231 A.D. 152 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1930
The action was tried by a justice of the Supreme Court without a jury under a stipulation waiving a jury and dispensing with findings of fact and conclusions of law.
The plaintiff sued to recover damages which he alleges he sustained by the refusal of defendant to renew for one year a written contract after the expiration of the first year’s term of plaintiff’s employment by defendant. The answer of defendant admitted the making of the contract of employment of plaintiff, the refusal to renew the same and the discharge of plaintiff from the defendant’s employment.
The defendant, a New Jersey corporation, was authorized to do business in the State of New York, and had its principal office and place of business in the borough of Manhattan, New York city. It was engaged in the sole business of manufacturing and selling a teeing device used by golfers, to which device the defendant had given the trade name of “ The Reddy Tee.” On June 16, 1924, at a meeting of the board of directors of the defendant corporation, the services of plaintiff were engaged as general manager of the corporation, at a weekly salary of $100 for the term of one year from March 24, 1924, and at said directors’ meeting it was further provided that the plaintiff should have the option of renewing the contract for an additional year after the expiration of the first.year at not less than the amount paid for the first year’s services, but which renewal option on plaintiff’s part was only to be binding on the corporation if the market price of the issued stock of the corporation be at least eight dollars per share on March 24, 1925. Subsequently the contract authorized at said meeting of the board of directors was reduced to writing and was signed by the president of the defendant corporation on June 16, 1924. The evidence shows that under such contract the parties worked from March 24, 1924, until March 24, 1925. On the latter date the defendant notified plaintiff in writing that the plaintiff’s services as general manager would no longer be required by the defendant, stating as its reasons that the plaintiff’s services had been inefficient,
The evidence very clearly disclosed that soon after entering upon the performance of his duties as general manager of the defendant company the relations between the plaintiff, who was himself a stockholder of the defendant corporation, and its president and the remaining stockholders of the corporation became strained, resulting in an entire lack of harmony between the officers of the corporation and the plaintiff. At that time the stock of the corporation was owned in substantially equal amounts by the president of the corporation, William Lowell, by Walter L. Niebling, a son-in-law of Lowell, and by plaintiff. On December 8, 1924, by reason of the existing discord in the corporation, Niebling sold to William Lowell, defendant’s president, the stock in the corporation which he held, receiving in payment therefor the sum of $5,000. From that time on until plaintiff’s discharge the strained relations between plaintiff and the holders of the remaining stock of the corporation became more acute, so that at the end of plaintiff’s term of employment it became quite evident that there must be a discontinuance of all relations between the corporation and the plaintiff, its general manager. The evidence discloses an entire lack of confidence on the part of the president and other shareholders of the corporation in the plaintiff and that the services which he Was rendering for the corporation were entirely unsatisfactory. By the terms of the contract plaintiff was to give his services to the defendant as general manager of the corporation. The evidence shows that the plaintiff, during the term of such contract, engaged in other business and in advertising and disposing of a large quantity of clock works and of patented display tables which had been manufactured by a corporation with which plaintiff had been theretofore identified, but which had gone into bankruptcy. This merchandise had been purchased by plaintiff at receiver’s sale, and the evidence disclosed that during the term of his employment he conducted, under his former corporate name, the business of disposing of said merchandise which had been brought to the place of business of the defendant corporation, using defendant’s employees and organization in such business; that when repeatedly remonstrated with, the plaintiff as often
As a condition precedent to plaintiff’s right to a renewal of his contract with the defendant, the burden was upon plaintiff to show that on March 24, 1925, the market price of the defendant’s stock was eight dollars per share. This the plaintiff failed to show by competent proof. The most that the plaintiff was able to show to establish the market price of the defendant’s stock were two offers, one admittedly made by a friend of plaintiff’s and at the plaintiff’s suggestion, offering the defendant’s president ten dollars a share for ten shares of the capital stock of the corporation. It appears from the evidence that this offer was made without any knowledge on the part of the person offering to purchase the stock as to the assets of the corporation or other facts or circumstances showing any knowledge of the actual value of the stock which he offered to purchase. The plaintiff himself also claims to have offered, without stating any price, to purchase the entire stock of the corporation at the time of his discharge. These offers clearly were insufficient to show any market price of the stock in question. No sales of the stock were proven, except that on December 8, 1924, the defendant’s president purchased 833 shares, the stock of his son-in-law, for $5,000, amounting to about $6 per share. Plaintiff also introduced in evidence three reports which he had had prepared as treasurer of the corporation, the
Moreover, the defendant was entirely justified in dispensing with plaintiff’s services at the end of his term on March 24, 1925. His attitude toward bis superior officers in the corporation was of such a nature as to preclude his continuance in the defendant’s employ, and the defendant was fully justified in discharging him by reason of his frequently expressed attitude toward his superior officers. (Jerome v. Queens City Cycle Co., 163 N. Y. 351, 356; Speiden v. Innis, Speiden & Co., Inc., 216 App. Div. 408.) It is very evident from the testimony in this case that plaintiff’s usefulness as general manager of the corporation had come to an end prior to his discharge. Not only was he charging his superior officers as being crooks and incompetent businessmen, and openly predicting that the business would not last a year, and that he himself would start a new business, and that the employees would receive no pay other than flowers and candy if the Lowells obtained control of the corporation, but his conduct in refusing to permit the president
While the contract itself does not, in terms, state that the plaintiff is to bestow his entire time in the defendant’s business, we think it was clearly inferable from the language used that the plaintiff’s entire time should have been so devoted. In Wood on Master and Servant ([2d ed.] § 111, p. 215) that text writer says: “ Where a person is employed by another for a definite period, in a certain business, the employer is entitled to his entire services in that business during the term, and if the servant engages in the same or any other business on his own account, or for others, during the term, he is chargeable with a breach of his contract, and may be discharged therefor.” (See, also, Stoney v. Farmers’ Transportation Co., 17 Hun, 579; Seaburn v. Zachmann, 99 App. Div. 218.)
Entirely aside from plaintiff’s failure to prove the market price of the issued capital stock of the defendant corporation as of March 24, 1925, at eight dollars per share, which was a condition precedent to any right on the part of the plaintiff to a renewal of said contract, the conduct of plaintiff throughout his service with the defendant was such, not only to justify, but to compel, a discontinuance of his services at the end of his contract.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed, with costs, and plaintiff’s complaint dismissed, with costs.
Dowling, P. J., Martin and Sherman, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed, with costs, and complaint dismissed, with costs.