Wakefield, Fries & Co. v. Sherman, Clay & Co.

17 P.2d 319, 141 Or. 270, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 228
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 319 (Wakefield, Fries & Co. v. Sherman, Clay & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wakefield, Fries & Co. v. Sherman, Clay & Co., 17 P.2d 319, 141 Or. 270, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 228 (Or. 1932).

Opinions

RAND, J.

This is an action to recover on quantum meruit for services alleged to have been performed by plaintiff as a real estate broker. The cause was tried by the court without a jury and defendant appeals from the judgment. At the close of plaintiff’s testimony, defendant moved for a nonsuit. The motion was denied and the correctness of this ruling is the main question for decision. •

According to plaintiff’s testimony, on February 28, 1929, the defendant, a California corporation, was occupying a building in which it was conducting a store *272 on the corner of Sixth and Morrison streets in the city of Portland under a lease which did not expire until September 2,1932, and which obligated it to pay an annual rental of $50,000, and was desirous of becoming released from its obligations thereunder. To that end, it employed plaintiff to negotiate with the Meier & Frank Company and ascertain the terms under which that company would take over said lease and assume defendant’s obligations thereunder. On said day, A. C. Clausen, one of plaintiff’s agents, was called to the office of the defendant at its said store by P. E. Eobinson, defendant’s northwest manager, and was employed as an agent of plaintiff to enter into such negotiations and secure terms from the Meier & Frank Company. At that meeting, not only Eobinson but P. T. Clay, the president of the defendant company, and Sidney Johnson, its local manager of the Portland store, were present. Plaintiff was informed that whatever action the Meier & Frank Company would agree to would be tentative only and would have to receive the approval of defendant’s board of directors at San Francisco before the same would become binding upon defendant. Clausen thereupon wrote a letter to the Meier & Frank Company and delivered the same personally to the officers of that company,- stating that any agreement reached between the parties would have to be ratified by the board of directors of the defendant company before becoming binding upon the defendant. The Meier & Frank Company then submitted a writing to Clausen, stating the terms upon which it would be willing to enter into a contract to take over said lease and a meeting was thereupon arranged for by Clausen and was on that day held at the offices of the Meier & Frank Company, at which were present the three officers of the defendant company above named and *273 also Clausen and certain officers of the Meier & Frank Company, and at said meeting an agreement was entered into subject to its subsequent ratification by defendant’s board of directors. The agreement was later ratified by defendant’s board of directors and the Meier & Frank Company took possession of the premises and assumed defendant’s obligations under the lease upon the identical terms that had been so agreed upon.

Under these facts, defendant contends that the officers of the defendant company present at the meeting and particularly Eobinson, who spoke for the company and made the contract, had no ex officio authority to employ plaintiff to perform said services and, therefore, the motion for nonsuit should have been sustained.

It is not necessary for us to determine whether the authority of Eobinson, and of the other officers present, to enter into the contract should be inferred from the offices held by them for there is other testimony showing that Eobinson did have full authority to make the contract. This fact is proven by his own: testimony. He was a competent witness to establish that fact. On cross-examination, he testified as follows:

“Q. And your Vice-President, knowing all about this, wrote a letter to Meier & Frank Company, accepting the terms that Mr. Clausen had gotten for you; and that you had had Mr. Clausen change for you, to April 1st; isn’t that a fact? A. Yes. Q. Now, the fact is, Mr. Eobinson, you had authority to ask Mr. Clausen to see Meier & Frank and to see George Joseph and to get that commitment in writing, didn’t you? A. Yes. Q. You did have that authority? A. Yes. Q. But you didn’t have any authority to. pay him anything for it? A. No, because we didn’t close any deal, and it had to be closed in San Francisco, if there was any deal.”

*274 Greenleaf says:

“Where the authority was verbally conferred, the agent himself is a competent witness to prove it; but his declarations, when they are no part of the res gestae, are inadmissible.” 2 Greenleaf on Evidence, (16th Ed.) p. 50.

The same rule is stated in 10 Encyc. of Evidence, pages 14 and 15, as follows:

“Where an agency can be established by parol, the agent is a competent witness to prove it. * * * The testimony of an agent is admissible to establish the extent of his authority. It is also held admissible to show that he had no authority; although the contrary has been held where the facts were sufficient to work an estoppel.”

This being an action at law and not a suit in equity, the finding by the learned trial judge that Robinson did have authority to employ plaintiff to perform the services alleged in the complaint is, by force of section 2-503, Oregon Code 1930, “deemed a verdict,” and since the evidence referred to sustains the finding, it is binding upon this court upon this appeal. Robinson was a hostile witness to plaintiff, and his testimony shows that he had authority to employ plaintiff’s agent Clausen to enter into such negotiations and his testimony does not dispute the fact that the authority existed, whether the results reached through such negotiations were subsequently ratified or not. Having authority to employ Clausen implies the authority to contract to pay for the services performed whether the results obtained were subsequently ratified or not. This renders unnecessary any further discussion of other objections urged in support of defendant’s contention that there was no evidence of authority upon the part of Robinson to enter into the contract.

*275 Plaintiff was permitted, over defendant’s objection, to introduce carbon copies of two letters, the same being plaintiffs exhibits 5 and 6, written by plaintiff to defendant, enclosing a statement of its account for the services rendered and requesting payment of the claim. No answer seems to have been made to either of these letters and defendant contends that the court erred in receiving them in evidence. We think that the objection to their admission should have been sustained as they were merely a demand for payment and, in this case, no demand for payment before suit is necessary to be made. Except under special circumstances, unanswered letters of this character are not admissible for the purpose of showing an admission of liability on the part of the addressee. In Seevers v. Cleveland Coal Co., 158 Iowa 575 (138 N. W. 793, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 188), plaintiff was seeking to secure a judgment for commissions for the sale of coal lands alleged to have been sold at defendant’s request, and for that purpose introduced in evidence unanswered letters addressed to defendant. The court, in holding that the letters were not admissible, said :

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 319, 141 Or. 270, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wakefield-fries-co-v-sherman-clay-co-or-1932.