Court Opinion

ID: 4722936
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:37:54.337164+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:42.746336
License: Public Domain

Parker, J.
The plaintiff, Levold, commenced this action in the superior court for King county, seeking recovery upon an alleged commission contract, which he claims is a contract in writing, entered into by him with defendant, Pederson, in November, 1917. The cause comes to this court upon the appeal of Levold from a final judgment rendered against him by the superior court, after the sustaining of Pederson’s demurrer to Levold’s second amended complaint, upon the ground that the action has not been commenced within the time limited by law; Levold having failed to plead further. Our problem is as to whether or not the writing relied upon constitutes a contract in writing; it being conceded that, viewed as an oral contract, this action thereon is barred by our three-year statute of limitations; while viewed as an enforcible contract in writing, this action has been commenced within the six-year period, as prescribed by our statute of limitations relating to the commencement of actions upon contracts in writing.
The allegations of Levold’s second amended complaint may be summarized as follows: Prior to November 5,1917, Levold and Pederson had conversations looking to Levold securing for Pederson a shipbuilding contract from one Pichot, who is also referred to as the French Syndicate. They orally arrived at an understanding that Levold was to secure for Pederson a contract from the French Syndicate for the building by Pederson of eight wooden ships for a compensation of $305,000 each, Pederson to pay to Levold, as a commission for the securing of such contract, five per cent *382of the total contract price. Levold stated to Pederson that he would not proceed with the negotiations until he had a promise from Pederson in writing that he would pay such commission, and also agree in writing to furnish a financial guarantee in the sum of $250,000 in the event the contract was secured. Pederson then wrote and caused to he delivered to Levold a letter as follows:
“Mr. J. C. Levold, Seattle, Nov. 5th, 1917.
“Dear Sir: In regard to your statement that you will award me a contract to build eight vessels for the French Syndicate at a price of $305,000 each, less 5% com., will say that I can furnish a financial guarantee to do this work, providing I am assured that I will get the work in question upon showing you such a guarantee in the amount of $250,000. Yours truly,
(Signed) “Hans Pederson.”
Levold then proceeded with negotiations for the securing of the shipbuilding contract from the French Syndicate. "While such negotiations were proceeding, Pederson wrote and caused to be delivered to Levold a second letter as follows:
‘ ‘ Mr. J. C. Levold: Seattle, Nov. 12 -17.
“I hereby authorize you to state that I have secured my bond to guarantee that I will build the ships for the interests represented by Mr. Robert Pichot. Yours truly, (Signed) Hans Pederson.”
Thereafter, on February 27, 1918, as the result of the efforts of Levold, a formal contract was entered into between Pederson and the French Syndicate, by which Pederson agreed to build eight wooden vessels for the French Syndicate for an agreed compensation therefpr of $305,000 each. Following allegations of facts, the substance of which are above summarized, Levold concluded his second amended complaint by alleging that there was due from Pederson to him the *383sum of $122,000, being five per cent commission on the total shipbuilding construction price of $2,440,000, with interest from February 27, 1918, tbe date of the shipbuilding construction contract, claimed as the date of the accrual of Levold’s cause of action against Pederson, and prayed for recovery accordingly.
Counsel for Levold have ingeniously drawn to his aid facts surrounding the making of this alleged contract and have presented what would be a persuasive argument in support of a contention that there was in fact a commission contract entered into between Levold and Pederson; but that falls far short of being our problem. The question here is, do the allegations of the second amended complaint show the making of a contract in writing 1 If not, then Levold’s cause of action is barred by the three-year statute of limitations, however conclusively the allegations of the complaint may show the making of an oral contract between Levold and Pederson. Now we have no writing of any nature whatever made or signed by either Levold or Pederson other than the two letters of November 5th and 12th, 1917, which are above quoted in full. The first letter may be divided into two parts, connected with the words “will say that”; first, the statement by Pederson referring to a previous purported statement made by Levold, to wit:
“In regard to your statement that you will award me a contract to build eight vessels for the French Syndicate at a price of $305,000 each less 5% com.”;
and second, a statement by Pederson with reference to the first statement in the letter, to wit:
“I can furnish a financial guarantee to do this work providing I am assured that I will get the work in question upon showing you such a guarantee in the amount of $250,000.”
*384We look in vain in this letter for the making by its terms of any promise by Pederson to do anything. This letter might be some evidence to aid in showing an oral commission contract to have been made of the nature claimed by Levold, but does not constitute any such contract. It merely refers to a previous purported statement of Levold preliminary to saying to him, “I can furnish a financial guarantee, etc.”
The second letter is equally devoid of any promise from Pederson to Levold to do anything. It merely informs Levold that Pederson has “secured my bond to guarantee that I will build the ships.” This second letter has to do only with the prospective consummation of a construction contract between Pederson and the French Syndicate. Like the first letter, it might be some evidence to aid in showing an oral commission contract of the nature claimed by Levold, but it does not constitute any part of such a contract. In other words, it at most may be some evidence of what had been done by Pederson in pursuance of some previous contract entered into. It seems to us that, since these letters are wholly devoid of any promise on the part of Pederson to do anything, the most essential element of contract is absent therefrom, and that they do not therefore constitute a contract in writing.
