195 A.D. 144 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1921
This action is brought by the plaintiff to recover damages which he claims to have sustained by reason of his wrongful
« nr t m tt “ Philadelphia, June 11th, 1917. “ Mr. J. T. Hendricks, ’ ’
“ San Francisco, Cal. :
“ Dear Sir.— Referring to our conversation of today, we will be very glad to enter into a business arrangement with you on the following basis:
“We will pay you a salary of $12,000 per annum, and give you an interest of 10% in the net profits of our business at New York and Philadelphia, payable quarterly each year.
“ On the Linseed Oil business in New York, instead of paying you 10% profit, we will pay you 50% of the net profits of the Linseed Oil business in the New York territory. We will also enter into a contract with you making this agreement binding for three years.
“We would like very much to have a reply from you prior to July First, 1917. „ Touts very tmly
“ CLEMENTS & SON,
“ H. M. Clement.”
This written proposition was either delivered to the plaintiff personally by the defendant or was mailed to and received by the plaintiff at San Francisco. On June 16, 1917, the plaintiff, in writing, accepted defendant’s proposition. Plaintiff’s written acceptance was embodied in the following letter, which was received by the defendant:
“ J. T. Hendricks,
“ San Francisco.
“ Messrs. Clements & Son, une ’
“ 1040 Widener Building,
“ Philadelphia, Pa.:
“ Gentlemen.— Referring to yours of June 11th, by Mr. H. M. Clements, I beg to advise that after reflection I will be glad to accept the proposition which you set forth and you may consider this letter as my acceptance and approval thereof. Very truly yours,
“ J. T. HENDRICKS.”
Defendant testified that he saw plaintiff at Atlantic City, where the plaintiff had taken his wife to recuperate, the latter part of July, and then told the plaintiff that as he had gone through a good deal with his wife and the weather was very hot, if he did not want to he need not come to New York immediately, but to take a few days’ rest. Defendant testified that the plaintiff did not, in fact, report to New York until the sixth or seventh of August, but that his salary dated from August first.
Plaintiff at once took up his duties at the New York office, but the evidence would seem to indicate that under plaintiff’s direction defendant’s business in the city of New York did not prosper satisfactorily to the defendant. Considerable criticism of the plaintiff was indulged by the defendant, culminating in written communications and telephonic conversations wherein defendant severely took the plaintiff to task for failure to put the business upon a paying basis. Finally, upon December 28, 1917, the defendant wrote plaintiff at length criticising his work and the manner in which he discharged his duties as defendant’s New York representative. On February 4, 1918, defendant again wrote plaintiff of his disappointment in the existing conditions. On February 8, 1918, plaintiff replied by letter stating to the defendant that he certainly would be unwilling to continue for any protracted period a relation with the defendant which was not mutually satisfactory, and that he would endeavor as soon as practicable to make other connections and to relieve the defendant from his obligations under their contract. Following plaintiff’s entry upon defendant’s service under said contract he was paid
Defendant, answering the plaintiff’s complaint, admitted the making of an arrangement with plaintiff but which defendant claimed was partly oral and partly written, and that the letter of June 11, 1917, from defendant to plaintiff, and plaintiff’s reply thereto June 16, 1917, did not make the complete contract between the parties, but that the contract into which they entered was to be thereafter put into definite form. Defendant in his answer also alleged that plaintiff, in his conduct of defendant’s business, was wholly inefficient and
The jury upon the trial.rendered a verdict in favor of the defendant, upon which the judgment appealed from was entered.
The plaintiff seeks reversal of the said judgment upon this appeal upon the ground of error committed at the trial. Under objection and exception of plaintiff’s counsel, defendant was permitted to give parol evidence tending to show that the letter from defendant to plaintiff of June 11, 1917, and plaintiff’s letter to defendant of June 16, 1917, upon which plaintiff bases his action, did not embrace the real contract between the parties. Upon the trial the defendant was permitted to introduce parol evidence to the effect that there was an oral understanding between the parties that the provision of the contract stipulating for a definite three years’ term was not to become éffective until plaintiff had served a six or seven months’ apprenticeship during which he should demonstrate his "ability to make a success of the business. In permitting such parol proof to vary the terms of the written contract between the parties, I think the trial court clearly erred. The law is too well settled to require discussion or the citation of authorities that all previous negotiations between the parties to a contract are superseded by and are deemed to be embodied in the written instrument itself when finally executed, and evidence of talk or negotiations between the parties to a valid instrument in writing, either prior to or at the time of its execution, is inadmissible to vary or contradict its terms. The only exceptions to this general rule are where through fraud, want of consideration or otherwise, no contract really can be said to exist. In such case parol evidence may be given which may effect a destruction of the written instrument. The effect of such parol evidence would be to show that no contract, in fact, was made. Parol evidence is also admissible in cases where the written contract is upon its face ambiguous or incomplete. In such case parol evidence is permissible, not to contradict or vary the terms of the written contract, but to explain and clarify the same and to complete the agree
In the case at bar we have presented a clear, unambiguous and positive offer on the part of the defendant to employ the plaintiff for three years at a salary of $12,000 per annum, together with an interest of ten per centum in the net profits of defendant’s business in New York and Philadelphia, payable quarterly each year, and, further, a one-half interest in the net profits of defendant’s linseed oil business in the New York territory. In acceptance of such written offer we have the clear and unambiguous letter from plaintiff to defendant of June 16, 1917, stating that the plaintiff accepted the latter’s proposition. While the defendant upon the trial contended that the said correspondence passing between the parties was ' tentative merely, and that it was the intention of the parties later, and after plaintiff had demonstrated his ability as a salesman, to enter into the three-year contract, the evidence does not disclose that any further attempt was made to amplify the plain and apparently complete written contract expressed through such correspondence. Soon after August 1, 1917, pursuant to defendant’s written request, plaintiff entered upon the discharge of his new duties, his salary dating from August 1, 1917. He was thereafter paid his salary of $1,000 a month and no suggestion was made but that the written communications between the parties fully expressed their contract, until plaintiff made claim to share in the net profits of defendant’s business enterprises pursuant thereto. Not only must defendant’s letter to plaintiff of June 11, 1917, offering plaintiff employment upon the terms therein specified, which were later accepted by the plaintiff in writing, be deemed to embody all talk and negotiations between the parties prior and at the time of said offer and acceptance, but under the very terms of defendant’s said letter reference is made to a conversation occurring that day between the parties, and referring to such conversation the defendant states that “ We will be very glad.
Under the charge of the court the jury was permitted to find that the written instrument upon which the plaintiff relied did not embrace the real contract between the parties. To the court’s instruction in this respect the plaintiff duly excepted, aqd I think theréby error is also presented requiring a reversal of the judgment herein.
The judgment and order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide event.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Smith and Page, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.