90 N.Y.S. 631 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The defendant is a domestic corporation organized under chapter 122 of the Laws of 1851, entitled “ An act for the incorporation of building, mutual loan and accumulating fund associations,” and the acts amendatory thereof and supplemental thereto. Its articles of association provide that any person approved by the president or secretary may become a member by signing the articles of association or agreeing in writing to abide by the same and subscribing for one or more shares of stock and paying one dollar per share membership fee. Certificates of stock are issued to the subscribers and thereafter they are required to pay twelve cents per share per week in advance, until the amount standing to the credit of the stock, including the semi-annual dividends to be paid by the corporation and credited to the stockholders, amounts to one hundred dollars, the par value of the stock, when the same can be withdrawn. Under the articles of association the company is also authorized to issue special certificates for what is called “ prepaid stock.” Prepaid stock is sold for fifty dollars per share in addition to the membership fee and such premium as the board of directors may require to be paid therefor. When the earnings apportioned to the prepaid stock, less a dividend of six per cent, payable semi-annually on the fifty dollars to the owner thereof, amount with the fifty dollars to one hundred dollars, the par value of the stock, then such par value can be withdrawn by the holders thereof.
In 1891 the defendant had just started its business. It had no capital or deposits and it was necessary for it to pay the expenses of the corporation from its receipts from stockholders. The articles of association provide for an expense fund and it is also provided
“ In order to maintain the business under his charge as long as he remains such Superintendent he shall receive from the ‘ Expense Fund ’ of the Bank an amount equal to 20 per centum of amounts actually received by the Bank for the Expense Fund arising from the memberships allowed to him. If, for any reason, he ceases to be such Superintendent, he, his executors, administrators and assigns shall receive an amount equal to 15 per centum of the Expense Fund, received thereafter from business actually procured by or through him, unless his official connection with the Bank be terminated on account of dishonesty or fraud, or if he be found thereafter to have been guilty of dishonesty or fraud in the conduct of his business for the Bank, in which case he and they shall receive nothing from the Bank at any time after such termination of his office. Accounts of amounts due to the Superintendent are to be rendered to him by the Bank upon each quarter year’s business, and payments of amounts so found due are to be made as soon after the end of each quarter as may be reasonably required to prepare and settle the accounts. But an approximation of amount coming to him shall be made on the first of each month and a check for the amount forwarded to him on account. If, however, he is discharged by the. Bank for any other cause than neglect of the business, dishonesty or fraud, the Bank shall pay him the full 20 per centum of the Expense Fund as if he were actually employed.” The plaintiff was required from the amount received by him to pay the expenses and compensation of the agents appointed by him and also all rent and every other expense in the conduct of the business in his district.
The contract also provided: “This appointment is to continue for a period of ten years from date hereof, and for such time thereafter as the parties hereto may agree; but either party may terminate it at pleasure, at any time by giving the other party ten days’ written notice personally or by mail. After such notice is
By a supplementary contract executed on said twenty-fourth day of September it was provided that the plaintiff should receive in addition to the amounts stated in the original contract fifteen per cent of the amount credited to the expense fund from dues collected on memberships procured prior to the date of liis appointment in the district allotted to him. The supplemental contract contained a condition as follows: “ Should, however, said Rollins leave the employ of the ■ Bank of his own accord and work for a like association within one year from date, this agreement shall be void.”
