275 Mass. 190 | Mass. | 1931
This is an action begun in March, 1926, for breach of an oral contract, alleged to have been entered into on or about July 1, 1920. On October 13, 1919, the plaintiff was employed as an agent of the defendant by a written contract negotiated through the manager of its Boston office. This contract was in the standard form used by the defendant. It was signed by the plaintiff and in behalf of the defendant by its president and its general manager of agencies. The name of Phelps, the local manager, was also appended as the person who nominated the agent. Evidence was introduced tending to prove that the plaintiff submitted to Phelps and his assistant a plan for insuring classes in colleges by a form of endowment insurance for the benefit of the respective institutions. Phelps sent his assistant with the plaintiff to a college in Boston to see if the men in authority there would consider the plan, and some examination was also made of it by the defendant’s actuaries.
The plaintiff relies upon conversations, to which he testified, admitted subject to the exception of the defendant, to prove the oral contract of employment. They were in substance that Phelps, addressing his assistant in the presence of the plaintiff, said: “I think the best thing we can do is to take Malcolm out of the shops and make it possible for him to devote all his time to the development of this idea.” To this proposition the assistant assented. Phelps then said to the plaintiff: “I am going, Mr. Malcolm, to make you a proposal but you are not to consider it as final, it can be revised, it can be made to suit you .... I suggest that the Travelers pay you $250 a month plus $300 a month for expenses,” a sum which might be revised to meet travel costs. He further suggested that this sum was to be paid until commissions on business written on the plan should be payable, and that the plaintiff would receive in addition ten per cent on all first year’s premiums written by the defendant’s agents anywhere. The plaintiff said the arrangement was satisfactory and acceptable, and Phelps then suggested that the financial returns to the plaintiff would be large “if the proposal is acceptable to
The contention of the plaintiff is that the evidence would justify a finding that the language was sufficiently definite to constitute an enforceable contract, that there was evidence of performance on the part of the plaintiff and repudiation on the part of the defendant, and that the only question is whether there was sufficient evidence that the making of such a contract was within the ostensible authority of Phelps to negotiate and of Mallory to conclude.
Upon the testimony Phelps had no authority to bind the defendant by an oral agreement in the terms to which the plaintiff testified, unless Mallory had authority to make such a contract and had delegated his power to act to Phelps. The evidence would not justify a finding that Mallory had been given actual authority to make such a contract, and the first question for decision is whether there was evidence that he had ostensible authority to make such a contract. The plaintiff must have known that the agreement to which he testified made no reference to many of the essential terms of the printed contract of employment under which he was then working, such as the time when it should begin and the manner in which it might be terminated, the obligations in connection with collecting and accounting for premiums, the manner in which the accounts should be kept, the obligation to furnish a bond and the amount of commissions on policies issued. His own contract was also some notice to him of the manner in which, and officials by whom, contracts employing agents were executed. Nielsen v. Northeastern Siberian Co. Ltd. 40 Wash. 194, 197. If the plan of insurance had the somewhat unusual features to which the plaintiff testified, this fact might have put him upon inquiry to ascertain whether the agents with whom he talked had authority to bind the defendant by what they said. See Shaw v. Stone, 1 Cush. 228, 245; Baldwin v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co. 182 Mass. 389; Mississippi & Dominion Steamship Co.
The evidence concerning Mallory’s authority tended, to prove that as one of the assistant superintendents of agencies, with headquarters in Hartford, from time to time he visited branch offices including the one in Boston; that he considered applications for employment as agents, although he did not talk with all the applicants; that he had at times signed contracts of employment but only in case of absence from Hartford of the general manager of agencies, the superintendent and the other assistant superintendent of agencies, and that Phelps might have seen such contracts; that sometimes a replacement contract is made with an agent without requiring him to present a new written application; that he would state the terms of employment to a prospective agent and if they were acceptable to the agent a written contract issued from the Hartford office would be executed. Mallory testified that he had no authority to enter into an oral contract, that the company never had an oral contract with an agent, and that the defendant had never employed an agent on a monthly salary. The plaintiff had been told by Phelps that Mallory represented Way, a vice-president and supervisor of agencies, but this testimony was not competent to prove the authority of Mallory.
. The testimony that the defendant required all of its contracts of employment to be in writing was not disputed, but if this testimony was not believed the case would be left without any evidence of actual or ostensible authority on the part of Mallory or Phelps to bind the defendant by an oral contract of employment. It did not appear that either agent in his dealings with prospective employees had undertaken to bind the defendant by what he said until the negotiations had resulted in a formal agreement executed by the proper officers of the defendant, nor was any evidence introduced to show that the defendant had
Because of the conclusion reached, we do not decide whether the terms of the agreement as they were stated by the plaintiff were sufficiently definite to be the basis of an enforceable contract; nor whether such authority as Mallory had could be or was delegated by him to Phelps. See Gerrish Dredging Co. v. Bethlehem Shipbuilding Corp. Ltd. 247 Mass. 162, 167; Malaguti v. Rosen, 262 Mass. 555, 564.
The judge was right in directing a verdict for the defendant and in accordance with the terms of the report
Judgment is to be entered for the defendant without costs.