14 N.Y.S. 370 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1891
Upon the trial it appeared that the plaintiff, a corporation,
by resolution of the board of directors, in March, 1890, fixed the rate of compensation to be paid the defendant, its secretary, for his services as such, at $900 per annum, and that the defendant was paid at that rate for some time thereafter. Subsequently the officers of the plaintiff met, and mutually'agreed to accept a reduced rate of salary for their services to be thereafter performed; but it did not appear that the plaintiff was a party to this agreement, or that the same had ever been communicated to or accepted by the board of directors of the plaintiff. The defendant claimed his salary at the former rate, and the plaintiff in this action sought to avail itself of the mutual agreement between its officers, asserting that, although it was not a party to that arrangement which had been made for its benefit, it was entitled to an enforcement thereof. The justice below decided contrary to plaintiff’s contention, and on this appeal plaintiff’s counsel urges that the facts are within the dqetrine established by Lawrence v. Fox, 20 N. Y. 268. We are of opinion that the ruling of the trial justice was correct. In Lawrence v. Fox, the defendant had received a loan of money from one Holly, who was indebted to