Hendricks v. R. T. Davis Mill Co.

Smith.

Statement

The defendant is an incorporated mill company engaged in the manufacture of the Aunt Jemima Pan Cake Flour at St. Joseph, in this state. The plaintiff had been for several years the general manager of the defendant’s business in certain states east of the Allegheny mountains. In the month of November, 1896, the defendant sold to Duryea & Company its eastern business. On or about the seventeenth of December following the plaintiff, while en route from New York to St. Joseph, was met at Chicago by the defendant’s general manager, Mr. Davis, where the latter requested the plaintiff to either go to Canada or to the southern states and there take charge of the defendant’s flour business. This the plaintiff refused to do, insisting that under his contract of employment his' duties were to be performed only in such of the eastern states as defendant had been doing business, and because of plaintiff’s refusal to proceed to either one or the other of the new territories previously mentioned the defendant discharged him from its employment. It is conceded that for the milling year ending July 1, 1896, the plaintiff, under his contract of employment, received a salary of $3,000 and a certain commission on sales made by him in his territory. It seems to be also in effect conceded that from the first day of July, 1896, until his discharge in December the defendant *229paid plaintiff $250 per month or at the rate of $3,000 per annum.

This is a suit by the plaintiff to recover of defendant his alleged salary of $250 per month from the date of his discharge until the first of July, 1897. The plaintiff'contends that he was employed by the defendant for the milling year beginning on July 1, 1896, and ending on July 1, 1897, at a salary of $3,000. On the other hand the defendant contends that the plaintiff at the time of his discharge was not employed for any certain or definite period of time, or if so his term of employment anded on the first of January, 1897.

The court by the instructions requested by both plaintiff and defendant left it to the jury to determine from the evidence whether or not there was a contract entered into between the plaintiff and defendant, whereby plaintiff was employed by defendant for one year beginning July 1, 1896, and ending July 1, 1897, to take charge of and manage its business in the territory east of the Allegheny mountains. The evidence adduced consisted of conversations and written correspondence carried on between the plaintiff and the defendant’s general manager, and was, as we think, ample to authorize the submission of the issue to the jury. If this evidence did not tend to prove a direct contract, it most certainly did tend to establish facts sufficient to authorize the jury to infer its existence.

Mam:Etermoferv' e“idlnce;ede-

The defendant complains of the action of the court in refusing its first and second instructions, which were in the nature of demurrers to the evidence, but in this action of the court we perceive no error. As already stated, the evidence was, as we think, quite sufficient to carry the case to the jury.

*230 ULUUonU"

*229The defendant further complains of the action of the court in refusing its third instruction, which was *230to the effect that the defendant’s letter of September 21, 1896, and that of the plaintiff of the twenty-ninth of the same month and year in reply thereto constituted the only contract shown by the evidence to have existed between plaintiff and defendant as to the terms of plaintiff’s employment and that under that contract plaintiff’s employment terminated in the month of January, 1897. Now if it be conceded that the letters referred to in this instruction constituted the sole and only contract between plaintiff and defendant, yet we do not think the court erred in refusing such instruction. The defendant’s letter presented to plaintiff a formidable array of facts and figures for the purpose of demonstrating that its eastern business would not justify it in paying him $3,000 annual salary with $150 expenses and sixty cents per case commission on sales and in furnishing salesmen, offices, etc. The defendant further proceeds to say in the letter that, “I have concluded, as stated above, that the business will not stand more than $3,000 per year salary and expenses. * * * I do not want to lose your services, yet |f I am forced to, and you can not see your way clear to accept the proposition we have made you, we will have to arrange some other plan of handling our business throughout the territory in which you are representing us. I would suggest to you that you go along on the salary we have figured out that we can stand for this season at least and when the business slacks up next January take up the manner of organizing a ‘company’ on the line you have thought of and then let us make arrangements for the next year.” To thedefend'ant’s proposition so made the plaintiff in his reply letter stated that “I will have to submit to your proposition and fight it out with you when we find more time.”

*231It is clear from this correspondence that the plaintiff gave his assent to defendant’s proposition to pay-plaintiff for the current year a salary of $3,000 and $150 per month expenses reserving the right, however, to thereafter insist on a modification of this agreement. The defendant, as has been seen, suggested in his letter to plaintiff that when the seasons business in January slacked up they take up the manner of forming a company for the more economical handling of the defendant’s product for the following year. It is clear from these letters as well as from the other evidence adduced that the year referred to in the defendant’s letter was that running from July to July. Plaintiff’s annual employment had been in that way. It is thus seen that as no modification of the agreement evidenced by the correspondence was ever effected it must follow that plaintiff’s salary for the entire year ending July 1, 1897, was $3,000 and expenses. This was the agreement in force at the time the defendant discharged the plaintiff.

It is further disclosed by the evidence that what is known as the “miller’s year” begins on the first day of July and hence it may be fairly presumed wherever the term “year” as used by the plaintiff and defendant’s general manager, either in their conversation or letters relating to plaintiff’s employment, was meant the “miller’s year.” Even though the only contract existing between plaintiff and defendant was that evidenced by the letters, still we find nothing in them or either of them to justify the trial court in declaring to the jury by an instruction that plaintiff’s employment under the contract ended January 1, 1897.

But the contract was not all set forth in the letters. The defendant’s counsel at the trial requested plaintiff while testifying to “state what the agreement was as to territory.” The letters do not embody every term *232of the contact. They only have reference to the amount of plaintiff’s compensation. This was the only matter left open when the parties concluded their Chicago interview in the last week of the preceding month of August. That part of the contract requiring plaintiff to take charge of defendant’s business in certain designated territory was a material part thereof. If plaintiff’s employment was restricted to no particular territory then of course he had no right to refuse to go wherever requested by the defendant. This with other parts of the contract was not established by the letters but by the oral communications disclosed by the evidence. This is not a ease where the contract was proved by the writings between the parties and hence the rule invoked by the defendant in respect to the construction of written contracts by the court is inapplicable.

But however all this may be, it is quite a sufficient answer to the defendant’s complaint as to the action of the court in refusing its said third instruction to say that it is in no situation to urge the same since, by its instruction number 5, which was given, it requested the court to leave it to the jury to say from all the evidence whether there was or was not a contract between plaintiff and defendant whereby defendant employed plaintiff for the period of one year from July 1, 1896, to July 1, 1897, at $3,000 per year and expenses.

It seems to us the case was fairly tried and that the judgment is for the right party and should be affirmed, which is accordingly so ordered. All concur.