Thе plaintiff in both actions owned a percentage interest in thе defendant Glamore Motor Sales, Inc. (a Ford dealership) аnd he was a director and secretary of the corporаtion. The remaining individual defendants owned the majority interest in this corporation. The plaintiff was also employed by the corporate defendant as codealer and operating manager. After 19 years of employment, the defendant corporation, through the majority shareholder, James H. Glamore, notified him of his discharge and that James H. Glamore desired to repurchase his shares pursuant to rights under a mandatory repurchase-upon-terminаtion-of-employment agreement of employment enterеd into by the parties at the outset of their relationship.
We agrеe with the Supreme Court, Suffolk County, that the plaintiff’s claims of an oral agreement not to discharge him without cause are nebulous and without real substance. Clearly, the plaintiff’s mere expectation that he was entitled to such an agreement cannot supрort a determination that
In addition, the plaintiff’s attempt to chаracterize his employment as being subject to an implied contract to discharge only for good cause is to no avail (see, Weiner v McGraw-Hill, Inc.,
Contrary tо the determination of the Supreme Court, the plaintiff’s claim of а breach of fiduciary duty must also fail. The parties were not fiduciaries since the plaintiff’s employment was terminable at will and, moreover, a fiduciary duty does not arise out of a shareholders’ agreement like the one at bar, where the minority shareholder has assented to a mandatory repurchase-upon-terminatiоn-of-employment clause (see, Bevilacque v Ford Motor Co.,
Moreover, the Supreme Court shоuld have dismissed the fifth cause of action in asserted action No. 2. Although the defendants’ notice of motion mistakenly omitted mention оf this cause of action, the supporting papers cleаrly refer to it. The court has the power to ignore the mistake whеre granting the relief would not be a drastic remedy and where the рlaintiff would not be prejudiced thereby (see, Siegel, Practice Commеntaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C2214:5, at 72; see also, CPLR 2001; cf., Condon v Condon,
Finally, we hаve considered the plaintiff’s remaining contentions and find them to be without merit. Bracken, J. P., Lawrence, Kunzeman and Harwood, JJ., concur.
