180 N.Y. 76 | NY | 1904
The plaintiff brought this action to recover $50,000 damages for breach of a contract of hiring, by which contract the relation of master and servant was established between the parties. The defendant is a business corporation, with its principal place of business in the city of New York. Its business was conducted on so large a scale that it was divided into a great many departments, with a person at the head of each having general charge and supervision of it. It is alleged that the plaintiff was employed at the head of what was known as the "notion department," which had its own staff of bookkeepers, entry clerks and general employees, numbering in all about two hundred.
It is averred in the complaint that on the 30th of November, 1892, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with the defendant, wherein and whereby it employed and hired the plaintiff to work for it as a manager of this department for the term of five years, beginning on the 1st of January, 1893, and the defendant agreed to pay him therefor twelve and one-half per cent of the net annual profits of the sales of said department in equal yearly payments, with a guaranteed drawing account of $500 per month, and that the plaintiff agreed to work for that time and for this compensation. It is alleged that the plaintiff entered upon the performance of this agreement on his part, and performed the same fully until the first of January, 1898; that on or about that date it was agreed by and between the plaintiff and the defendant that said written agreement should be, and it was, continued for a further term of five years from the 1st of January, 1898, upon the same terms and conditions as the agreement of 1892 above stated; that the plaintiff entered upon the performance of this last agreement on his part and performed the same fully and entirely until the 21st of August, 1900, when the plaintiff, *80 while engaged in carrying out the agreement, was, without any fault on his part, wrongfully discharged by the defendant from its employ and it refused to permit him to carry out the agreement.
It is quite important at the outset to get a clear idea of the plaintiff's cause of action as stated in the complaint. It is alleged that the written agreement for five years' services which had just expired was continued for a further term of five years upon the same terms and conditions as were embraced in the first written contract. An agreement to employ the plaintiff for five years in order to be valid should be in writing, and since it is alleged that the first written agreement for five years was continued for another five years, the legal effect of the allegation is that the second agreement was evidenced by some writing signed by the party to be charged thereby. The proper construction of the pleading, therefore, is that the plaintiff seeks to recover damages for the breach of a written contract of hiring commenced on the 1st day of January, 1898, and to terminate in five years thereafter.
On the trial the plaintiff sought to establish a cause of action only by proof that after the termination of the first written agreement, the plaintiff held over and continued in the service of the defendant, with the defendant's consent, to the time of his discharge. In other words, the plaintiff sought to recover for breach of an agreement from year to year to be implied by law from the fact that the plaintiff continued to hold over in the service after the expiration of each year. The evidence of the plaintiff in that regard was received under the defendant's objection and exception. The objection was to the effect that the proof was a departure from the cause of action stated in the complaint. No amendment of the complaint was asked or allowed, and the question is not in respect to the power of the court to grant an amendment in such case, but as to the right of the plaintiff to recover for the breach of a contract for one year based entirely upon an inference or implication of law. Where there is a hiring for one year and the servant continues in the employment after the expiration of the year *81
with the consent of the master, this effects a hiring for another year. (Adams v. Fitzpatrick,
The defendant's answer also put in issue the allegation of the complaint that the plaintiff was wrongfully discharged and this issue raised a serious question for the plaintiff. There is no dispute about the fact that in December, 1899, the year before the plaintiff was discharged, he presented an inventory or statement to the defendant's executive officers purporting to show the sales and profits of his department during the year, and there is no dispute about the fact that the statement was untrue in that over $40,000 of goods were reported as sold which were in fact on hand. This statement enlarged the *82 basis for the plaintiff's commissions to that extent, and he was actually paid $5,000 in the form of commissions which he was not in fact entitled to. Whether this falsification of the inventory was the result of fraud, negligence or honest mistake may be another question, but the fact that the statement was untrue and that the plaintiff received the benefit of it seems to be undisputed, and there was no attempt on the part of the plaintiff to explain the discrepancy or any offer to restore what he had received on the faith of it. This condition of the plaintiff's account in his department was not brought to the attention of the defendant's officers until about a month before his discharge, and they then sought to obtain some explanation consistent with his honesty and fidelity, but failed in that respect. The relations between the plaintiff and the defendant's officers became somewhat strained in consequence of this incident, and in about a month after the discovery the plaintiff brought an action against the defendant to procure an injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with the management of his particular department. This move, of course, added fuel to the flame, and the defendant's president, the day after the papers were served upon him in the injunction suit, discharged him. The learned trial judge submitted to the jury the question arising upon these facts. The jury were instructed that if the falsification of the inventory was the result of fraud or negligence then the defendant had the right to discharge the plaintiff; but if it was an honest mistake, without fraud or negligence, that the plaintiff might be excused, and that if he commenced the injunction suit in good faith, intending only to assert his legal rights, and not for the purpose of annoyance, then he might be excused for that act as well. There does not seem to be any exception in the record to the submission of this question to the jury, nor to the charge in that respect, and since the judgment was unanimously affirmed below we do not think that this court can properly deal with the question concerning the defendant's right to discharge the plaintiff. *83
The breach of contract for which the plaintiff recovered $5,000 in this case consisted in discharging the plaintiff about the 21st of August, 1900, that is, about eight months from the commencement of the year and about four months before, according to the plaintiff's own theory of the case, his term would expire. This included the monthly guaranty of $500 a month for four months, and the loss of commissions for the whole year, which were to be estimated at the rate of twelve and one-half per cent upon the net profits of the department, and these net profits were to be ascertained according to certain rules described in the first written agreement, but which are not now very important. It is by no means clear that the plaintiff, under the circumstances of this case, was entitled to recover anything for commissions which were not yet earned and did not accrue, or could be ascertained only by the results at the end of the year. (Sedgwick on Damages, vol. 2 [8th ed.], § 671.) There are some cases in this state which appear to hold that such commissions or profits may be recovered as damages, but only when the plaintiff has made it appear that such profits are reasonably certain to be made, and that if he fails in such proof, he will not be entitled to recover on that basis. (Lavens v. Lieb,
The judgment must be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY and VANN, JJ., concur; BARTLETT and HAIGHT, JJ., concur in the result, and MARTIN, J., concurs on ground last discussed in opinion.
Judgment reversed, etc. *85