92 N.Y.S. 132 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1905
This is the second action brought to enforce the plaintiff’s claim. Upon the first action the complaint was dismissed, which upon an appeal to this court was affirmed. (58 App. Div. 25.) The plaintiff having testified as to the conversation with one of the defendants upon which he based his claim that a contract was made for compensation in addition to that which he had before received, this court said: “ The most that can be predicated upon such a conversation is that Mr. Kimball was- favorably disposed to the consideration of the question of increased salary. But that no definite agreement of any kind was made for an increase of salary for any definite period or any stated amount is evidenced from the plaintiff’s own statement at the trial, that he was to get a share in the profits of the buildings in addition to his regular salary. He did not claim that he was to ,be taken in as a partner, but that his additional compensation in some way was to be measured-—how does not appear — by the profits realized upon the two buildings. There is not sufficient in this vague and indefinite conversation to support a contract, because there is nothing to show that the minds of the parties met upon any binding agreement.”
The plaintiff then commenced this action to recover for the same cause of action. Upon the trial the plaintiff somewhat modified his account of the interview with one of the defendants. He testified that the defendants were copartners doing business in the city of Hew York-as architects, and that the plaintiff entered their employ in October, 1893, at a salary of thirty-six dollars per week, receiving additional pay for overtime; that in February, 1895, he had a conversatidn with the defendants about his- compensation during which he stated that it was his intention to leave unless they gave him an increase of salary; that Thompson, one of the defendants, said that there was not enough work in the office to warrant giving him any increase; that if any important work came in
The only distinction between what the plaintiff testified to in the
There was here nothing from which a promise could be inferred that what the plaintiff would receive would be based upon a quantum, meruit. The defendants proposed-in the future to make some agreement which would be satisfactory to the plaintiff; but no basis upon which such increased compensation was to be estimated was suggested, except a general statement that Kimball’s idea was that the plaintiff was to be allowed some interest in the profits of the ■defendants’ business. The whole arrangement as testified to was so indefinite that it could not be the basis of a recovery. In United Press v. N. Y. Press Co. (164 N. Y. 406) Judge Gray, delivering the opinion of the court, says: “ It is elementary in the law that,
Meislahn v. Irving Nat. Bank (62 - App. Div. 231) was decided nppií ¡th^di^tinct ground that, there being no certificate that the c^j.gqntainpd. all the .evidence, the court was bound to presume that; fpfi^eient, evidence - was offered on behalf of the plaintiff to warrapfj the .verdict, and was not at liberty to review the facts. The court,,yras^bound to. assume that a valid contract had been made. The only question was whether evidence that was received was admissible. . We have not overlooked the distinction, pointed out by coungel for the respondent between an action to enforce an exe.cn-, tory contract to recover damages for its' breach and . an action to recover for services rendered under a contract executed by one of the parties to it'. The plaintiff was in the employ of defendants, receiving a regular salary which he continued to receive for the services rendered. If there was proof that an. express contract had ■ been made by which he was to receive additional compensation, he would be entitled to it;"but it is just here that the plaintiff’s proof fails. ■ He continued in the defendants’ employ, receiving the salary that had been agreed to. These services were not performed by the plaintiff under a new 'arrangement by which he was to, receive any other or different sum for his services than that provided for by the contract under which he was employed. There is no contract which - can be enforced which entitled him to receive anything in addition to that which was paid him and which he received as compensation . for his sérvices. If this promise is anything, it is a promise to give him an interest in the-business in the-future an cl that, the arrangement when made would be satisfactory ; b.ut as there was no basis upon which the interest that he was to receive could be ascertained and determined, there is no promise that can be enforced.
■ There is ‘also an exception -to a ruling upon a question of evidence which, I think, is clearly error and which required a reversal of the' judgment. The action was brought against the defendants' as copartners. The plaintiff continued in.the employ of the defendants from the time of his original employment in 1893 until he. was dismissed from his employment on June 4, 1898, at which time the
It follows that the judgment and order appealed from must b.e reversed and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Van Brunt, P. J., O’Brien and McLaughlin, J.J., concurred ; Hatch, J., concurred on second ground.
Judgment and order reversed, new trial ordered, costs to appellant to abide event.