24 N.Y.2d 682 | NY | 1969
Plaintiff Felsen was employed, pursuant to a written contract, by defendant Sol Cafe as its treasurer, comptroller and general administrator for the period from May 15, 1961 to December 31, 1965. The contract provided for a stated weekly
Felsen thereafter instituted an action against Sol Cafe and against Chock Full O’Nuts asserting a cause of action against the former for breach of contract and against the latter for the alleged malicious inducement of that breach of contract. Sol Cafe’s answer contained a defense of discharge for cause and Chock Full O’Nuts asserted a general denial. A jury returned a verdict for plaintiff against both defendants and the verdict and judgment entered thereon were affirmed by a closely divided Appellate Division panel.
Felsen, on his direct case, proved the contract, its term, the fact of discharge prior to term and his damages as a result of the discharge. He thereby established a prima facie case and the burden fell upon defendant Sol Cafe as to the first cause of action for wrongful discharge, to establish the defense of discharge for cause (Linton v. Unexcelled Fireworks Co., 124 N. Y. 533; Richardson, Evidence [3d ed.], § 110). Defendant attempted to show that various inventory and production reports made at its plant were altered and falsified and submitted to Sol Cafe and Chock Full O’Nuts and that plaintiff knew about these alleged falsifications and alterations but nevertheless failed to report them and was thereby guilty of dereliction in the performance of the duties owing to his employer. The evidence as a whole, however, not only failed to establish that Felsen was aware of the alleged “ falsifications and alterations ’ ’ but there was also a plain jury question as to whether the admitted changes in such reports were, in fact, 1 ‘ falsifications ’ ’ contrived to mislead Sol Cafe or whether they were
Plaintiff’s second cause of action was asserted against Chock Full 0 ’Nuts and was grounded on the theory of malicious inducement of a breach of contract. Plaintiff alleged in his complaint that Chock Full 0 ’Nuts ‘ ‘ wrongfully, knowingly, intentionally, maliciously and without reasonable justification or excuse induced, persuaded and enticed the said Sol Cafe Mfg. Corp. to * * * break [its1] contract with the plaintiff ”. The court charged the jury, without exception, that plaintiff’s unrebutted evidence had established three of the four elements of his cause of action and the only remaining question was whether Chock Full 0 ’Nuts had intentionally interfered with plaintiff’s contract with Sol Cafe without just cause or excuse. The jury returned a verdict against both defendants and necessarily, by that verdict, found that Chock Full 0 ’Nuts had intentionally interfered without such just cause or excuse. Chock Full 0 ’Nuts contends that plaintiff had failed to establish a prima facie case since Chock Full 0 ’Nuts, as the sole stockholder of Sol Cafe, had an existing economic interest to protect and was, therefore, privileged to interfere with the contract between plaintiff and Sol Cafe and plaintiff could not, therefore, recover on this cause of action unless he established that the means chosen to protect that interest were illegal or that Chock Full 0 ’Nuts, through its officers or agents, was motivated by malice toward the plaintiff rather than by the preservation of its own economic interest in Sol Cafe.
Order modified in accordance with the opinion herein, and, as so modified, affirmed, with costs to appellant Chock Full O’Nuts Corporation.