On the 2d day of March, 1894, the parties made a farther contract by which it was agreed that on and after October 1,1893, the plaintiff should be paid thirty-two and one-half per cent of the expense fund received by the bank for business obtained in the district after March 1, 1893. Out of said thirty-two and one-half per cent said contract expressly provides that the plaintiff shall pay certain percentages that had theretofore been agreed to be paid by the defendant to other persons within the district. It also provided that the plaintiff should receive seventeen and one-half per cent from the expense fund received by the defendant on certain business obtained in a prescribed part of the district prior to the time therein mentioned. The plaintiff continued in the employment of the defendant until the 10th day of February, 1899, a period of between seven and eight years. It is conceded that prior to the 10th day of February, 1899, the contracts had been faithfully performed by the parties thereto. On that day, by mutual agreement, the plaintiff surrendered and assigned to the defendant his said contracts with it, and in consideration of one dollar and of the surrender and assignment of the said contracts the defendant agreed and bound itself, its successors and assigns, “ to pay to the said party of the first part the 20 per cent of the amounts hereafter collected by said party of the second part for the Expense Fund of said Bank, arising from the stock now in force, or from all of said stock continuing in force during the period of four years from the date hereof, in the district covered by said contract and supplement, dated September 24,1891,
Since February 10,1899, the plaintiff has not performed any service for the defendant except that from time to time he has, at the defendant’s request, exerted his influence to have the old stockholders continue their payments ujxm the stock held by them.
The defendant performed its part of the agreement of February 10, 1899, until in the year 1901. The last payment made by the defendant to the plaintiff on account of said contracts was made January 28, 1901, which paid the plaintiff in full under the terms of said contract to October 1, 1900. The defendant refused to make any further payments to the plaintiff on account of said contract, and this action is brought to recover therefor. It is conceded that if the plaintiff is entitled to recover against the defendant in this action, the amount due and owing to him on account of said contract is $1,302.39.
On the 16th day of January, 1900, the defendant had gross assets from which an income ■ was derived. On that day it materially changed its by-laws, by which it entirely abolished the “ Expense Fund ” as provided by the original articles of association, and other provision was made for the payment of the expenses of the association.
At the time the defendant’s by-laws were so changed the plaintiff was not a member of the corporation. It is claimed by the defendant that, as the contracts provide that the payments to the plaintiff were to be made from the “ Expense Fund,” the plaintiff cannot now after the defendant has abolished the “ Expense Fund ” compel the payment of any sum whatever. Such voluntary change of the defendant’s by-laws without the plaintiff’s knowledge, consent or acquiescence cannot be considered for the purpose of destroying the provisions of a valid contract. (Sinteff v. Peoples Building Association, 37 App. Div. 340 ; Beach v. Supreme Tent, K.of M., 177 N. Y. 100.)
The amount that the plaintiff is entitled to receive by the 'terms of the contracts can be easily ascertained, notwithstanding the
The defendant also claims that all the contracts made by the defendant with the plaintiff are unreasonable and void, and cites as authority for its contention Beers v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co. (66 Hun, 75); Carney v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co. (19 App. Div. 160; affd., 162 N. Y. 453), and Caldwell v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association (53 App. Div. 245). The trial court found as a fact that each of the contracts made by the defendant with the plaintiff is unreasonable, and that the contract of February 10, 1899, was also without consideration, and dismissed the plaintiff’s complaint on the merits.
We will first consider the validity of the contract of September 24, 1891, as modified by the supplemental contract and further contract of March 2, 1894.
In Beers v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co. (supra) it was held that a contract made with the plaintiff when he was the president of the company to the effect that he should resign his office as president and thereafter receive from the company for life a salary of $37,500 per year, in consideration of which the plaintiff agreed that “ so far as strength and health permitted ” he would serve the company in an advisory capacity and not become an officer or employee of any other life insurance company was unreasonable and that the officers of the defendant had no power to make such a contract.
In Carney v. N. Y. Life Ins. Co. (supra) it was held that a contract made with the plaintiff by the officers of the defendant by which the plaintiff was employed as a physician for life was unreasonable, and that the officers of the defendant had no power to make such contract.
