131 N.Y.S. 744 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1911
This judgment is wrong upon the law and the facts. In December, 1890, the plaintiff made a contract with the defendant whereby he was to remain in its employment on the following terms: Commencing January 1, 1891, the company to pay $25 per week for fifty-nine hours labor; all lost time to be ‘deducted at that rate and thirty cents per hour for actual overtime allowed. It was also to pay the sum of $200, payable in
In July, 1894, his attention was called to the fact that the bookkeeper was charging his lost time against him, and he was asked his pleasure with reference to it. He said that he had rather have the lost time deducted and the equivalent given to him at the end of the year. It was understood that $50 was to be allowed. Thereafter it gave him and he. accepted $50 at at the end of the year, about Christmas time, This was paid annually until January, 1908, when he was informed that, the company could not afford to pay him the $50 a year longer. He was then about sixty-nine years old. He made no dissent. There is no substantial dispute about this last conversation, which plaintiff concedes was in January, 1908. He remained in the company’s employ .without any dissent, receiving only the weekly wages thereafter until September, 1910, when he quit the employment and brought this action, and by the judgment has recovered the.$200 a year for about seventeen years, less $50 per year deducted as payments thereon from January 1, 1903, to January, 1908.
There is no substantial dispute about the facts. Any dispute is merely a verbal one, but the main facts that he was informed in 1893 that the $200 would not be paid longer; that he remained thereafter without dissent; that in 1894 when it was discovered that his lost time was being charged to him it was agreed that $50 was to be paid in lieu thereof at the end of each year; that settlements were thereafter made pursuant thereto; that in 1908 he was told that the $50 would not be paid any longer and that he continued at work without objection, are entirely undisputed. He says that when he was told the company did not.want to pay the $200 any longer his answer was, “I will see about it,” and when asked why he continued to make settlements from year to year with the $200 deducted he says: “I understood that he didn’t want to pay it. Q. And wasn’t-going to ? A. Well, sir, that was another question whether he would. No, sir, I did not understand that he was not going to
nineteen or twenty years prior to the time of my employment ceasing, I didn’t make claim for this $150 a year and collect it because I had every confidence in the-Eddy Valve Company, that they were in good standing, and that my money was safe, more so perhaps than in many of the banks. It was in' good standing. And I thought if I made any claim that it would conflict and perhaps be the cause of my leaving, and I was not circumstanced to leave. * * * I have no reason for not finding out what they understood about it, only every confidence in the company; I didn’t find out what they understood, because I didn’t want any misunderstanding. * * * I preferred to stay, even if they did not understand that they were owing me anything for this $200 a year. I had it in mind that if I said they were not paying me this $150 a year, and that they owed me the balance of $150 a year, that they would not keep me, perhaps that they would — from what Mr. Thomas Knickerbocker said, that that was more than they were willing to pay, and therefore I kept still about it. * * * I said to Mr. John Knickerbocker when he came home that Mr. Rogers had when he paid me the last installment said that his father, Mr. Thomas Knickerbocker, wanted to discontinue the $200 and he made the reply, I suppose, Mr. Hughes, you don’t like that,’ and I says, no, sir, and I don’t intend to like it,’ and he said, 'I will see,’ and that was all he said. ”
These are the only suggestions which the plaintiff can urge in his favor, but they are not sufficient to change the fact that he was informed that the defendant was not willing to pay the $200 a year, that he made no dissent and apparently acquiesced, as he says, in order to have no misunderstanding and not to losé his job. Of course he' did not like .it, but he was called upon to dissent or assent and his subsequent conduct shows clearly that he assented. While he did not in words, say that he would submit to the reduction, he knew it was
I think, therefore, upoii the law and the facts' the $200 was deducted pursuant to the agreement of the parties and that there can be no recovery therefor.'
But if I am. not right the fact remains that the defendant during all the time stood in the attitude of being unwilling to pay the $200. The $50 per year was not intended as a part payment of the $200. It was as a present and to make up for lost time charged. When it is claimed that the $50 is a part payment of the $200 and takes the remainder from the Statute of Limitations,, it is immaterial, what the plaintiff’s intent was in receiving it; the real question is what was the defendant’s intent in paying it. Was it paid as a part of the $200 under circumstances indicating that there was a balance unpaid 1 The. true rule is stated in Crow v. Gleason (141 N. Y. 489, 493): “In order to make a money payment a part payment within the statute, the burden is upon the creditor to show that it was a payment of a portion of the admitted debt, and
It is a violence to all the facts in this case to say that the defendant in making the weekly payments, or the yearly payment of the $50, was thereby admitting any indebtedness on account of the $200. Therefore, under any possible construction of the case, it is impossible to allow anything except for moneys growing due within six years prior to the action brought. I favor a reversal of the judgment on the law and the facts.
All concurred, Houghton, J., concurring on the question of the Statute of Limitations, except Betts, J., dissenting.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.