Abendpost Co. v. Hertel

67 Ill. App. 501, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 144
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedDecember 28, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 67 Ill. App. 501 (Abendpost Co. v. Hertel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abendpost Co. v. Hertel, 67 Ill. App. 501, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 144 (Ill. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Waterman

deliveeed the opinion oe the Couet.

Under the contract between appellee and appellant, appellee testifies that it was his business to give orders to Shaad, his assistant, and that he did so; that his relations with Shaad were such that he was manager and Shaad his assistant. He says: “ I was to give him instructions, and he obeyed them when he felt like it, and did not when he didn’t. On one occasion I did have a fisticuff row with my assistant. I gave him a slap in the face and he returned it, in front of the Abendpost. Afterward we had trouble, and I reported to Glogauer. He called Shaad up, and in my absence told him he was to obey my orders. I also saw a copy of a letter to that effect. Later, my assistant interfered with me by going to see some customers whom he should not see, and I again reported to Glogauer.”

It is manifest that prior to the discharge of appellee, there was a good deal of friction between him and his employer. Appellee, among other things, testifies: “ I also had charge of advertising contracts with the railroad companies. I was the man who made them, and kept them in my possession, and it was intended that requests for transportation should go through my hands. I also carried on the correspondence concerning the closing of these contracts, whatever there was. Mr. Glogauer had requested.me to get the railroad business into shape.

Q. And you did ? A. I did to the best of my ability, until such time as I was interfered with by my assistant, and he went around and he would lower prices thirty per cent below me, and I told in the office—I forget who it was —I told somebody under those circumstances it was just idle work for me to try and bring that railroad department into shape.

Q. And that you would not have anything further to do with it? A. Well, I might have said that I was disgusted with it.

Q. Well, didn’t you say you would not have anything further to do with it ? A. I don’t remember that I did but I might have said so. I did not throw up these contracts or surrender them to the bookkeeper. I do not remember saying that I would have nothing further to do with them.”

It appears that on Saturday, the 28th of January, 1893, appellee had trouble with his assistant about a desk. Appellee went to the office of the president of appellant and made a complaint concerning the matter. During the next week appellee, according to his own testimony, appeared at the office only on Monday and Tuesday. Hone of the other employes or officers of the paper seem to have seen him at the office on any occasion during that week. On Monday Mr. Glogauer, the president of appellant, finding that appellee had not been at the office during that day, left a letter on his desk, requesting to see him at the editorial rooms. On Tuesday, finding appellee absent, and his own, Mr. Glogauer’s, letter unopened upon appellee’s desk, together with other correspondence, Mr. Glogauer wrote to him the following letter:

“ Chicago, January 31, 1893.
Mr. Frederic Hertel, City.
Dear Sir : According to the terms of your contract with the Abendpost Company, I hereby instruct you to resume at once all the functions which you have exercised up to this time, and which, as you deemed fit to inform me indirectly, you have relinquished without order. If you can not or will not comply with this request, you will oblige me by handing in your resignation.
Tours respectfully,
Fbitz Glogauer,
President of the Abendpost Co.”

Appellee excuses his absence from the office during that week by the statement that he was ill. As to the letter of January 31st, by Mr. Glogauer to him, he says :

“ After receiving that letter I sat down to answer it.
Q. Well, go on; state the particulars. A. Well, I did answer it, but the letter got to be rather longer than I expected it would be. It was written in long-hand, and I suppose it must have been six or seven or eight pages, but it got to be pretty late that night—I suppose it was ten o’clock before I got through with the letter, so I thought I would not mail it that night, and kept it over until the next morning. ISText morning read the letter. Started down town to go to the Abendpost. On the way my throat commenced to trouble me, and I concluded not to go down, and I had the letter which I had written to the Abendpost copied by a typewriter on Thursday, the 2d of February; it was copied at the office of Dr. Brinkerhoff, in McVicker’s Theatre building. I mailed it in the box southeast corner of Dearborn and Madison streets; it was addressed to Fritz Glogauer, president of the Abendpost Company.”

The following is the letter:

“ Chicago, III., Feb. 1, 1893.
Mr. Fritz Glogauer^ Prest.
Dear Sib : Yours of the 21st ultimo, at hand. I have not relinquished my functions, that is, to procure Ads. to the best of my ability. Yesterday 1,700 lines, display, to-day 600; in other words, $175 prove this. Besides I had yesterday arranged with Kimball a,nd Dr. Brinkerhoff for a three inch contract from March 1st. A conference to-day with Frank Bros., Streeter, Boring and Chas. A. Stevens will very likely result in some yearly contracts at full price in the course of this month, provided I am not interfered with. Therefore your haughty language is, to say the least, in bad taste and entirely unwarranted by the circumstances. I ask myself what have I done to be addressed in such a manner, and I fail to discover any plausible reason. I have filled my position, so far as circumstances permitted, with better results than any of my predecessors; have worked honestly, faithfully and conscientiously, and if you had not thought so you would not have prolonged my contract to January 1, 1895. The outcome is, that in spite of a smaller circulation, the Abendpost, as an advertising medium, stands to-day in quality and quantity fifty per cent higher than ever before, and exclusively through my work. Any newspaper man in Chicago will tell you so if you do not know it. Again,, what cause for complaint have I given you ? How have you appreciated my work and endeavors ? Certainly not by honest and, straightforward dealing. While you have solemnly pledged yourself, in the presence of your secretary, not to underbid me, you have personally granted rebates and reductions against which I could not compete, and your stipulation to keep the matter secret is proof that you knew you were acting in bad faith. It is only by chance that I became acquainted with this state óf affairs later on, and further investigation revealed that rebates, etc., have all along been the rule, while honest rates were the exception. You have often stated before the entire office, with great bravado, that rates must be kept up under all circumstances, enjoining, me, for instance, from accepting6 fat locals ’ at $1, when at the very same moment you jumped at them in a quiet way, unbeknown to me, at 40 cents and less.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 Ill. App. 501, 1896 Ill. App. LEXIS 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abendpost-co-v-hertel-illappct-1896.