31 N.W.2d 512 | Wis. | 1948
Nicholas S. Meyers commenced an action against A. C. Wells and Diamond Coal Dock Company, a corporation, on February 9, 1945, to recover wages claimed to be due him. Meyers died while the action was pending, and it was revived in the name of Rose Ann Meyers as executrix of the will of Nicholas S. Meyers, deceased. The case was tried to the court without a jury. Judgment was entered in favor of the plaintiff in his action against Diamond Coal Dock Company, and dismissed as against A. C. Wells. Judgment was also entered in favor of defendant Diamond Coal Dock Company on its counterclaim, and dismissed as to the counterclaim of defendant A. C. Wells. Defendant Diamond Coal Dock Company appeals from the judgment in favor of plaintiff.
During the fall of 1938 Nicholas S. Meyers and A. C. Wells discussed entering into the wholesale and retail coal business at Marinette, Wisconsin. Meyers had twenty-seven years experience in the coal business, and at that time was employed with a subsidiary of the Central West Coal Company at Marinette. In addition to being a coal salesman he was an experienced bookkeeper. Wells was a lumberman with no experience in the coal business. On March 10, 1939, after numerous conferences, they agreed to form a corporation to carry on the business. Wells personally executed a written contract employing Meyers as manager for three years from that date at $5,000 a year payable in semimonthly instalments. Wells and his two sons subscribed for seventy-five hundred shares, and Meyers for one thousand shares of stock in the corporation, which was organized as the Diamond Coal Dock Company, and on April 3, 1939, at an organization meeting *354 A. C. Wells was elected president; Meyers was elected vice-president and manager; John Wells, secretary; and Sam Wells, treasurer.
Meyers started to work under his contract with Wells March 15, 1939, and continued as manager of the company until he was discharged in May, 1944. Sam Wells was also employed by the defendant company. There was no new agreement between Meyers and the officers and directors of the defendant company as to compensation to be paid to Meyers as manager. He drew his first two salary checks at the rate of $5,000 per year, or $416.66 per month, and then on April 27, 1939, A. C. Wells, as president of the company, called Meyers to his office and they conferred about Meyers' salary. As a result of this conversation Meyers thereafter at all times during his employment was paid $162.50 semimonthly, which was at the rate of $4,000 per year. In addition to his salary Meyers was allowed an expense account and claimed a balance due on this expense account at the time he was discharged. No new contract with Wells or the corporation was entered into at the expiration of the three-year contract between Meyers and Wells.
In this action Meyers seeks to recover the difference between $4,000 per year which was paid to him and $5,000 per year which was provided in the Wells contract for the entire period of time he was employed, together with a balance due as expenses. The court granted judgment to the plaintiff for the sum of $6,106.12, less the unpaid balance due to defendant company for unpaid stock subscription in the sum of $2,400, together with costs and interest. The first question is whether appellant adopted the contract entered into between Wells and Meyers. *355 It must be conceded that Wells entered into this contract in order to obtain Meyers' services to manage the coal company, wherein he was to be the majority stockholder of a family corporation, where Meyers was the only outside stockholder, all stockholders being officers of the corporation. Appellant relies on the fact that the board of directors of the corporation never took any action adopting the Wells-Meyers contract and never agreed upon the compensation which Meyers was to receive. It is argued that the Wells contract in no way bound the corporation.
The corporation was not in existence at the time the contract was entered into but it was a contract made by one of the promoters in the interest of the future corporation and constituted an offer which could be accepted by the corporation when it came into existence. The failure to formally accept or adopt the contract by formal action of the board of directors does not mean its adoption cannot be implied from conduct and circumstances following its incorporation. If the corporation accepts the benefits of a contract made on its behalf by its promoters this amounts to an adoption and it must accept the contract and its burdens as well as its benefits. Hinkley v.Sagemiller (1927),
On the question of whether this contract was within the statute of frauds, appellant relies on the case of Brown v.Oneida Knitting Mills (1938),
Appellant contends the contract was modified on the 27th day of April, 1939, by the corporation , and Meyers, whereby Meyers agreed to reduce his salary from $5,000 per year to $4,000 per year. If there was in fact a modification of this written contract it would have to be mutual. Thomsen v.Olson (1935),
On the question of whether the terms of the contract extended beyond the three-year term, it is undisputed that no new written contract was entered into at the expiration of the original contract although Meyers several times requested that one be entered into. He continued to work. It is a general rule of law that if an employee continues working after his term expires and no new contract is made it will be presumed the parties intended he should be paid the same wages he received under the original contract. Kellogg v. CitizensIns. Co. of Pittsburgh (1896),
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed. *358