Atkins v. Keener

109 Ala. 143 | Ala. | 1895

BRICKELL, C. J.

The construction of the contract is the point of contention between the parties. It isa contract for the rendition of personal services for a term of one year. By it, in words, the appellants declare *145that they have employed the appellee — that is, have engaged his services for the term of one year; and by it the appellee promises to give his entire time to the interest of the business of the appellants. The relation the contract constitutes is that of employer and employe. ■ It may be collected from the contract, and such the parties now assume to be true, that the appellee was to serve in the capacity of a traveling salesman, the expenses of traveling to be borne by the appellants. The parties each agree to this analysis of the contract. They differ only as to the measure of the compensation of the appellee. The words of the contract in reference to compensation which immediately follow the agreement of the appellee to give his entire time to the interest of the business, of the appellants, are, ‘ ‘for which we agree to pay him $600, payable monthly, $50 per month, and six per cent, commissions on all his sales over $10,000, provided said salary and travelling expenses does not exceed ten per cent, of his net sales, after deducting all goods returned and all failures of his sales.”

The insistence of the appellants is, that the entire compensation of the appellee was contingent or conditional, dependent on the amount of sales he effected. If the sales did not exceed ten thousand dollars, then the compensation and traveling expenses could not exceed ten per cent, of the amount of sales. While the appellee insists that if he kept and performed his part of the contract, rendering the services the contract contemplated, he is entitled to the compensation of six hundred dollars, payable in monthly instalments of fifty dollars, though the amount of sales effected did not equal or exceed ten thousand dollars.

The promise of the payment of the sum of six hundred dollars, in monthly instalments, is not dependent upon any other condition or contingency expressed'. By intendment or implication, of law, it is dependent upon the diligent, continuous rendition for the term by the appellee of the stipulated service. This is the intendment or implication of law, which the parties have not modified or displaced by the expression of any other condition. It was not a speculative contract into which-the parties proposed entering. Therefore, in relation to the salary of six hundred dollars, it was made payable in equal monthly instalments, and would be paid chiefly *146before the expiration of tbe term of service, and before the aggregate of the net sales effected by the plaintiff could be ascertained in the mode the contract fixes for fhe ascertainment, and before the aggregate of the traveling, expenses would be known. If, when the aggregate of the net sales was ascertained, and the aggregate of the expenses was known, then, if the sales exceeded ten thousand dollars, the appellee would have been entitled to six per cent, commission-on the excess, in the event, and only in the event, that the salary and traveling expenses did not exceed ten per centum of the aggregate of the sales. The promise of payment of the commission is not in modification or in defeasance of the promise of payment of tbe salary. It is a promise inde-pendent of, or rather in addition to, the promise of pay;ment of the salary, intended to stimulate the exertion ■of the appellee to make sales.

This is the construction of the contract adopted by the Court below, and we are of opinion it is the only construction of which the contract admits, when the relations of the parties are considered.

Let the judgment be affirmed.

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