McAuley v. Wells

Evans, J.

Plaintiff sues for the agreed price and reasonable

value of services. At the close of the entire case the plaintiff had produced evidence showing an express promise on the part of defendant to pay a stipulated monthly salary. The defendant denied the agreement for a salary and testified to an express agreement to pay plaintiff and his assignor a share of the profits of the venture, and no salary. At that point plaintiff could have gone to the jury on a quantum meruit, and, under those circumstances, the jury could have considered the express promise as evidence of the value of plaintiff’s services. (Boyd v. Vale, 84 App. Div. 414; Hollander v. Kaufmann, 172 id. 218.) The plaintiff was required to elect, by the court, before he went to the jury, whether he would stand on the express agreement or on a quantum meruit. He elected to stand on the contract, and was defeated by the *425jury. Now he wants a new trial, because, he claims, the direction to elect was erroneous. The cases hold that a requirement to elect is improper before the close of the trial (Rubin v. Cohen, 129 App. Div. 395), but that election at the close of trial is, by inference, proper. (Herrmann v. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc., 127 Misc. 54.)

The rule seems to be that where the complaint is on a special promise and quantum meruit, the plaintiff may go to the jury on a quantum meruit when he is not able to establish the special promise. (McKeon v. Van Slyck, 223 N. Y. 392, 399; Sturtevant v. Fiss, Doerr & Carroll Horse Co., 173 App. Div. 113.)

As was said by Judge McLaughlin, in Sturtevant v. Fiss, Doerr & Carroll Horse Co. (173 App. Div. 113, 115): The law is well settled that where an action is brought upon a special contract of employment, a recovery may be had upon a quantum meruit when the special promise is not established * * *.”

The rule goes to that extent. But it does not go to the extent that, where plaintiff asserts a special promise for a monthly wage, and defendant asserts a profit-sharing agreement, the jury may still give plaintiff a quantum meruit, when they do not believe what he says about the special promise, and choose to believe what defendant asserts. The claims of a special promise and a quantum meruit are inconsistent. (Herrmann v. Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc., 127 Misc. 54.) This inconsistency is tolerated by the adjudicated cases only up to the point of submission to the jury. To carry it further, in a case like this, would be to stretch an inconsistency into an absurdity. The jury, at bar, had to decide whether the contract contemplated a salary or a share of the profits. If it was not a salary, it necessarily must,have been what defendant claimed. Under those circumstances, to give the jury the right to say that, if the contract was not for a salary nor for a share of the profits, they could still give the plaintiff the reasonable value of his services, would be to submit to them a fictitious issue. On reflection, I think the result would have been the same if plaintiff went to the jury on a quantum meruit. But I have been cited no authority, and I can find none, which holds that a plaintiff may go to the jury on both a special promise and a quantum meruit. To my mind, such a rule would be entirely out of reason.

Motion for a new trial, and to set aside the verdict, is denied.