In Caldwell v. Mutual Reserve Fund Life Association (supra) the defendant entered into a contract with the plaintiff by which it agreed that if the plaintiff would become the manager of a department of the defendant’s business known as the Liverpool department, embracing part of the territory of the British islands, and would personally attend to the business of said department for a
The facts in the Beers case and in the Oarney case are entirely different from the facts under consideration. The contracts under consideration in such cases were unreasonable. By such cases it is established that an unconditional employment by corporate officers of a person for life contradicts and is repugnant to the express authority of such officers to appoint, remove and fix the compensation of employees, and also that a board of directors elected for a limited time should not be- allowed to make contracts unreasonably interfering with the powers of future boards of directors, upon whom must rest the responsibility of the conduct and management of the’ business of the corporation. The contracts in such cases were held to unreasonably hamper future corporate officers. We do not understand that the court intended to hold that all reasonable contracts, extending beyond the term of the corporate officers
In the Caldwell case, as we have stated, the plaintiff, in consideration of a minimum personal service of six months, was to receive all of the admission fees and a large part of the dues for expenses, not only from policyholders obtained during the six months of his personal employment, but also from all business obtained in the district by the defendant for ten years. The court say: “We do not think its board of directors, much less its executive committee, could enter into a contract with a person by which it agreed to pay him a compensation extending beyond the time when he rendered services, the extent of which might go beyond his life, and the amount of which could by no possibility be known. If the corporation had power to thus deal with the plaintiff, if it could for six months’ services rendered by him agree to pay him a certain amount of the premiums received, not for ten years, but so long as persons insured within that time should continue to pay premiums, then it could make a contract with other of its employees by which the entire income derived from policyholders would be exhausted and thereby completely disable itself from performing its obligations. Manifestly this could not be done. It would not only defeat the object of the statute which committed the management of the business and affairs of the corporation to a board of directors, but would be a fraud upon policyholders which the law does not and will not sanction.”
The facts in the Caldwell case are also entirely different from the facts in the case under consideration. In this case there is a definite fixed period after which all payments to the plaintiff are to cease, and during such period the payments to the plaintiff are limited to a specified percentage of the expense fund so far as it is derived from stockholders in the district who had subscribed for their stock while the plaintiff was personally in charge thereof. The maximum amount payable to the plaintiff after his personal services shall cease, if at all, is, therefore, subject to computation, and the fact that the amount thereof may be materially reduced by the withdrawal of stockholders cannot injuriously affect the defend
The contract made by the plaintiff, although for ten years, was subject to cancellation on ten days’ notice by either party. It cannot, therefore, be said to have been an unreasonable contract, so far as the term of service is concerned.
The record does not disclose any claim that the amount agreed to be paid to the defendant under the contracts, including the amount payable to him after his personal services for the defendant had ceased, was in excess of the value of the services performed, or that the plaintiff did not fully and faithfully carry out his contracts and earn the amount that by such contracts the defendant agreed to pay for his services. Experience seems to have shown that it is neces
The contracts now under consideration should not be held to be unreasonable, as a matter of fact, unless the condemnation of such contracts is to be so sweeping as to prohibit all contracts where the compensation, based upon the business obtained by an employee during the term of his employment, is extended and made payable for a definite period beyond the time when the employment terminates. The findings that the plaintiffs contracts of employment are unreasonable are not sustained by the evidence in this case.
That a corporation has a right to pay employees for services by a percentage upon business obtained, including a percentage on the renewals of such business, even after the term of service has expired, is recognized in Hercules Mutual Life Assurance Society v. Brinker (77 N. Y. 435); Hepburn v. Montgomery (5 Civ. Proc. Rep. 244; modified without affecting the principle stated in 97 N. Y. 617); Hall v. Brooklyn L. Ins. Co. (120 id. 294), and other cases.
We now come to a consideration of the contract of February 10, 1899. At the time said contract was made, assuming that the contracts theretofore made with the plaintiff are valid and binding, the plaintiff had a valuable interest in such contracts to the extent of the compensation to be paid to him after his personal services for the defendant had ceased.
It does not appear that the defendant, by such agreement, promised to pay the plaintiff more than the value of such interest.
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
All concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.
Note.— The rest of the cases of this term will be found in the next volume, 99 App, Div.— Rep.