Plaintiff brought this action to recover $1168 for services performed under an oral contract. According to the complaint, the plaintiff was to assist and aid the defendant in laying out for subdivision and subdividing for sale certain lands of the defendant and to act as defendant’s general sales manager in charge of the advertising of said subdivision, and devising ways and means of promoting the sale of said tract and superintending the sale thereof at a stated salary per week until the employment should be terminated, and alleging certain payments made thereon. The defendant’s answer denied the allegations of the complaint except the receipt by plaintiff of certain sums of money alleged as payments by the defendant, and as a separate defense pleaded a contract alleging the employment of the plaintiff by the defendant as a sales manager for the purpose of offering for sale and making sales of certain real property; that said agreement herein referred to by said defendant was oral and as a separate defense that the cause of action is barred by the provisions of section 1624 of the Civil Code and by cross-complaint sought to recover a judgment for certain sums of money advanced to the plaintiff. The finding is in accordance with the plaintiff’s claim except that the court finds that the plaintiff was employed by a contract in writing and by an oral contract. This appeal is taken upon a bill of exceptions.
The record before us discloses that the plaintiff’s testimony was in strict accord with the allegations of the . complaint above mentioned. There is no evidence in the record to support the finding so far as the contract being in writing is concerned. However, that is immaterial if the contract here, being oral, is not within the inhibitions provided in Civil Code, section 1624. Appellant contends that by the very terms of the contract here found to exist *663 it is one falling squarely within subdivision 5 of section 1624 of the Civil Code, which provides that any agreement authorizing or employing an agent or broker to purchase or sell real estate for compensation or a commission is invalid unless in writing, or some note or memorandum thereof is in writing and subscribed by the party to be charged. The employment had to do with the sale of real estate.
Shanklin
v.
Hall,
Dolan
v.
O’Toole,
Plaintiff relies entirely upon the case of
Arbuckle
v.
Clifford F. Reid, Inc.,
The services intended by the parties to the said contract were personal services of the plaintiff to effectuate a smoothly functioning organization for the benefit of the defendant and not directly for the sale of any certain real property by the plaintiff. If construed otherwise it is in conflict with the established rule of law of this state as declared in the casé of Shanklin v. Hall, supra, and from such established rule we feel we are not at liberty to depart. In the case at bar, the plain intendments of the parties to the contract were that the plaintiff was to aid and assist in preparing a certain tract of land belonging to the defendant for sale by laying the same out for subdivision and subdividing it; to act as sales manager; to promote the sales by a plan of campaign of advertising; and to superintend the sale thereof. Stating the proposition otherwise, the plaintiff was to aid and assist the defendant in the preliminary work of laying out a subdivision and subdividing a certain tract of land owned by the defendant; to plan and carry out an advertising promotional scheme looking to the sale of the land; to act as sales manager; superintend the sale of said tract. The contract in its entirety looked to the sale of said tract through the agency of said plaintiff and by the means conceived and devised by the plaintiff, all to the end that defendant might sell his said tract through the medium of and by the activities of the plaintiff. Such employment, therefore, had for its sole object and purpose the sale of the real property, and such an employment is within the inhibition of section 1624 of the Civil Code. To hold otherwise would give rise to a practice of ingenious forms, without substance in fact, and thus avoid the very salutary rule of law as declared in section 1624 of the Civil Code, and open the door to fraud,' long closed by said statute, and would in effect abrogate such statute of frauds (Civ. Code, sec. 1624).
The decision in Arbuckle v. Clifford F. Reid, Inc., supra, as we understand it, is not in conflict with the decision in Shanklin v. Hall, supra; hence the sole question remaining for determination is, is the contract of employment herein *666 one that is required by the statute to be in writing? We think it is. If one assists either in the purchase or sale of real estate on a contract for compensation either by commission or salary, he falls within the inhibitions provided in said section to the same extent and in the same manner as though he had been the sole and exclusive medium through which the purchase or sale was made. We think that the term 11 employed to sell or purchase” should and does include to aid and assist in the purchase or sale, and it seems to us that to state otherwise would be equivalent to saying that the whole does not include all of its parts (Shanklin v. Hall, supra; Dolan v. O’Toole, supra). Measured by this standard, all the testimony in the record shows that plaintiff was to aid and assist defendant in the sale of real estate, and such was the purpose of his employment. The evidence, therefore, was insufficient to support the findings of the court and the judgment, there being no evidence that the contract was in writing, that the contract was of such a nature as to require it to be in writing or some note or memorandum thereof in writing and signed by the party to be charged.
The judgment is reversed.
Barnard, P. J., and Marks, J., concurred.