It seems to us that the law, as announced by this court in Cushing v. Monarch Timber Co., 75 Wash. 678, 135 Pac. 660, Ann. Cas. 1914C 1239, in harmony with our previous decisions, is conclusive as against the contentions here made in behalf of Levold that the contract sued upon by him is a contract in writing. In that case, there was involved an alleged contract of -employment of an agent to sell real estate upon which he was seeking compensation by way of a commission. Such a contract, by § 5825, Bern. Comp. Stat. [P. C. *385§ 7745], is required to be iu writing to be enforcible, so the question was as to whether or not the alleged contract was a contract in writing. Holding that the contract sued' upon was not one in writing, Judge Ellis, speaking for the court, made the following very pertinent observations:
“By an unbroken line of decisions we have held that, to meet this statute, the writing evidencing the agreement must be so complete in itself as to make a resort to parol evidence to establish any material element of the agreement unnecessary. The rule deduced from prior decisions and tersely expressed in Engleson v. Port Crescent Shingle Co., 74 Wash. 424, 133 Pac. 1030, is that:
“ ‘ A writing sufficient to satisfy the statute must be coextensive with the stipulations of the parties; that is to say, it must express the entire contract and leave nothing that pertains to the essentials of the contract to be supplied by parol. *
“The following decisions amply sustain that statement in all of its breadth. We cannot look beyond the writing itself to fix the liability. Swartswood v. Naslin, 57 Wash. 287, 106 Pac. 770; Keith v. Smith, 46 Wash. 131, 89 Pac. 473; Foote v. Bobbins, 50 Wash. 277, 97 Pac. 103; Forland v. Boyum, 53 Wash. 421, 102 Pac. 34; McCrea v. Ogden, 54 Wash. 521, 103 Pac. 788; Crouch v. Forbes, 63 Wash. 564, 116 Pac. 14.
“. . . the employment, the description of the real estate and the agreement to pay the commission are all essentials to any writing meeting the terms of the statute.”
In that particular case, and in some of the others cited in the above quotation, the contract was held not to be in writing in all its essential particulars because not-describing the land which the agent claimed to have been authorized to sell. In some other of the cases ' cited in the above quoted language, the contract upon which the agent sought recovery of commission was *386held not to he in writing because not containing any express promise to pay the claimed compensation or commission, though containing authorization to the agent to sell. Manifestly, a promise clearly obligating a contracting party is of the very essence of a contract, and when such promise is not expressed in the writing, plainly one of its most important essentials is wanting. This, as we view these two letters, is wherein they fall short of constituting a contract in writing.
Counsel for appellant rely principally upon the early decision of this court in Strong v. Eldridge, 8 Wash. 595, 36 Pac. 696, in which there was involved the question of whether or not a written signed subscription in these words, “I agree to subscribe $1,500 towards getting the foundry at Fairhaven,” constituted a binding obligation. It was there held that the acceptance of such subscription and the expenditure of substantial sums in the construction of the contemplated foundry by those for whose benefit the subscription was given, resulted in maldng such subscription a binding obligation upon the signer of it. The question of whether or not this was a complete contract in writing seems not to have been considered. However, if the court assumed it to be such, it manifestly did so upon the theory that the subscription, by its very terms, constituted an express promise signed by the party to be bound. We think the decision in that case is not controlling here.
In Levold’s original complaint filed in this action, he alleged the writing of a letter from Pichot to Pederson following the writing of the letter of November 5th from Pederson to Levold, reading as follows:
“Seattle, Wash., November 5, 1917.
“Mr. Hans Pederson,
“Alaska Building, Seattle, Wash.
“Dear Sir: Confirming my letter of this day, I beg *387to state that it is agreeable to me that you pay Mr. J. C. Levold five per cent of commission for his intervention in this contract of building the eight wooden schooners, this also being in conformity with your mutual agreement as per the letter from you to Mr. Levold which was communicated to me this morning. Yours very truly, (Signed) Robert Pichot.”
The allegation of the writing of this letter was, upon motion of counsel for Pederson, stricken from the original complaint by the superior court. This is claimed by counsel for Levold to have been error; his theory evidently being that this letter was a part of the writing constituting the alleged commission contract sued upon. Levold was, by this ruling of the court, in effect prevented from setting up this letter in his second amended complaint in connection with the two letters from Pederson to him. "We are of the opinion that the trial court did not err to the prejudice of Levold by striking this letter from the original complaint. It was not written or signed by either Levold or Pederson and could in no sense constitute any part of a written contract between them. “Whether or not it would be admissible in evidence to aid Levold in proving an oral commission contract between him and Pederson is quite another question, but one with which we are not here concerned. This letter, in any event, has no bearing upon the question of whether or not the contract here sued upon is a contract in writing, which, in its last analysis, is the beginning and end of our inquiry.
“We conclude that the pleadings in this case do not show, admitting every fact therein alleged to be true, that there has been entered into between Levold and Pederson any employment or commission contract in *388writing. The rulings and judgment of the superior court are affirmed.
Main, C. J., Holcomb, Bbidges, Mackintosh, • and Fullerton, JJ., concur.