82 N.Y.S. 667 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiff, who had been in the employ of the defendant and its predecessor for a period of fifteen years or more, brought this action to recover $50,000 for the breach of an alleged contract of employment for a term of five years from the 1st day of January, 1898, he having been discharged on the 21st day of August, 1900, without, as the plaintiff claims, and the jury has found, any just cause or provocation. The defendant denied the existence of the contract as alleged in the complaint, and justified the discharge of the plaintiff upon the grounds that his employment at the time was at the ‘pleasure of the employer, and that the conduct of the plaintiff justified his discharge, and these were the questions litigated Upon, the trial. The jury has found in favor of the plaintiff in a verdict for $5,000 damages, and from the judgment entered the defendant appeals to this court.
It appeared upon the trial that the plaintiff, in June or July, 1885, entered into a written contract with the firm of H. B. Olaflin & Co., by the terms of which he was permitted to draw $500 per month. With ten per cent additional at the end of the year upon the net profits of the notion department, which was given into his charge, subject to the general directions of the firm. In 1888‘this contract was changed, so that the plaintiff drew in addition to. his $500 per month twelve and one-half per cent of the net profits. He continued under this contract until the 30th of November, 1892, when the present defendant ■ corporation became the successor of the firm of H. B. Olaflin & Co., and the plaintiff’s contract was renewed for a period of five years from the 1st day of January,
The more serious question is presented by the. evidence upon the question of the defendant’s justification for the discharge of the plaintiff. The evidence, it may be assumed, for it was not seriously questioned, established that in the inventory for the year 1899 cer
It is important, in considering what inferences'.the jury might properly draw, to note the fact that in the matter of the inventory, if the error was honestly made and the goods were subsequently delivered to the purchasers, the error would correct itself in the inventory of the following year. That is, the $40,000 worth of goods would not be in stock and the inventory would show that much less of sales for the year 1900 than would be the case if the inventory for the previous year had been correct, and as there was
"We think no reversible error is presented by the record in this case; the plaintiff as a witness had a right to state the gross amount of the sales of his department in a given year, where he had received his compensation upon the basis of such sales, and the objection that the books were the best evidence of this fact is not supported by the facts. The witness was testifying as to his knowledge of facts, and if he refreshed his memory from figures upon a slip of paper, no objection was made to this. But the question to which special objection was made, and to which attention is called at folios 105 and 106, was not answered, although the witness made some response to the effect that he knew about the matters. He was asked: “ What was the amount of the gross sales of these six months of 1900 ? ” Defendant objected on the ground that the best evidence-of this fact was the books. The objection was overruled, and the-witness replied : “ I know and I have them computed, made extracts from the books. I have a memorandum kept by my bookkeeper for me. I have computed it. I made a computation of the gross sales from the books.” But he nowhere" tells what those gross sales were until, upon cross-examination, he gives a statement of the amount in response to the defendant’s question, and the saíne appears in evidence without exception.
The judgment and order appealed from should be affirmed, with" costs.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett, Jerks and Hooker, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.