201 A.D. 454 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1922
This is an action predicated on a contract in writing made between the parties on the 3d of January, 1919, by which defendant agreed to employ plaintiff as its sole sales manager from that day until the 1st of February, 1937, and it is brought to recover, on two counts, commissions earned under the contract and damages for the wrongful discharge of the plaintiff.- The first count of the complaint shows that prior to the 14th of April, 1914, plaintiff and Cyrus F. Tibbals, Sr., were copartners publishing and selling codes; that on that day they incorporated the defendant under the laws of New York with a capital of 1,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, and Tibbals became president and took 600 shares and $60,000 of a bond issue of $100,000, and plaintiff became vice-president and took 300 shares of the stock and the remaining $40,000 of the bonds; that defendant brought an action against plaintiff, which was settled and discontinued pursuant to said agreement under which the plaintiff was employed, and a former agreement for his
At the opening of the trial, counsel for the defendant demanded that it be given the affirmative. The motion was denied and it excepted; and that is assigned as error, on which a reversal is asked
Defendant pleaded that the plaintiff was incompetent, but on the trial its counsel admitted that he was a competent sales manager and an expert in making codes. He testified that it was not his duty under the contract to act as salesman, but that it was his duty to, and he did, call on the trade with a view to establishing agencies to sell codes published and handled by the defendant, and to obtaining orders for private codes to be compiled by him; that he advised the president of the company that it would be well to make the Allied Code Company, with which his son was associated, its retail selling agent, and in that connection stated that, with a little training by him, it should be able to handle the defendant’s publications to their mutual advantage; and that the Allied Code Company contemplated the publication of the fifth edition of the A. B. C. Code, which was sold by the defendant and was one of its best sellers; and that if an arrangement could be effected with the Allied Company, the publication by it of that code could be stopped; that the defendant’s president finally authorized him to make a contract with the Allied Code Company, by which it was to receive and devote its time to selling the defendant’s codes at a discount of forty per cent, and not to publish any code in competition with defendant; that, pursuant to that agreement, business relations were established with the Allied Code Company, and it sold codes for the defendant throughout the year 1919; and that the monthly bills for these sales ran from $685.10 in January to $1,090.50 in May, and $202.50 for each of the months of November and December. Plaintiff further testified that it was his duty as sales manager
It is contended in behalf of the defendant that the complaint should have been dismissed, and that, in any event, the verdict was against the weight of the evidence. Plaintiff admitted that after he made the contract in behalf of the defendant with the Allied Code Company, he spent most of.his time in the office of that company; and he did not in that connection or elsewhere in his testimony expressly state what he was doing there; and he also somewhat flippantly admitted that he spent considerable time around the streets. But defendant’s president admitted that he made no complaint prior to the plaintiff’s discharge that plaintiff was not properly performing his duties although he had full knowledge with respect to what plaintiff was doing, for during the latter part of April he employed detectives to follow plaintiff about and report to him with respect to plaintiff’s movements, and they testified that most of plaintiff’s time was spent in the office of the Allied Code Company. It further appears that, during the period of the plaintiff’s employment and while he was ill, without notice to him, he was removed as vice-president, and the son of the president was elected in his place and given an increased salary and took plaintiff’s place as sales manager after the discharge. Counsel for the respondent argues that the appellant did not make this contract with the plaintiff in good faith but for the purpose of becoming
It was conceded that his commissions for April were $1,019.19. The verdict was for $21,019.19, which shows that the jury awarded $20,000 as general damages. The only basis shown for the general damages was the amount of the plaintiff’s commissions under the contract until the time of his discharge, which were $324.01 for January, $586.73 for February, $770.20 for March, and $1,019.19 for April, thus showing a gradual increase; and the commissions on the same basis, to which, if he had not been discharged, he would have been entitled for the succeeding three months, would have been for May $982.05, for June $1,255.71, and for July $1,321,44. The issues were brought to trial on the 9th of January, 1922, but no further evidence with respect to the business transacted by the defendant in the meantime — a period of about two and one-half years — was shown. This evidence and further evidence that the
I am of opinion, therefore, that the recovery was warranted by the evidence, and that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling and Merrell, JJ., concur; Page, J., dissents.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.