— Ann аnd Harold (Harley) Eggers were married in 1967 and divorced in 1970. In 1973, Harley asked Ann to move back into his home. She agreed, providing Harley would divorce the woman he had married in the interim, would agree to pаy her for work she did, and would give her an independent bank account and some interest in some property as security. Ann and Harley lived together for 5 years, holding themselves out as husband and wife. Ann workеd approximately 20 hours per week for Harley's businesses during this time.
Ann and Harley separated on July 7, 1978. Shortly thereafter, Ann filed a "Petition for a Dissolution of Meretricious Relationship", seeking an equitаble division of property, both real and personal, and an allocation of *869 indebtedness, i.e., that she would be awarded her car, household furnishings and $10,000 in cash and Harley would be required to pay all indebtednеss. Harley's attorney orally moved to dismiss the petition for failure to state a claim, which was denied. His second attorney also moved to dismiss the petition, which was denied by a court commissionеr and affirmed by the Superior Court. There was no appeal from that ruling; rather, both Ann and Harley appeal from the disposition made by the trial court in terminating the relationship.
At trial, only Ann testified, as Harley became ill on the morning of trial. After considering her testimony, the trial court issued two letter opinions. In the first, the court found there was an express oral contract to employ Ann in Harley's businesses for 20 hours per week at $2.50 per hour. The court also applied the 3-year statute of limitations, RCW 4.16.080(3), and allowed judgment for $7,800 ($2.50 per hour times 20 hours per week times 156 weeks). It also awarded $150 аs a sanction for Harley's failure to respond to interrogatories, but did not allow attorney's fees. The court rejected Ann's alternate theories of quantum meruit and contract to create an interest in property. Ann moved for reconsideration, urging the statute of limitations had not been pleaded and was therefore unavailable to Harley, and that she was entitled to attorney's fees based on her wage claim pursuant to RCW 49.48.030.
In a second letter opinion, the court affirmed its earlier decision as to Ann's alternate theories of recovery, recomputеd the wages due her to $7,000 ($125 per month for 56 months), awarded $800 attorney's fees and continued the award for the $150 sanction.
Harley first argues the trial court should have found Ann waived her wage claim because she made no demand for wages during the 5-year period, nor did she pay herself while she had the authority to write checks. He cites no authority to support this assignment of error and thus we will not cоnsider it.
State v. Kroll,
Harley also contends the trial court erred in interpreting the oral contract between the parties. The trial court found that in 1973, when Ann and Harley began living together, there was an exprеss oral contract between them under which Ann worked 20 hours per week at $2.50 per hour. Harley claims either the contract was formed when he gave Ann an undated document approximatеly a year later, or that the document was a subsequent modification of the contract. That document provided:
For the considered sum of $40.00 monthly I Ann Eggers?? agree to compute all road аnd fuel taxes for Allied Prod. Big Bend & all other typing, Bookkeeping duties, etc.
Computed [at] $2.50 per hour for 4-hr periods each month.
H H Eggers
First, there was substantial evidence to support the trial court's finding of an express
oral
contract and we will not disturb this finding on appeal.
Thorndike v. Hesperian Orchards, Inc.,
*871 Ann's arguments on appeal concern the distribution of property acquired during a "meretricious" relationship. 2 She argues first that there was evidence to distributе the property under the principles developed in past meretricious relationship cases. The trial court, however, found there was not sufficient evidence to sustain such an award. We agree.
In a meretricious relationship, the court will presume, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, the parties intended to dispose of the property as thеy did dispose of it.
Creasman v. Boyle,
Ann argues there was an implied partnership or joint
*872
venture between Harley and her which would allow the court to award her a share in the property acquired in Harley's name. In
Poole v. Schrichte,
rights do not stem from cohabitation or the meretricious relationship, but from the fact that the proceeds from the beauty shop she operated clearly constituted a larger [portion] of the Crosley account than did Mr. Schrichte's earnings as a railroad switchman],]
Poole v. Schrichte, supra
at 564, and found a joint venture. In
In re Estate of Thornton,
Here, there is no evidence Ann contributed any money toward the purchase of any property. Because she was paid wages at an agreed rate for her work, she cannot claim her efforts showed a joint venture. She did not contribute her earnings to the businesses, nor did she share in the decision making. There is therefore no implied partnership between the two. The trial court was correct in not awarding Ann property based on the equitable theories developed in reaction to Creasman.
Ann's alternate contention is that the trial court should have awarded her an interest in Harley's property by applying the community property laws by analogy to this dissolution of a "meretricious" relationship. An alternate *873 approach to the Creasman presumption and its exceptions is stated:
A court could ascertain whether there exists a long-term, stable, nonmarital family relationship. Such relevant factors include continuous cohabitation, duration of the relationship, purpose of the relationship, and the pooling of resources and services for joint projects. If a relationship exists, it is rеasonable to assume that each member in some way contributed to the acquisition of the property.
Latham v. Hennessey, supra at 554. 4
Whether a meretricious relationship is of a quality which would allow for equitable distribution is a question of fact,
see Latham v. Hennessey, supra; Omer v. Omer,
The attorney's fees awarded by the court were based on the statute. RCW 49.48.030. There was no error in this award.
*874 The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Green and Munson, JJ., concur.
Notes
Ann argues the trial court erred in interpreting the contract and that she should have been awarded
$5
per hour for 20 hours per weеk, since the trial court allowed the statute of limitations to apply. The construction of an oral contract is for the trier of fact.
Palmiero v. Spada Distrib. Co.,
Cases сriticize the use of the term meretricious in characterizing this relationship, but that is how the parties here viewed it in their pleadings. "Meretricious" comes from the Latin word "meretrix", meaning prostitute. Othеr descriptions have included nonmarital, partnership, or joint venture. Courts have struggled with a descriptive term for such a party. We note the acronym POSSLQ, used in the 1980 census, meaning "Persons of Oppоsite Sex Sharing Living Quarters", which has been criticized because literally it included married couples and communal livers, neither of which is a meretricious relationship. CUPOS has been suggested, originating from "Cohabiting Unmarried Persons of Opposite Sex". We prefer the latter term.
Other theories used by the courts to rebut the
Creasman
presumption are resulting trusts,
Walberg v. Mattson,
The сourt has also applied equitable principles to divide property acquired during cohabitation of a man and woman not legally married when one of the parties believes in good faith they are married.
Buckley v. Buckley,
