Judges: Merrell
Filed Date: 12/24/1920
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/27/2024
This action is brought by the plaintiff to recover of the defendant, a domestic corporation, commissions in the sum of $175,000, claimed by plaintiff to be his due from the defendant upon a contract entered into November 25, 1913,
The defendant, for several years prior to the date of the making of said contract, was engaged in the general engineering business, principally in carrying on engineering projects in construction work. At the time of the making of said contract, defendant had never engaged in any commercial enterprise further than disposing of securities received by it in connection with its work. The original contract was in writing and provided that the plaintiff should be furnished by the defendant with suitable desk room in their place of business at 49 Wall street, in the city of New York, together with telephone facilities for himself and his secretary-stenographer, which he was to furnish. Under the terms of said written contract entered into between the parties the plaintiff was to devote his time as far as possible “ to such negotiations as may result in bringing to Viele, Blackwell & Buck [the defendant] engineering, construction, reporting, appraisal or other work.” Plaintiff was to pay all his traveling expenses during preliminary negotiations for work, but defendant was to reimburse plaintiff for all traveling and living expenses incurred in connection with the work after it was assigned by. contract to said defendant. As compensation for his services the contract provided that plaintiff should receive twenty-five per cent of the net profits to the defendant of such work as he brought to said defendant, provided only that the net profits exceeded ten per cent over and above the net cost. If, after deducting the twenty-five per cent commission paid plaintiff, the remaining profit exceeded twenty-five per- cent of costs, plaintiff was to receive in addition one-fourth of the amount by which said remaining net profit exceeded such percentage of cost. Such arrangement, by the terms of the written contract, was to continue for an indefinite period, either party being free to withdraw on reasonable notice at any time, provided the arrangement did not prove practicable, but such withdrawal was not to relieve either party of responsibility for agreements incurred prior to the date of withdrawal.
During the succeeding years after the making of this
The evidence shows that in the early part of 1917 considerable discussion was had between representatives of the defendant and the plaintiff, notably the vice-president of the defendant, H. W. Buck, with reference to a stated salary or compensation which the plaintiff was to receive. According to the testimony the various talks had between the parties culminated on April tenth in an oral agreement with reference to compensation which the plaintiff was to receive from the defendant for the year ending March 31, 1917, and also with reference to the compensation which he was to receive for the year commencing April 1, 1917. On the same day defendant’s vice-president, Buck, representing the defendant, after talking with the plaintiff, dictated a memorandum and laid the same upon the plaintiff’s desk in the business place of the defendant in the following form:
“ R. E. F. Flinsch, Esq., “ Apnl 10th’ 1917‘
“ Office:
“ The following is in confirmation of our talk this morning.
“ For the year ending ' March 31st, 1917, we will pay you a retainer of $2,500 and in addition, an ’ amount equal to 10% of the net profits accruing to us from the Floussfisch business, which has been liquidated up to that date.' In figuring the net profits of the Floussfisch business, it is understood that proper office expenses will be charged in, and also reasonable allowance for overhead expense.
“ From April 1st, 1917, we will also pay you a retainer at the rate of $2,500 per year, in consideration of your assisting us in the export business, and also a sum equal to 10% of the net profits as above, from the Floussfisch business, or other business which you yourself originate in our behalf, to an equal extent. These profits are to be reckoned semiannually, on business actually liquidated during the period.
“ In case the time and effort required to be devoted by you to our business reasonably justifies it, the retainer may be increased by mutual agreement and adjustment.
“ This arrangement takes the place of our memo of November 25th, 1913. H. W. BUCK. " HWB/d”
“ April 10, 1917.
“ Viele, Blackwell & Buck
“ To Rudolph E. F. Flinsch, Dr.
“ For salary for year ended March 31, 1917, $2,500.00 “ Approved: W. M. B., Treasurer.
“ Received from Viele, Blackwell & Buck
“ Two Thousand, Five Hundred Dollars, in full settlement of the above account.
“ Dated. April 10, 1917.”
The plaintiff saw this memorandum of agreement, did not object thereto, and signed said receipt which had been prepared by the defendant for the $2,500. Buck testified that the aforesaid memorandum was in all respects in conformity with the oral talk which he had had with the plaintiff, with the exception of the final clause; that the arrangement took the place of their memorandum of November 25, 1913, which he says was not talked between them. However, the plaintiff did not object to the inclusion of the last-mentioned statement in the memorandum and never disputed or denied the correctness of the same. Thereafter the plaintiff continued in the office of the defendant until July 1,1918, assisting the defendant in its export business.
In the original complaint herein, wherein the plaintiff demanded judgment for the sum of $175,000, the plaintiff sets forth both the contract of November 25, 1913, and the subsequent memorandum of agreement of April 10, . 1917. Upon motion of the defendant the court ordered the plaintiff to serve an amended complaint concisely stating his cause of action. Thereupon the plaintiff did serve an amended complaint wherein he alleged as the basis of his claim only the original written contract between the parties dated November 25, 1913, and alleged that he was entitled to commissions at the rate of twenty-five per cent upon the net profits received by the defendant, not only from the Floussfisch
The referee also held that under the terms of the contract of April 10, 1917, the previous contract of November 25, 1913, was superseded.
