152 N.Y.S. 897 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1915
This action was brought to recover damages for breach of contract of employment by wrongful discharge. The contract contained a covenant binding the plaintiff to devote his entire time to the business of the defendants. It appeared without contradiction that shortly after plaintiff entered the defendants’ employment in the city of New York, without the consent of the defendants he entered into a general partnership with another firm engaged in a' different line of business in the same city, and contributed $10,000 to the capital thereof. It is contended by the defendants that plaintiff’s entering into and carrying on a general partnership with another firm
Assuming that plaintiff’s entering into this general partnership did not constitute per se a violation of the covenant for exclusive service, the case discloses numerous prejudicial errors requiring a reversal. The defendants should have been permitted at least to introduce all available evidence tending to show what services plaintiff rendered his partnership and whether he did anything more than make a mere investment of $10,000 in another business. Defendants sought but were not permitted to show that the plaintiff was the financial man of his general partnership and furnished statements to a financial agency showing the firm’s assets and liabilities for a credit rating. This statement showed that plaintiff called at B. G-. Dunn & Go’s on March 29, 1913, four weeks after entering defendants’ employment, and made a statement concerning his contribution of capital and concerning the business of the concern. Yet the court refused to permit the plaintiff to answer, on cross-examination, a question whether he had furnished a signed statement of the firm’s affairs to the commercial agency. This would have tended to shew that during business hours, when according to his contract and according to the testimony, plaintiff was devoting
If the plaintiff did not make any such promise, did not make any such statements, did not do anything on his part to breach the contract, he would be entitled to recover because defendants would have had no right to discharge him.” We have seen the covenant for exclusive services was in the written contract and there was no basis for the court’s submitting it to the jury to determine whether plaintiff made such a promise. Furthermore, the court charged at defendants’ request: “That if a salesman who has contracted his entire time without the consent of the principal, engages in any employment or business for himself or with another, he may be lawfully discharged before the expiration of the agreed time.” Upon plaintiff’s counsel taking an exception, the court further charged: “ That is a matter of fact for the jury to determine.” If the defendants’ request was proper, the evidence .being uncontradicted, the complaint should have been dismissed. Apart from this, whether a salesman may be lawfully discharged under such circumstances certainly is not a question of fact. A verdict of a jury rendered under these circumstances is worthless and should not be permitted to stand. These considerations render it unnecessary to determine whether, as a matter of law, on the facts disclosed by the record, the defendants were justified in discharging the plaintiff. That question, an interesting and important one, upon which this court is at present divided, may be
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.
Pendleton, J., concurs; Guy, J., dissenting.
Judgment reversed and new trial ordered.