Alder v. Consumers Co.

152 F.2d 696, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3415
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1945
DocketNo. 8731
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 696 (Alder v. Consumers Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alder v. Consumers Co., 152 F.2d 696, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3415 (7th Cir. 1945).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff, formerly a salesman employed by defendant, recovered a $25,284.43 judgment for commissions he allegedly earned in the sale of building materials. The trial was by the court, and the judgment is supported by specific and detailed findings and conclusions.

The controversy is largely over two issues. Was plaintiff the procuring cause of the sales on which he seeks commissions? Is he estopped to claim such commissions because of endorsements on his monthly checks ?

Alder entered the employ of defendant in July, 1938,1 and the employment terminated in October, 1943. He had been the president of another building material company before entering defendant’s employ.

The commissions involved cover the period subsequent to June 1, 1942. At that time plaintiff was offered an annual salary of $10,000, in lieu of commissions. He refused this offer. The president of defendant then stated plaintiff would receive no further commissions on Portland cement.

From February, 1942 to September, 1943, plaintiff’s pay checks bore this printed endorsement :

“The endorsement of this check by payee guarantees acceptance of it in full settlement of the account as stated in voucher bearing corresponding check number.” Defendant argues, — Plaintiff was not the procuring cause of the sales upon which he claims commissions.2

A consideration of the evidence bearing on these two issues provokes several other questions factual in nature, one of which [698]*698is the action of the defendant’s sales manager, and defendant’s failure to call him as a witness, when his testimony- would have been clarifying and important.

At the close of the trial the judge announced his opinion. He believed plaintiff’s testimony in its entirety. He did not believe defendant’s witness S. to be entirely reliable. He found the principal issues to be whether or not plaintiff was the “procuring cause” of the orders, and second, whether there had been an accord and satisfaction.

On the question of “procuring cause” he concluded:

“No matter what thought there may be in the mind of the court otherwise, the plain record is that the parties interpreted their own contract, and that the defendant up until the first of June, 1942, admitted that the plaintiff was the procuring cause of all this business; and under that admission they could not change the relationship of the parties afterwards by any unilateral statement * * * by the president of the company simply announcing, ‘We are going to cut you off; we will pay you no more commissions,’ because he would be destroying a property right without the consent of the .opposite party to the transaction. That conversation in June had absolutely no legal effect of any kind that I can see.”

As to the matter of settlement he stated:

“As to the matter of accord and satisfaction, these vouchers, or whatever name it is that you call them by, that are attached to the checks, <the statements of what is being paid for, do not amount to an accord and satisfaction as a matter of law. The checks purport to pay for the items specified in the exhibits; they do not purport in any way to bar any other claim that may exist between the parties. When it came down to the point of attempting to place a bar in the record by any endorsement stating that it was in full of everything, the plaintiff very promptly refused to accept it and turned it back.” -

The court also commented: '

“For some mysterious reason unknown to the court, the defendant in this case has not called as a witness, their own former vice president, Mr. Hock. * * * If Mr. Alder’s testimony * * * was not sound or reliable, or if there was any thing false about it, Mr. Hock could so testify. * * * I gathered from the remarks of counsel and from the course that the case has taken, that the defendant company felt that Mr. Hock was not the right kind of a manager and perhaps that he was too liberal with Mr. Alder.”

A reading of the evidence discloses a serious conflict. There is uncertainty and doubt, as well as serious conflict over just what plaintiff’s relations with defendant after June 1, 1942, were. The sales of cement were large but a reduction in the price to the customer lowered the profit, so that defendant felt there should be an elimination of all commissions to plaintiff and a flat salary of $10,000 a year substituted. Plaintiff, on the other hand, felt that he had been the instigating cause of these large sales and opposed the reduction in the price of the product. He believed that ensuing deliveries, pursuant to initial orders, gave him a valid claim to commissions on all such deliveries. He testified he made daily contact, in many instances, with the customer, pushed deliveries to the customer, and in general smoothed relations between consumer and seller.

We are not impressed, as a negativing factor to plaintiff’s procurement of the Defense Plant Corporation sales, with the argument that the Government agent had to approve the sales. The Government agent testified that the approval was simply of quality of merchandise, but that price was according to lowness of bids, the quality factor being equal.

As to the Duffy transaction, the evidence is conflicting as to whether the sale was due solely to Hummel’s efforts or whether Hummel relinquished the transaction to plaintiff, who clinched and serviced the deal.

Like the District Judge, we too are curious as to why Mr. Hock did not testify. He was an officer of defendant company, the superior of plaintiff. It was he who authorized plaintiff’s commissions, and in general supervised his transactions. Fie would have been able to clarify all the details. Ordinarily, his acts bound the company, and we must conclude they do here.

In the face of the fact that plaintiff continuously and consistently maintained his position relative to the right to commissions on cement, defendant can not be relieved of the effect of the payments of commissions thereafter, or the inference to be drawn therefrom.

[699]*699Very important we feel, was plaintiff's refusal to accept a check in November, 1942, which bore the statement on the back of the voucher “Payment of commissions in full to date.” All other checks carried the endorsement above set forth. Plaintiff refused the check, and was given one with the restricted endorsement.

Another serious conflict in the evidence arises on the “O’Neil” transaction wherein the trial court awarded plaintiff commissions of $4,227.69, and interest. Plaintiff and Schlegel, another of defendant’s salesmen, called, frequently on this account, and Schlegel sent in many sales slips.

Despite the sharp conflict in the evidence, there is substantial testimony to support the trial court’s determination in favor of plaintiff.

Three comparatively small items, that of customers Goss, Griffiths, and Paschen, also involved a conflict in the evidence between plaintiff and Schlegel. Both testified they procured the sales. That issue resolves itself into one of credibility of the respective witnesses.

As to the Defense Plant Corporation transaction at McCook, plaintiff recovered $12,854.24 commissions.

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.2d 696, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 3415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alder-v-consumers-co-ca7-1945.