Opinion
June, 1901.
Jay C. Guggenheimer, for appellants.
M.D. Steuer, for respondent.
The learned justice who tried this case rendered a written opinion, in which he said that, from the evidence given upon the trial and the demeanor and conduct of the witnesses, he concluded that the defendant truthfully stated the agreement which existed between the parties.
Accepting this estimate as to the comparative truthfulness of the parties, it remains to consider whether, upon the defendant's own showing, the judgment should be allowed to stand. The action was for money loaned to the defendant and goods sold to him. He did not dispute the receipt of the money and goods, but set up a counterclaim, upon which the action turned. According to the defendant's story, a verbal agreement was made between the plaintiffs and himself on November 15, 1899, whereby he agreed to act as salesman for them for the year 1900, commencing on the first day of January and ending on the thirty-first day of December, and they in return agreed to pay him a certain weekly salary, a stated commission and a bonus of $500, providing his sales reached $20,000. He entered upon the performance of this agreement, and his sales, up to the time he left the plaintiffs' employ, on November 6, 1900, amounted to more than the stipulated sum. The agreement, being one which by its terms was not to be performed within a year, was obnoxious to the Statute of Frauds, but, notwithstanding that fact, if the plaintiffs permitted the defendant to go on under it and perform the services it called for, and if he did, in fact, perform the contract on his part, the plaintiffs cannot avail themselves of the statute to deprive him of his agreed compensation. The contract was one covering the whole year 1900. The plaintiffs were entitled to defendant's services, not only until he had sold $20,000 worth of goods, but until the end of the year. He continued to serve them only until November sixth, when his agreement had nearly two months to run. The justice was of the opinion that the contract had been terminated by mutual consent, and, so concluding, decided that the situation of the parties and the defendant's rights thereunder were the same as they would have been had the contract been fully executed by continuing the services until the end of the year. If he was right in deciding that the contract had been terminated by mutual consent, the conclusion to which he arrived undoubtedly followed. Jeffery v. Walker, 72 Hun, 631. Accepting again the defendant's own version of the matter, we are unable to find any evidence of consent by the plaintiffs to the termination of the contract. It is true that he testifies that when he told one of the plaintiffs that he had a chance to make a good change, the latter said: "If it is a very good one take it, because you would be a fool not to accept it". It does not appear, however, that he told the plaintiff that the change was one to take effect immediately, nor is there anything to indicate that the plaintiff, with whom he was talking, had reason to so understand it. On the contrary, the presumption is all the other way. The defendant, in October, 1900, asked Henry Scheuer what arrangement he would make for next year, meaning, as defendant himself says, the year 1901. The parties seem to have had several conversations about the contract for the following year, and it was in the course of one of them that the defendant spoke of the better chance which had offered itself. He does not say that he told either of the plaintiffs that the better chance involved breaking his existing engagement, and, considering the fact that the conversations related solely to a contract for the next year, the natural assumption would be that the better chance to which he referred meant a better chance for the year 1901. We are unable to spell out of this conversation any consent to the premature termination of the existing agreement. If the defendant abandoned his employment before the end of the stipulated term, without the consent of his employers, as from his own evidence we are convinced that he did, he certainly cannot recover upon his contract. Whether or not he could recover upon a quantum meruit, for the work done, it is not necessary to discuss, for he neither sought to recover upon that theory, nor was any evidence offered as to the value of his services except the contract itself. Such a contract, even though void under the Statute of Frauds, might furnish a measure of the value of the services, if the defendant had fulfilled the contract on his part. Having refused to fulfill, he cannot rely upon the contract to fix the value of his services. His agreement was to serve for one year, and his compensation, including his bonus, must be deemed to have been fixed with reference to such service. The compensation, having been agreed upon with reference to a year's complete service, was not, therefore, competent evidence of the value of the services during ten months. Galvin v. Prentice, 45 N.Y. 162. There was, therefore, no competent evidence in the case as to the value of the defendant's services, and nothing upon which to base a judgment in his favor.
Judgment reversed, with costs to abide the event.
Present: SCOTT, P.J., BEACH and FITZGERALD, JJ.
Judgment reversed, with costs to abide event.