Bachmann v. Blaw-Knox Company

198 F. Supp. 617, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3435
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 5, 1961
DocketCiv. A. 16800
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 198 F. Supp. 617 (Bachmann v. Blaw-Knox Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bachmann v. Blaw-Knox Company, 198 F. Supp. 617, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3435 (W.D. Pa. 1961).

Opinion

WILLSON, District Judge.

In the complaint filed in this civil action, 25 plaintiffs being citizens of states other than Pennsylvania, sued Blaw-Knox Company, defendant, a Delaware Corporation, with its principal place of business in Pittsburgh, Pa., invoking the diversity jurisdiction of the court. No jurisdictional issue is raised. Each of the plaintiffs’ individual state citizenship will be hereafter mentioned. Six plaintiffs have had their complaints dismissed for reasons not here pertinent, leaving 19 individuals as parties plaintiff.

Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment alleging that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact which bars summary judgment and therefore, for several reasons, says defendant, plaintiffs do not state in their complaint any cause upon which relief can be granted by this court.

Each plaintiff contends that he was hired by defendant, Blaw-Knox Company, to work in Venezuela for a period of not less than two years, and that prior to the expiration of the two year period defendant wrongfully terminated his employment in breach of the argeement. It is conceded that there were no written contracts of employment between plaintiffs and defendant as that term is generally understood. Plaintiffs, in fact, in their complaint did not make any allegation tending to show that they were hired under any written memorandum. However, when confronted with defendant’s defense in this motion that the employment contracts were oral and therefore contrary to the statute of frauds of each of the respective states where plaintiffs were hired, then plaintiffs sought to show that an advertisement appearing in the New York Times of October 30, 1955, was such a memorandum as would take the employment out of the statute of frauds principle.

*618 Defendant asserts three areas in all or any one of which, says defendant, bars each and every one of the plaintiffs’ claims :

1. It asserts that the statute of frauds is a defense which bars each of 17 plaintiffs.

2. It says that each of the plaintiffs’ claims are governed by the law of Venezuela because each cause of action arose in Venezuela and that each cause of action is fully barred by the Venezuelan statute of limitations, and

3. Defendant asserts that it has a good and valid release executed by each one of the plaintiffs while still in Venezuela.

Without deciding the last defense raised, this court is of the opinion that the defense of the statute of frauds is applicable to each of 17 plaintiffs, that is, Charles A. Bachmann, William A. Clark, Wade P. Crawford, Owen F. Darcy, Arthur Faltz, Joseph J. Gallagher, Walter D. Gross. Bernard Kaplan, William G. Knight, a/k/a William Kowalczylc, Earl E. Mason, James Edwin Mathews, James P. Mikedes, Glenn E. Owens, Jr., Richard John Preston, John F. Schnacky, Eli L. Schwartz and Julian S. Webb; and the motion for summary judgment will be granted as to them.

This court is likewise of the opinion that the Venezuelan statute of limitations is a defense applicable to all the remaining 19 plaintiffs, that is the 17 heretofore named and John W. Erickson and John K. Prout; and the motion for summary judgment will be granted also on this basis.

I — Defense of Statute of Frauds

At the hearing on the motion for summary judgment, the following colloquy took place between the court and plaintiffs’ counsel, Mr. Schwartz, as shown on pages 46 and 47 of the transcript:

“* * * The Court: What is your contract; what do you say your contract was, where it was executed ?
“Mr. Schwartz: We never claimed there was a written contract, but we don’t say, we don’t admit that there must be a written contract to take this case out of the statute of frauds. Defendant’s Exhibit 2 cites the law of the eight states, the other states in addition to Pennsylvania in which these contracts were entered into. California, which is the first one in its exhibit—
“The Court: You agree that one of them was entered into in California?
“Mr. Schwartz: Oh, sure.
“The Court: You agree to that?
“Mr. Schwartz: We admitted that in our answer, and amended answers to interrogatories posed by the defendant.
“The Court: In eight states, you agree that’s where the contract was entered into ?
“Mr. Schwartz: Yes, your Honor, we have no evidence to the contrary. California Code Section 1973, ‘In the following cases the agreement is invalid, unless the same or some note or memorandum thereof be in writing * * * ’ and this same thing is found in all of the statutes.
“Idaho, ‘some note or memorandum’.
“Illinois, ‘some memorandum or note thereof.’
“New Jersey, ‘some memorandum or note thereof.’
It is the same, in all precisely the same way. * * * ”

It is conceded by each of 17 of the plaintiffs that their contracts of employment were accepted by them in states other than Pennsylvania and that the law of these states governs these contracts and the applicability of the statutes of frauds.

Plaintiffs, Mason as a citizen of California, Preston as a citizen of Idaho and Owens of Oklahoma agree that their contracts were accepted in their respective states and that the statutes of frauds in these three states declare an oral agreement of employment for more than one year without a signed memorandum to be *619 invalid. Plaintiffs, Darcy, Faltz, Gallagher, Kaplan, Knight, Mikedes, Schnacky and Schwartz, all as citizens of New York, and Clark and Crawford, as citizens of Washington, agree that their contracts were accepted in their respective states, and that the statutes of frauds of these two states declare such oral contracts void without some signed and written memorandum. The plaintiffs, Webb as a citizen of New Jersey, Gross and Mathews as citizens of Ohio and Bachmann as a citizen of Illinois, agree that their contracts were accepted in their respective states and that the statutes of frauds of these three states provide that no action shall be brought upon any such oral contract unless there is a written memorandum thereof.

A. New York Times Advertisement of October 30, 1955.

The plaintiffs contend this is the “note or memorandum” and would have this court so find, that takes their cases out of the statute of frauds principle. In so doing their counsel refers to the Restatement of Contracts, Section 207 which provides:

“A memorandum, in order to make enforceable a contract within the statute, may be any document or writing, formal or informal, signed by the party to be charged or by his agent actually or apparently authorized thereunto, which states with reasonable certainty,
“(a) each party to the contract either by his own name, or by such a description as will serve to identify him, or by the name or description of his agent, and

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Bluebook (online)
198 F. Supp. 617, 1961 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bachmann-v-blaw-knox-company-pawd-1961.