I think the learned referee correctly decided both of said propositions. I am entirely clear that at the time of the making of the original contract on November 25, 1913, the defendant did not contemplate engaging in any commercial business,- and that plaintiff’s employment was entirely along the lines of engineering work, and that the term “ other work ” in the original contract related solely to other work of the same general nature as that specified in the contract and in which the defendant had theretofore been engaged. Also, I think the plaintiff is bound by the statement contained in the memorandum of agreement placed upon his desk by the defendant’s vice-president on April 10, 1917, purporting to express the new arrangement made between them, which
The referee, however, held that, under the clause contained in the memorandum of agreement of April 10, 1917, to the effect that “ from April 1, 1917, we will also pay you a retainer at the rate of $2,500 per year, in consideration of your assisting us in the export business, and also a sum equal to 10% of the net profits as above, from the Floussfisch business, or other business which you yourself originate in our behalf * * * ” the plaintiff is entitled to recover his commissions at the rate of ten per cent upon the business in the Orient procured through De Sherbinin, who had been introduced by the plaintiff to said defendant. In other words, the learned referee has held that the term “ other business which you yourself originate in our behalf,” embraces any business, past, present or future, which was originated by the plaintiff.
From a careful examination of this provision of the memorandum agreement of April 10, 1917, I am constrained to disagree with the conclusion of the referee. I think the provision taken as a whole refers to new business or future business which the plaintiff may originate in behalf of the defendant. I do not think the parties at that time had in contemplation the De Sherbinin or oriental business, although at the time this contract was entered into said business in the Far East was in a most flourishing condition and bid fair to bring to the defendant enormous profits. In the provisions of the contract of April 10, 1917, the Floussfisch business was particularly mentioned, and no good reason appears for not mentioning the De Sherbinin business, if the parties at that time considered that such business was affected by or embraced in the contract. Furthermore, the provision as to the payment of ten per cent of the net profits on other business originated by the plaintiff in defendant’s behalf also was followed by the following significant words, to which the referee attached no importance, namely, “ to an equal extent.” I think the evidence fairly shows that in originating the Floussfisch business the plaintiff was far more instrumental than in originating the De Sherbinin business, which origination
To my mind the memorandum contract of April 10, 1917, was clear and without ambiguity, and under its plain terms the plaintiff was not entitled to recover any commissions, save that his due upon the Floussfisch business. Under the terms of the agreement of April 10, 1917, plaintiff was to receive as compensation for his services for the defendant the sum of $2,500 a year, and in addition was to receive a commission of ten per cent upon the Floussfisch business, or upon any other business which he might originate in defendant’s behalf to an equal extent.
I am also of the opinion that the judgment entered herein was based upon an alleged breach of a contract not set forth in the complaint, and that for that reason the plaintiff is not entitled to recover. The referee distinctly found that the agreement of November 25, 1913, did not apply to any of the services for which the plaintiff seeks to recover in this action. No application was made by the plaintiff at any time during the progress of the trial to amend the complaint, and indeed, the plaintiff is here appealing from the judgment rendered, still claiming a right to recover under the contract of November 25, 1913, and is insisting that the referee has
The recovery here is directly contrary to the provisions of section 1207 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which expressly provides that after answer the court may permit the plaintiff to take any judgment “ consistent with the case made by the complaint, and embraced within the issue.” As was said by Judge Collin in Walrath v. Hanover Fire Ins. Co. (216 N. Y. 220): “It is' fundamental that in civil actions the plaintiff must recover upon the facts stated in his complaint, or not at all. In case a complaint proceeds on a definite, clear and certain theory, it will not support or permit of another theory because it contains isolated or subsidiary statements consistent therewith. A party must recover not only according to his proofs but according to his’ pleadings. (Northam v. Dutchess Co. Mut. Ins. Co., 177 N. Y. 73; Canton Brick Co. v. Howlett, 169 N. Y. 293; Brightson v. Claflin Co., 180 N. Y. 76; Southwick v. First Nat. Bank of Memphis, 84 N. Y. 420.)” See, also, Allerton v. Rhineland Machine Works Co. (165 App. Div. 557), in which Mr. Justice Hotchkiss said: “ The eases are numerous where it has been held that if the plaintiff fails to prove the cause of action set up in his complaint, and the objection is properly taken and preserved by exception, and no amendment of the pleadings is had, a judgment in plaintiff’s favor on a cause of action entirely separate and distinct from that alleged cannot be sustained on appeal.”
In Southwick v. First Nat. Bank of Memphis (84 N. Y. 420) the court said; “It is no answer to this objection that the
It is conceded by the defendant that the plaintiff is entitled to recover the balance his due • as commissions upon the Floussfisch business. The balance appears to amount tó $2,245.60. The plaintiff’s recovery should be restricted to the latter amount. The plaintiff should also recover of the defendant the taxable costs of the action. And with the exception thereof, the complaint should be dismissed, and the judgment, so far as it denies the plaintiff’s claim for commissions under the contract of November 25, 1913, should be affirmed. New findings should be made in conformity herewith. The defendant should recover the costs of this appeal.
Clarke, P. J., Laughlin, Dowling and Greenbaum, JJ., concur.
Judgment modified as directed in opinion and as modified affirmed, with costs to defendant. Settle order on notice.