222 A.D. 197 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1927
The complaint sets out two causes of action. The first alleges that the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant under a renewal contract of employment running from January 1 to December 31, 1925, the terms of which contract obligated the defendant to pay plaintiff $25,000 per year, payable in monthly installments of $1,250, and a balance of $10,000 on December 31, 1925; that the defendant paid the monthly installments, but that there was left unpaid the sum of $10,000, due December 31, 1925.
The answer denied the making of this contract but admitted the payment of the monthly installments, aggregating $15,000 for that year.
This issue of fact was decided by the jury in favor of the defendant. No claim is made of error with respect to the first cause of action. Error is claimed with respect to the second cause of action. The view I take of the question relating to the second cause of action makes unnecessary further consideration of the first cause of action.
The second cause of action realleges seven of the eight paragraphs of the first cause of action, the substance of which has just been stated, with the omission of allegations covering the making of a written contract from January 1, 1923, between plaintiff and defendant relating to plaintiff’s services and the renewal thereof each year (with salary modifications) by acquiescence of both parties from time to time down to and including December 31, 1924, and the allegation that all payments due from the defendant thereunder were paid to the plaintiff.
The plaintiff then alleges in paragraph 10:
“ Tenth. That thereafter, on or about June 18, 1925, plaintiff and defendant did, by mutual consent and by acquiescence, agree that the aforesaid contract of employment be continued and extended for a period of one year from January 1,1926, to December 31, 1926, except that the compensation to be paid to the plaintiff*199 by the defendant for such services so to be rendered was to be the sum of Thirty thousand Dollars ($30,000) per annum, payable in equal monthly installments of Twelve hundred fifty Dollars ($1250) per month, and the balance of Fifteen thousand Dollars ($15,000) on December 31, 1926.”
There is then alleged, in paragraph 11 that the plaintiff duly performed; in paragraph 12, that on March 5, 1926, the defendant wrongfully discharged the plaintiff; and in paragraph 13 there is, under the second cause of action, an allegation of damages in the sum of $28,750.
The answer denies the making of this contract alleged in the second cause of action and, as an affirmative defense, it alleges that the plaintiff’s employment was from month to month, terminable at the end of any month by either party, and that on February 27, 1926, the employment was terminated by notice from the defendant to the plaintiff and by consent of the parties.
The only other defense which need be considered is one, added at the trial, of the Statute of Frauds, which was allowed, since it appeared, subsequently'to the service of the answer, that the second , cause of action rested in parol. ''
It seems that on January 1, 1923, the plaintiff was hired by the defendant under a written contract to act as general salesman and manager for one year at $15,000 a year, payable in monthly installments of $833.33, and the balance of $5,000 on December 31, 1923, which contract was fully performed; that by mutual consent the parties continued and extended that contract for one year with an increase in salary to $20,000 with payments in monthly installments of $1,250, and on December 31, 1924, $5,000. This contract was performed by both parties. The claim of the plaintiff is that the plaintiff and defendant similarly extended this 1924 arrangement for another year from January 1, 1925, as has already been indicated, at a salary of $25,000 a year. The issue of fact as to this arrangement for compensation for 1925, based on a June 18, 1925, talk, was determined in favor of the defendant by the jury, which accepted the defendant’s version of the 1925 arrangement as to salary. The decision of the claim of a month to month employment was not essential to disposing of the first cause of action by the jury. The decision of the 1925 salary question was dependent upon the view to be taken by the jury as to two conversations between the plaintiff and the defendant’s officer Migel, one of which conversations was claimed to have occurred in December, 1924, just before the beginning of 1925, and the other in June, 1925, six months after the beginning of the contract for 1925, alleged by the plaintiff. This is more clearly stated in the charge
The appellant claims that under the portion of the proof he invokes there arose, by implication of law, a contract of employment from January 1, 1926, to December thirty-first, based upon a continuation of the relationship of employer and employee growing out of an agreement or an implied contract for the one year preceding January 1, 1926; and that a certain conversation on June 18, 1925, related solely in legal effect to changing or increasing the compensation for 1926, and that that conversation, although increasing compensation, was not itself a contract. He cites certain cases which recognize that a contract of renewal for one year may arise by implication of law following a definite contract for the preceding year, and insists he comes within these cases. Plaintiff recognizes that his pleading is in the nature of an express1 oral agreement arrived at on June 18, 1925, for a period to begin January 1, 1926, but insists that the portion of the proof he invokes should be considered dissociated from his pleading so as to sustain a recovery on an implied contract and thus avoid the Statute of Frauds.
The defendant accepts the doctrine of the cases plaintiff relies upon, urging, however, that such an implied contract for one year does not arise where the preceding term is greater than one year on the basis of express contract, and likewise that that would be so where the preceding term was less than for one year. It also insists that as a matter of pleading the plaintiff has relied upon an express contract, which, being oral, is invalid, made on June 18, 1925, for a period of one year beginning January 1, 1926, and with compensation different from that claimed to have been agreed upon in the same conversation for the year 1925.
An examination of the cases sustains the respondent’s view and its contention with respect to the effect of the express contract respecting compensation is sound within the authorities.
