114 N.Y.S. 846 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1909
The complaint alleges the employment of the plaintiff as a salesman and general manager of the business of the defendant for a term of three years from January 2, 1904, to December 31, 1906, by an agreement in writing whereby the plaintiff was to receive as compensation for his services certain commissions based upon the defendant’s business; that the plaintiff entered into the employment and continued therein until the termination of the contract, and that, sales were made by the defendant in his business on. which, under the terms of the agreement, the commissions, amounted to $7,165.81, of which the plaintiff has received $3,890.38, the plaintiff demanding judgment for the balance remaining unpaid. The answer admits the employment; that the plaintiff continued in the defendant’s employ, until the date specified for the termination of the contract; and for a separate defense and by way of counterclaim- annexes to the answer the contract actually made'; alleges that the plaintiff has violated the agreement in certain particulars named; that by the terms of the contract it was agreed that if the plaintiff violated the agreement the damages for such violation should be the sum. of $1,500, which the plaintiff agreed to pay to the defendant, and demands judgment dismissing the complaint and an affirmative judgment for the sum of $1,500. There was no allegation that defendant sustained damages by reason of a breach by plaintiff.
By the contract annexed tothe-answer it appears that the defendant “ shall engage ” the plaintiff as a salesman and general manager in his business for a period commencing January 2, 1904, and ending December 31, 1906, and the plaintiff agreed to work as salesman and general manager for said period, and the plaintiff, by the 4th- clause of thé contract, further agreed “ to give his entire time and atten
On the trial plaintiff, after proving the amount of Sales upon which he was entitled to commission, was asked on cross-examination a series of questions tending to show that during the time the plaintiff was acting under his contract he Worked for other people than the defendant. These questions were objected to and excluded by- the court upon the ground that under the 5th clause of the agreement the violation of the agreement intended was a violation of the entire agreement and not a violation of one of the independent conditions to which the plaintiff agreed, and that as there were no damages alleged in consequence of these violations the counterclaim was not sufficient. The defendant then attempted to .prove a subsequent modification of the contract, which was excluded upon the ground that it was not pleaded. At the close of the case plaintiff asked for the direction of a verdict for the amount that seems to have been conceded due, which motion was granted, to which the defendant excepted. The defendant then moved for a
The contract contemplated the employment of the plaintiff for a period of three years. During that period the plaintiff agreed to work as salesman and general manager for the defendant’s business, and by a separate clause of the contract agreed to devote his entire time and'attention to the furtherance of the interests of the defend ant’s business; to comply xvith the orders and commands of the defendant; to perform his Work as salesman and general assistant faithfully and honestly, and to the best of his ability; and plaintiff further agreed to engage in no other business, either for himself or for any other person. These were independent obligations of the plaintiff, having a.general relation as to the duties which the plaintiff xyas to perform. If the construction of this contract is as claimed by the defendant it would follow that upon a single violation of the defendant’s orders or a single transaction by the plaintiff for himself during the time that the contract was in force, although such violation caused the defendant no damage, the defendant would be entitled to recover from the plaintiff the sum of $1,500. While such an act on the part of the plaintiff Would be a violation of a stipulation contained in the contract, it would not be a violation of the general obligation., assumed by the plaintiff upon which'his right to compensation depended. The plaintiff was employed to act as salesman and general assistant for the defendant during the term of the contract. ITe rendered the services required of him and continued in his position during the term provided in the contract. We must assume that he violated his undertaking not to engagé in any other business during the term of the contract, and for a violation of that undertaking the defendant would be entitled to recover damages sustained 'and could have maintained an action therefor. Considering, however, the object of the contract, I think it-could hardly have been intended that the failure to obey any order given by the defendant or conducting a business transaction of the plain
The defendant relies upon the case of Cotheal v. Talmage (9 N. Y. 551), but the agreement in that case was so different from the one at bar that it canhot be considered an authority. There the plaintiff entered into an agreement with a company of persons of whom the defendant’s principal was one by which the plaintiff agreed to furnish to, the defendant’s principal and his associates subsistence for a year with the articles and tools necessary for carrying on mining operations in California. On their part the associates covenanted with the plaintiff that they would diligently devote themselves to obtaining gold and other precious metals as provided for in the agreement, a certain proportion of the earnings of each being agreed to be paid to the plaintiff, and would execute a bond conditioned for the payment to him by the person executing the agreement in case such person should ■ fail to keep or should break such agreement, and the defendant was surety upon that bond. The answer alleged that defendant’s principal performed the agreement for a certain length of time and then he and the other parties interested with him broke up and abandoned the enterprise. It was held that the
I think, therefore, that as the defendant has failed to allege that lie sustained any damage by these breaches by the plaintiff his counterclaim failed, and as he accepted the services rendered by the plaintiff during the entire term the plaintiff was entitled to recover the compensation allowed for the performance of such services.
The ruling of the trial court was, therefore, right and the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Patterson, P. J., Laughlin, Houghton and Scott, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order affirmed, with costs.