81 Minn. 316 | Minn. | 1900
Lead Opinion
On the pleadings and a stipulation entered into between the parties judgment was ordered in favor of defendant in this action, and this appeal is from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
The facts appearing .from the pleadings and stipulation are that in January, 1898, defendant was the owner of all of the stock shares
This action was brought upon the contract for the purpose of recovering the alleged damages, namely, the amount of money which he would have earned if he had rendered services for three years, less the sum paid him, and the par value in money of the stock shares to which he would have been entitled.
Counsel for both parties concede that the agreement, wholly resting in parol, and according to its terms not to be performed within one year, was within the provisions of the statute of frauds (G. S. 1894, § 4209), and that an action to enforce it cannot be maintained. They differ as to what remedy is available to plaintiff, who has not been paid in full for his services if the agreed value of such services is to control; counsel for defendant contending that in the present form of action he is not entitled to recover at all. It is further contended by defendant’s counsel that the agreement for compensation in stock shares was in fact one for the sale of chattels of the value of more than $50, and therefore void under the provisions of section 4210, no requirement, of that section having been complied with, and the court below seems to have been of that opinion.
1. Taking the facts as alleged in the complaint and as stipulated
“And, in so far as it had been voluntarily executed, the terms thereof might be referred to and considered in determining the measure of compensation which ought justly to be allowed to the defendant.”
And in Kriger v. Leppel, 42 Minn. 6, 43 N. W. 484, it was said that
“An oral agreement for services not to be performed within one year is not wholly void, though no action can be maintained on it. It will control the rights of the parties with respect to what they have done under it.”
. The same rule has been followed in cases where parties have entered into possession and occupied premises under parol leases for terms exceeding one year, which by G. S. 1894, § 4215, are declared absolutely void. Evans v. Winona L. Co., 30 Minn. 515, 16 N. W. 404; Finch v. Moore, 50 Minn. 116, 52 N. W. 384; Steele v. Anheuser-Busch Br. Assn., 57 Minn. 18, 58 N. W. 685. The doctrine adopted by these decisions is undoubtedly that, while no action can be maintained on an oral agreement for services not to be performed within one year, such an agreement controls the rights and remedies of the parties with respect to what has been done, and fixes the value of services rendered under it, when the person rendering such ■ services is discharged after part performance, without fault on his part. We are compelled to admit that the reasoning on which the doctrine is based is not satisfactory, and has often been criticised as illogical, because, although the statute denounces such agreements and deprives them of all legal validity, the doctrine itself validates them to some extent, and measures some of the rights of the parties by them.
No strained or forced construction has ever been put upon the language used in that section, which, unlike section 4209, declares all contracts “void” which fall within its terms. To agree with counsel on this point we should have to hold that every contract for personal services or labor for which compensation was to be made in goods, chattels, or choses in action, at the price of $50 or more, is within the statute, and void. An agreement to pay for one’s services in goods, chattels, or choses in action is not a sale, within the letter or the spirit of the statute of frauds. It is a mere agreement as to the method of compensation. Instead of payment in money, the parties agree that he who renders the services. shall be paid therefor in another manner, — in goods, chattels, or choses in action. In the case at bar it was stipulated that plaintiff should be compensated in the sum of $200 per week, one-half thereof to be paid in money, one form of property, and the other half in stock shares of the corporation, another form of property, at their par value, which it is alleged, and must be taken as true on this appeal, was and is $100 for each share. Defendant having refused to turn over and assign the shares of stock, this plaintiff is entitled to recover their money value instead.
3. The parol agreement, in itself and as such, was and is nonenforceable under the statute. If. plaintiff had declined to enter upon the performance of his duties as manager of the corporation, or if defendant had refused to allow him to render any services, no action whatever could have been maintained by either party. Both would have been remediless. So plaintiff’s right is limited to a recovery for services actually rendered up to the time of his discharge. He cannot recover anything by way of damages for his loss of employment thereafter.
Judgment reversed, and a new trial granted.
BROWN, J., absent, took no part.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the result. One of the questions demanding consider
The plaintiff performed services under a contract which provided for weekly payments in money and in stock. The plaintiff was willing to perform the entire contract, and the defendant repudiated it without cause. The contract was executed in part voluntarily by both parties, and to that extent was taken out of the operation of the statute. The consideration was definite and certain, from week to week, as it became payable/and, having been treated by both parties as the measure of compensation, defendant is bound by it to the extent of performance. In respect to the recovery of the wages actually earned, plaintiff is not enforcing the original contract. He can only recover upon the contract which the parties made for themselves by their conduct. Under such circumstances, it would be unjust to permit either party to prove a different value than that which he had stipulated. To the facts pleaded in the complaint it was unnecessary to add an allegation as to the value of the services. But I am not prepared to admit that the rule defined in La Du-King Mnfg. Co. v. La Du, 36 Minn. 473, 31 N. W. 938, is the correct one in all cases where one party voluntarily repudiates a contract, and the other is willing and able to complete it.