71 P. 70 | Or. | 1903
after stating the facts, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is contended by defendant’s counsel that the testimony introduced by plaintiff shows that the gross earnings, a share of which he seeks to recover, were secured in contravention of public policy, of which fact he, at all the times mentioned, had knowledge, and, this being so, the court erred in not dismissing the action. The bill of exceptions discloses that on March 25, 1896, the defendants formed at Portland, Oregon, a partnership for the ostensible purpose of purchasing and selling on commission for their customers grain or options in the Board of Trade of Chicago, Ill., at which time they entered into a contract with plaintiff, a telegraph operator, agreeing to pay him for his services as such $60 a month and 10 per cent of the commissions earned by them. Plaintiff performed service for defendants from March 25, 1896, to April 24, 1897, during which time they daily gave him statements purporting to show the purchases and sales of grain made by them for their customers, whereby it was made to appear that they had earned $21,120 as commissions, a memorandum of which he kept, and upon his rendering them a monthly report of said commissions they paid him 10 per cent thereof, and also the wages agreed upon. Plaintiff severed his connection with defendants on April 24,1897, having prior thereto inspected their books, and, as he claims, ascertained therefrom that their gross earnings during the time he was employed by them were $105,000, and commenced this action to recover 10 per cent of the difference between $21,120, the sum of the daily statements so made to him, and the gross earnings. The plaintiff testified that prior to March 25, 1896, he was in business at Portland, Oregon, with the defendant Downing as a partner, and engaged in buying and selling grain on commission; that, a partnership having been formed between the defendants at that time, he was employed by and worked for them from 7 or 7:30 A. m. to 1:20, and sometimes until 5 p. m., in their office at Portland, continuously until April 24, 1897, except a few days when he may have been ill or out of the city; that his business was to receive
A careful examination of the testimony introduced by the plaintiff shows that defendants falsely represented to their customers that all orders received for the purchase of grain were transmitted by telegraph to the Chicago Board of Trade, and, after the commodity had been thus secured, orders for the sale thereof were sent in the same manner, for which the defendants charged a commission of one eighth or one fourth of a cent
Believing, as we do, that the contract sought to be enforced violated public policy; that plaintiff, at all times during his said employment, was aware thereof, although without knowledge of the extent of the illegal gains, — it follows that the-judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to dismiss the action. Reversed.