Clyde H. ROWLAND, Appellant,
v.
George W. EWELL, Jr., Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Second District.
*79 William W. White, Jr., of Wilder & White, Clearwater, for appellant.
John E.M. Ellis of Ellis, Logan & Page, St. Petersburg, for appellee.
ANDREWS, Judge.
This is an appeal from a summary judgment entered against Clyde H. Rowland, the plaintiff, in a suit for breach of an alleged oral contract of employment with George W. Ewell, Jr., defendant.
The plaintiff alleged that he had agreed to work for the defendant, George W. Ewell, Jr., as manager of a mercantile store for a period of not less than five years, and in return the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff in addition to his weekly salary a bonus of 1% of the personal gross sales generated by the plaintiff during and at the end of a 5-year period conditioned upon the plaintiff remaining in the employ of the defendant for said period. The plaintiff further alleged that he remained in the employ of the defendant for said five years; that he made demand for said bonus; and that the defendant refused to pay the same.
The defendant acknowleged the employment and bonus arrangement, but alleged that it was further conditioned upon an increase in the sales and profit in future years as a result of plaintiff's association with the store; that the sales and profits did not increase; that the plaintiff's weekly salary was increased during said period, and in addition, he received bonuses at the end of each year; that the plaintiff was advised of the defendant's intention to sell the business before the end of the 5-year period, at which time the defendant assumed responsibility for management of the store. The defendant sold the store in January 1963, and plaintiff continued to work for the new store owner and made no demand on the defendant for the bonus until after his employment by the defendant had terminated.
The defendant, in addition, plead as a defense the Statute of Frauds, F.S.A. § 725.01, in that the alleged agreement was oral and was not to be performed within the period of one year.
Although there were issues of fact as to the exact conditions and details of the oral agreement to pay the bonus, these issues are immaterial insofar as the defense of the statute of frauds is concerned, and as to that issue the court found that there was no genuine issue as to any material fact, and that the defendant was entitled to judgment as a matter of law, because the agreement was barred by the statute of frauds. We agree.
The Florida courts have held that part or complete performance of an agreement, not capable of performance within one year and not in writing, may be enforced under certain circumstances. The cases which have set forth exceptions have involved contracts for the purchase of realty, Battle v. Butler, 1939,
On the other hand, in Miller v. Murray, Fla. 1953,
The statute of frauds was enacted to prevent perjury and the enforcement of claims based on memories made faulty by the lapse of time, or loose verbal statements, and should be strictly construed. Yates v. Ball, 1938,
Apparently there have been no decisions in Florida on the peculiar circumstances now before the court. The question of the application of the part-performance doctrine to wage or bonus agreements to remove them from the statute of frauds has arisen in numerous other jurisdictions and is the subject of an extensive annotation entitled "Statute of Frauds Performance" in
"In accordance with the general rule (see subsection 3 supra) it has been held or recognized that the part-performance of an oral contract for employment not to be performed within a year did not take the contract out of the statutes of fraud."
The annotator's conclusion is substantiated by decisions in other jurisdictions decided on facts similar to those in the case at bar. The facts here do not show fraud or other peculiar or unusual circumstances in the absence of which the courts of Florida have consistently applied the statute of frauds. Williams v. Faile, Fla.App. 1960,
The court properly determined that as to the application of the statute of frauds there was no genuine issue as to any material fact, and it correctly determined that on these facts the oral agreement was barred by the statute of frauds and that the defendant was entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
Affirmed.
SMITH, C.J., concurs.
JUSTICE, JOHN D., Associate Judge, dissents.
JUSTICE, JOHN D., Associate Judge (dissenting).
I must respectfully dissent from the majority opinion in this case. The lower court and those of the majority opinion found that this employment contract fell within the purview of the Statute of Frauds and that the conflict in the facts raised merely an issue that was not material to *81 a determination as to the sole question upon which this action was decided, both in the lower court and by the majority on appeal. I concur completely with these rulings, but at this juncture I must depart from their thinking. The lower court determined that the performance of the plaintiff did not take the contract out from the Statute of Frauds. I do not concur with the majority in sustaining the lower court on this ruling. The plaintiff performed his obligations under the employment contract fully and to the complete satisfaction of the defendant. This the defendant does not deny so the truth of this is established.
The majority supports its opinion by citing the authority of Battle v. Butler, 1939,
I am in accord with the expressions of the Supreme Court of this State when it ruled in the case of Price v. Price, 1880,
The Supreme Court in the case of Cottages, Miami Beach Inc. v. Wegman, Fla. 1951,
No Florida case has been found directly concerned with bonus contracts as is here involved. It would appear however from the citations appearing in
Summary Judgments should be entered in those instances in which there is no conflict in the facts on a material issue and then only when there is no theory under which the opposing party could prevail in a trial of the cause.
In the case on appeal it is clear that the Supreme Court of this State has held from the earliest times that under facts *82 of the nature involved herein the plaintiff has a cause of action, if not on the contract, then in Quantum Meruit. The Supreme Court in the case of Hart Properties, Inc. v. Slack, Fla. 1963,
That was not done in this case. This is substantial error which should not be permitted to stand. The case should be reversed and remanded with directions.
