21 N.Y.S. 1034 | City of New York Municipal Court | 1893
Plaintiff’s action is upon a written agreement between him and defendant, made on November 1, 1889, whereby Brandus, plaintiff, engages for five years the services of Hecht, defendant, as general manager of his busi
“ Brandus shall have the right of terminating this agreement at any time upon the payment of $2,000 to said Hecht, and a share of the profits up to the time of such termination. Either party committing a breach of this agreement shall forfeit to the other $2,000 as liquidated damages, and not as a penalty, to be recovered by him in an action at law.” It is undisputed that defendant, by his letter of December 1,1890, notified plaintiff, his general business manager, as follows: “ Personally, I am positively through with the business, and will run it no longer,” and “ please close down.” It was the servant’s duty to obey these instructions from his master, and his obedience in this respect was the master’s breach of the agreement as regards the continuance of the master’s business and servant’s employment. And as the factory was immediately closed down and its dismantlement begun, and the whole business was finally abandoned and closed on March 7, 1891, the plaintiff had an immediate cause of action for $2,000 under the above provisions of the agreement, unless he,*473 as appellant contends, had abandoned, released or waived defendant’s obligations under the agreement to continue the business and plaintiff’s employment for five years, or to pay the plaintiff $2,000 as stipulated damages for failure to so continue the business or employment, or for terminating the agreement as provided for therein.
The appellant’s main contentions as to abandonment, release or waiver by plaintiff of defendant’s obligations under the agreement, are that defendant’s letter of ¡November 18, 1890, is, in itself, such release or waiver and if not so, in itself, then it is the foundation upon which a waiver or release by estoppel can be built from the subsequent acts of defendant in discontinuing his business and plaintiff’s employment, and in terminating the agreement, and which were induced by this letter and plaintiff’s acts and conversations. The appellant insists that plaintiff’s willing obedience to defendant’s instructions to shut down and dismantle his factory was a waiver or release by him of defendant’s obligations under the agreement to continue the business under plaintiff’s management for five years. But such obedience cannot be so construed, first, because plaintiff was a servant, and such instructions came from his master, and secondly, whether servant or copartner, the plaintiff had no legal right to object, for he had by the contract conceded to defendant the absolute right to terminate the agreement, or to discontinue the business or employment whenever he saw fit to do so, and upon the exercise of such right he became liable to plaintiff in $2,000. ¡Now as to this letter of plaintiff. The defendant, at folios 150 and 151, testified that before he had received this letter he had “ lots of times ” directed plaintiff to sell the business, and had “ asked him to do all he could to sell it.” This letter treats almost solely of plaintiff’s efforts to make a sale of the business as instructed by defendant, and in it plaintiff says: “You (defendant) ask me what are my views as to my future; frankly, I had not given that a thought, but I certainly expect to perform all my obligations to you,” and then makes reference to going into some other business with defendant if
MoG-owak and FrrzsiHorrs, JJ., concur.
Judgment affirmed.