White v. Reger

618 P.2d 1304, 49 Or. App. 43, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3673
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 3, 1980
DocketA77-04-06089, CA 13830
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 618 P.2d 1304 (White v. Reger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Reger, 618 P.2d 1304, 49 Or. App. 43, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3673 (Or. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

*45 ROBERTS, J.

This is a suit for the balance due under a contract by which plaintiff sold to defendants his interest in an insurance agency partnership. The parties were partners in an insurance agency business in Portland until 1974, when plaintiff retired. In the agreement by which he sold his share of the partnership to defendants, who continued as partners, plaintiff was to receive one-third of the partnership’s annual net profits each year for ten years, each payment to be computed on the basis of net profits earned the previous year. The agreement specified that in no event should the payment be less than $12,200 or more than $15,667. 1 Any amount over $12,200 was to be calculated as a percentage of the profits in excess of $36,600, up to the maximum specified.

Defendants paid the first installment of $15,667 in April of 1976. The partnership of defendants Reger and Arnold was thereafter dissolved on November 30,1976, and no further payments were made to plaintiff. Plaintiff brought this suit in equity based on two causes of action and one cause of suit: one to recover the second installment of $15,667 under the contract, a second cause of action on an implied contract for the entire balance of $141,003, and a third cause of suit seeking a temporary restraining order to restrain disposition of the remaining partnership assets. Defendant Reger answered and raised as an affirmative defense a request that the purchase agreement be reformed to reduce the amount due plaintiff by $9,716.75, alleging this sum, the estimated value of plaintiff’s goodwill in the business, had been mistakenly paid to plaintiff in cash at the time of the sale.

*46 The trial court ordered defendants to pay plaintiff $12,200 per year until 1985, beginning with the 1977 payment, plus 7 percent interest as provided in the agreement for amounts overdue. Defendants were awarded a judgment against plaintiff for the sum of $9,716.75 and the additional sum of $6,252.93, found by the court to be the amount of unauthorized items of expense due from plaintiff to the partnership. 2 The purchase agreement was also reformed by deducting $9,716.75 from the amount due.

Plaintiff appeals from those portions of the decree awarding him only the minimum sum specified in the agreement of purchase, and reforming the purchase agreement. On cross-appeal, defendant Reger seeks a rescission of the contract, claiming failure of consideration for the purchase agreement. 3

In order to determine the scope of our review, we must first consider whether plaintiff’s claim was properly brought as a suit in equity or Whether it is an action at law. Counsel for defendant Reger argued to the court on appeal that this is an action at law for breach of contract. Plaintiff, on the other hand, contends it is a suit in equity because it includes a claim for injunctive relief, and that our review should therefore be de novo.

To decide this threshold issue, a glimmer of illumination may be provided by reviewing the complicated procedural maneuverings of the parties and we digress briefly to do so. Plaintiff sold his share of the partnership to defendants on August 30, 1974. The surviving partnership, that between defendants Reger and Arnold, was dissolved by written agreement on November 30, 1976. The complaint in this action, White v. Reger and Arnold, Multnomah County Circuit Court No. A77-04-06089, was filed on April 27, 1977, as a "Complaint in Equity for Temporary Restraining Order and Recovery of Contract Payment.” It sought injunctive relief to restrain disposition of the partnership assets during the winding up of the affairs between defendants, and the sum of $15,667, which came due under the sales agreement on April 15, 1977. An amended *47 complaint seeking the same relief was filed July 13, 1977. On July 29, 1977, a complaint for dissolution of the partnership, Arnold v. Reger, Multnomah County Circuit Court No. A77-07-10685, was filed.

On April 20,1978, plaintiff White filed, in the suit before us, an amended and supplemental complaint in equity adding a claim for the second payment, calculated to be $13,200, which had become due on April 15, 1978. On June 9, he filed the final "Amended Complaint in Equity for Restraining Order and Recovery of Price,” upon which he proceeded to trial. This sought the $15,667 payment due in 1977, the restraining order, and $141,003, said to be the reasonable value of his one-third share of the original partnership. This new claim was brought on an implied contract theory.

The partnership dissolution case went to trial first, on October 3,1978. On November 30,1978, the case before us, which was then pending, was consolidated with the dissolution case and a second case, Arnold v. Bowes, Mult-nomah County Circuit Court No. A78-11-18600. It was stipulated that evidence already taken in the dissolution could be used in determining the issues between plaintiff White and the defendants in this case. A judgment was entered in this action on March 2, 1979, and a final decree of accounting in the dissolution on August 3,1979. Appeals were taken in both. The appeal from the dissolution was dismissed on December 19, 1979, by stipulation of full settlement and compromise. The appeal in the original case is the one before us.

Plaintiff’s cause of action is not necessarily one in equity merely because he chooses to term it so. It is the role of this court to look at the true nature of the underlying claim and determine on the basis of relief sought, whether the claim is one at law or in equity. Lieuallen Land & Livestock Corp. v. Heidenrich, 259 Or 333, 485 P2d 1230 (1971). We disagree with plaintiff’s contention. The claim for injunctive relief, though contained in the pleadings, was not raised below, and plaintiff concedes this in his abstract of the trial record. Plaintiff’s claim, reduced to its final terms, was on an express contract for a payment due, and on an implied contract for the balance. It is thus an *48 action at law, and we review accordingly. Or Const, Art VII, § 3. ORS 19.125(1). We affirm the trial court’s decree, except as to the reformation of the purchase agreement, which we delete from the decree.

Neither party in this case has contended that the dissolution of the partnership ends the partners’ contractual obligations. See Platt v. Henderson, 227 Or 212, 232-33, 361 P2d 73 (1961), ORS 68.520. The sole issue as to the contract is whether the trial court was correct in determining that, the partnership having been dissolved, only the minimum amount specified in the agreement was due. Where the language of the contract is clear and unambiguous, it is the role of the court to interpret it and declare its effect. Rolfe v. NW Cattle and Resources Inc., 260 Or 590, 491 P2d 195 (1971); Libby Creek Logging Inc. v. Johnson, 225 Or 336, 358 P2d 491 (1961).

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Bluebook (online)
618 P.2d 1304, 49 Or. App. 43, 1980 Ore. App. LEXIS 3673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-reger-orctapp-1980.