102 N.Y.S. 27 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1907
Dissenting Opinion
The action is for damages for the breach of a contract. On February 15, 1894, the parties made a contract whereby the defendant employed the plaintiff as its agent to solicit applications for life insurance. It contained a clause that the employment was terminable by either party upon a written notice óf 30 days. The relation continued until April 6, 1900, when the defendant served the plaintiff with a notice of termination. The original contract from time to time was amended and was changed, and the plaintiff now sues on the theory that the contract extant in 1900 was for a fixed period of one year from March 1, 1900, until March 1, 1901, and that the provision for termination was not then'in the contract. At trial and immediately after the opening of counsel for plaintiff, the defendant moved for a diémissal -of the complaint on the opening
The construction of the contract by the learned trial court is that
The rule is.stated by Andrews, Ch. J., in Miller v. Hannibal & St. Joseph R. R. Co. (90 N. Y. 430, 433): “ But it is the imperative duty of courts to give effect if possible to all the terms of ail agreement. The construction is to be made iipon a consideration of the whole instrument, and not upon one or more clauses detached.from the others, and this principle applies as well to instruments partly printed' and partly Written as to- those wholly printed or wholly written. (Barhydt v. Ellis, 45 N. Y. 107.)”. (See, too, Kratzenstein v. Western Assurance Co., 116 N. Y. 54, 57, Vann, J.,. writing for the court.) In Barhydt v. Ellis (supra) the court, per Bapallo, J.,. say : “ Effect must be given, if possible, to every part of an. agreement, and it is only when there is an inconsistency or repugnancy which is totally irreconcilable that a discrimination-will be made as to which part shall be made to yield to. the other. (Harper v. N. Y. City Ins. Co., 22 N. Y. 443; Harper v. The Albany Mut. Ins. Co., 17 id. 198.) ”
I come, then, to the question whether any of the changes or amendments made in the contract (which, as I have said, was inva
Judgment and order affirmed, without costs.
Lead Opinion
The duration of the plaintiff’s employment was fixed by a clause in the original agreement that either party might terminate the agreement by a notice of 30 days. Three several times that agreement as theretofore amended was in terms “ extended ” from the first day of March in one year to the samé day in the following year, the final agreement of extension "being dated February 24th, 1900, and providing that the said agreement as amended (all of the amendments being enumerated) “is hereby extended * * * for one year after March 1st, 1900.”
The duration thus fixed was different to that first fixed; it is inconsistent with it; both cannot exist together. -If the contract was to continue to be terminable by either side at will oil a notice of 30 days, what was the meaning of extending it for a year? If the contract could still be terminated at will -— if that was the intention — the words of extension for a fixed period were used to mean nothing.
The contract was extended a year from March 1st, 1900, and the defendant is liable for damages for discharging the plaintiff before the year was up.
The judgment should be affirmed.
Hirschberg, P. J., Hooker and Miller, JJ., concurred; Jenks, J., read for reversal.