As to the arrangement thereafter the parties are diametrically opposed. The partnership commenced July 26, 1927, under a written agreement between the plaintiff Treat and the defendant Ogden. The partnership agreement provided that the partnership should continue until the expiration of the lease from the Standard Oil Company of the partnership offices. This lease expired December 21, 1929, but the partnership *74 continued without any further writing or formal action of the parties until April 15, 1938.

At the time of the formation of the partnership, both plaintiff and defendant were practicing lawyers of many years’ experience. Under the written agreement, plaintiff was to receive 58 per cent of the net earnings and defendant was to receive 42 per cent thereof. On June 15, 1930, plaintiff Treat was severely injured by being struck by a golf ball. This incapacitated him so that for some time he was unable to carry on the practice of the law, and the burden of the entire practice fell on his partner, the defendant. Because of this fact, shortly after the injury, an oral agreement was made between the parties that thereafter the fees would be equal instead of in the proportion set forth in the written agreement, which proportion was still being followed although the term set forth in the written agreement had really expired about a year before. The recovery of plaintiff from the accident was gradual and it was some considerable time before plaintiff was able to devote his entire time to the law practice.

At this point the parties diverge. Plaintiff contends that this oral agreement that the fees should be divided equally thereafter was never changed; defendant contends and the court found, that by subsequent oral agreements it was changed. The appeals by both parties are really a series of appeals. It is simpler and clearer to discuss, one by one, the items in the decree objected to by each party.

Plaintiff first contends that the court erred in applying any basis of division except that set forth in the written agreement, even though he admits that the parties did agree to the fifty-fifty basis after his injury. He contends that, as a matter of law, such oral agreement is an attempt to vary the terms of a written instrument by parol, and that such agreement is only binding as to fees which the parties themselves divided that way and which are not in controversy here, and which amounted to an executed oral contract. In other words, plaintiff contends that all fees received by the partnership and not accounted for to each partner must be divided in accordance with the written agreement because any oral unexecuted agreement for their division would be void, under Civil Code, section 1698.

This contention, however, ignores the fact that the writ *75 ten agreement had really terminated, or at least, the provision concerning the length of the partnership no longer applied. The term of the partnership set forth in the writing had expired, and the parties were really operating under an oral agreement to continue the partnership on the terms set forth in the agreement.

The parties did not actually make an agreement in so many words to continue on, after the lease expired, but they did continue on, and the effect is the same as an oral agreement to extend the written agreement. Civil Code, section 2417, states: “When a partnership for a fixed term or particular undertaking is continued after the termination of such term or particular undertaking without any express agreement, the rights and duties of the partners remain the same as they were at such termination, so far as is consistent with a partnership at will. (2) A continuation of the business by the partners or such of them as habitually acted therein during the term, without any settlement or liquidation of the partnership affairs, is prima facie evidence of a continuation of the partnership.” “So far as consistent with a partnership at will” necessarily requires the right to modify the terms of the agreement, and as the writing itself was no longer the measure of the life of the partnership, the same method that was used to extend that life, an oral agreement, must necessarily be the method for changing any other term of the agreement. Section 2417, Civil Code, provides in effect that under the circumstances here the parties were partners at will. Both parties agree that after plaintiff’s injury in June, 1930, they agreed that the division thereafter should be equal between them, although now plaintiff contends that such agreement was illegal. The written agreement continued in effect by the equivalent of an oral agreement so to do, by reason of the application of section 2417, Civil Code, did not provide for any definite period the partnership was to continue on. Therefore, the oral agreement in 1930 could be construed to be a termination of the old agreement and the entering into of a new one, although it is not necessary to hold that the written agreement terminated. It is probably a better construction of the situation to hold that the old agreement was continued in effect by the conduct of the parties in treating it as such. Both parties treated the agreement as *76 still in effect as to practically all its terms, except those as to divisions of fees. In any event, the oral agreement was binding on the parties, and the court was justified in so finding. Therefore, the division of the fees made by the court from June, 1930, until the time when the court found that the basis of division was again changed by an oral agreement is correct.

In his brief, plaintiff makes some reference to the necessity of consideration for any change in the basis of division of fees. It is not clear whether plaintiff claims that in this case there was no consideration for such change. Certainly the incapacity of plaintiff and the fact that defendant had to perform all the work of the partnership for a while and thereafter most of the work for a very long period, were consideration enough for the changes of the division basis. While in the absence of an express agreement a partner who performs all the work of the partnership during the illness of his partner is not entitled to compensation or an extra share, still, the fact that he will have to perform such extra services is sufficient consideration for the making of an agreement to compensate him therefor.

The Medical Center Properties, Inc. Note.

The first specific item objected to by plaintiff centers around a promissory note of the Medical Center Properties, Inc., which corporation will hereinafter be referred to as the Medical Center. Besides the firm acting as attorneys for this corporation, defendant was a director and also its secretary. Plaintiff was its stock transfer agent. Commencing with August, 1931, defendant received as secretary a salary of $30 per month from the Medical Center. January 1, 1935, this salary was increased to $50 per month, and on January 1, 1936, it was increased to $100 per month.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

McKeon v. Giusto
280 P.2d 782 (California Supreme Court, 1955)
Treat v. Ogden
148 P.2d 417 (California Court of Appeal, 1944)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 493, 56 Cal. App. 2d 70, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/treat-v-ogden-calctapp-1942.