The second cause of action was for damages, and it was upon an express agreement (complaint, 10) claimed to have been entered into “ on or about June 18, 1925, * * * by mutual consent and by acquiescence,” whereby the plaintiff and defendant did “ agree that the aforesaid contract of employment be continued and extended for a period of one year from January 1, 1926, to
It has been held (Ætna National Bank v. Fourth National Bank, 46 N. Y. 82, 86): “ The law will not imply a promise as a substitute for, or in addition to the express contract of the parties.” And it is further held that express contracts preclude the arising of implied contracts covering the same subject-matter. (Miller v. Schloss, 218 N. Y. 400, 406; Walton Water Co. v. Village of Walton, 238 id. 46, 52.)
In Kreitner v. Burgweger (174 App. Div. 48, 51) it was said: “ The existence of a specific contract cannot be reconciled with that of an implied contract involving the same elements. . The two conceptions are antagonistic and all services performed while the specific contract exists must be conclusively presumed to have been performed thereunder.”
The theory of the plaintiff’s pleading was an arrangement or agreement made on June IP, 1925, with respect to the period-from January 1, 1926, to December 31, 1926, and that the compensation differed from that applying to the year in the middle of which the alleged agreement was made, to wit, 1925. The plaintiff insists: “ Therefore, to determine whether plaintiff was relying upon an express agreement rather than an implied agreement, his testimony only need be considered.” Plaintiff claims that his proof is to control and not the manner of his pleading. He points out certain testimony as supporting the claim that there was a preceding arrangement or implied agreement existing for the year 1925, which in turn was impliedly renewed for the year 1926 by reason of the conduct of the parties in continuing after January 1, 1926, in the relation of employer and employee.
The testimony cited may, upon a strained view, be susceptible of the construction plaintiff makes, i. e., that it is consistent with the claim that although talks took place on June 18, 1925, between the defendant and the plaintiff, such talks had nothing to do with anything but a change in compensation which later was contained in a contract which, by implication of law, did not come into being until January 1, 1926. But this new element could not incorporate itself into the implied agreement which could not and did not arise until six months later, except on the basis of agreement or contract made June 18, 1925, which time of making invalidates it, since-the talk in reference to compensation was not repeated after January 1, 1926, after the implied contract for one year could be said to have arisen.
The plaintiff ignores testimony which is in keeping with plaintiff’s
The cases which plaintiff cites are wholly consistent -with the disposition made by the trial court. They relate to situations where an employee is continued in employment under an express contract for a year’s employment and the employer permits the employee to continue working after the beginning of the ensuing year. In such an instance the law implies, as a proper inference of fact, that the employment is to continue for another year; but this implication of fact arises after the beginning of the new year, and that is what happened in each of the cases plaintiff cites. The question of added compensation in the cases he cites is covered by talks transpiring after the beginning of the year respecting a new salary basis, and thus became incorporated in the term implied by law. (Ball v. Stover, 82 Hun, 460.) None of the cases he cites are concerned with an arrangement to increase the salary based solely on conversations claimed to have been "had before the beginning of the new year of employment.
The appellant seeks to have this court disregard his complaint and the theory of it, and confine itself wholly to the testimony,
It was held in Schott v. La Compagnie Generale (52 Misc. 236, 238) that an agreement for an increase of salary, made between the parties, creates a new contract. There it was held that no contract for one year was implied by law from the mere continuing in the employment, because the express contract for the preceding period was for two years. It is, of course, claimed by the plaintiff here that the preceding period related to a renewed contract of one year, and that, therefore, an implication for the additional one year could follow, which would be in accordance with the authorities if there had not been a claim of or a reliance upon an express contract, which precluded an implied contract arising with respect to the same subject-matter.
In Brown v. Actors’ Fund of America (103 Misc. 578, 579; affd., 190 App. Div. 908) it was held that an implied contract for another year did not arise from the continuance of the relationship, following an express contract for the preceding year, because of testimony of a transaction with the defendant’s officer, which transaction the court held to constitute in effect a new contract and which prevented the arising of a contract by implication of law, and this new contract was futile to support the claim of the plaintiff therein.
In Brightson v. Claflin Co. (180 N. Y. 76) an employee having a written agreement for five years sought to recover for a further period, upon the same terms and conditions, on the theory of renewal growing out of the holding over of the employee by the employer. It was there held that no such recovery could be had, the court reiterating the rule that “ Where there is a hiring for one year and the servant continues in the employment after the expiration of the year with the consent of the master, this effects a hiring for another year. (Adams v. Fitzpatrick, 125 N. Y. 124.) ”
It is further claimed by the plaintiff that, in any event, the question should have been submitted to the jury under the second cause of action with respect to his claimed services rendered in January and February, and his claim of wrongful discharge in March, 1926. He admitted he had been paid for the month of January. However, this claim is untenable because the second
Of course, this claim may not be asserted for the first time upon an appeal.
The action of the trial court in dismissing the second cause of action was, in my opinion, correct.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Present — Lazansky, P. J., Rich, Kapper, Seeger and Carswell, JJ.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.