Briggs-Weaver MacHinery Co. v. Pratt

184 S.W. 732, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 359
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 11, 1916
DocketNo. 7442. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 S.W. 732 (Briggs-Weaver MacHinery Co. v. Pratt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Briggs-Weaver MacHinery Co. v. Pratt, 184 S.W. 732, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 359 (Tex. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

RASBURX, J.

Appellee sued appellant in the court below to recover a sum of money alleged to be due appellee as agreed compensation for personal services. There was trial by jury, to whom were referred certain special issues of fact. Upon the answers of the jury the court rendered judgment for appellee, from which entry this appeal is prosecuted.

Briefly stated, and without attempting to follow their mutations, the pleadings were as follows: Appellee alleged that he was employed by appellant as traveling machinery salesman for the year 1913 by oral agreement between the parties by which appellee was to receive a salary of $3,600, of which $125 was payable monthly, the balance at the expiration of the year, with the further understanding that appellee was to receive the additional sum of 5 per cent, of all sales in excess of $25,000 on which appellant realized a profit. No claim was made for the additional compensation, but it was alleged that appellant had only paid $1,375 of the agreed salary of $3,600, leaving a balance of $2,225, for which amount judgment was rendered upon the finding of the jury.

Appellant, while admitting appellee’s employment for the period and in the capacity stated, denied such employment was under the oral agreement alleged by appellee, but was, on the contrary, under a written one, by which appellee was to receive $1,500, payable $125 per month, together with the additional compensation of 5 per cent, on all sales in excess of $35,000, provided the profit on. such sales was sufficient to warrant the commission, and that he earned no commissions, and that his agreed salary had been paid, save $125,. which was tendered. Appellant also sought by cross-action to recover of ap-pellee $500 alleged overpayment on 1912 commissions, during which year appellee was in its employment. Verdict and judgment were against appellant on its cross-action.

Some issues arise on the pleading which require a more specific statement 'in that *734 respect, and in considering the issues we will when necessary make such further statement. It may also be said for the purpose of this appeal that evidence was adduced by both sides to the controversy in support of the allegations in their pleading sufficient to sustain verdict either way.

[1] The first issue presented is that the manner in which the trial court presented the issues made by the pleading and evidence preliminary to propounding to the jury the questions of fact to be determined by them was calculated to lead the jury to believe the contract relied upon by appellant was not an issue in the case, and to confuse them in that respect. In propounding questions of fact to the jury for their determination, the court preceded the questions with a formal statement of the nature of appellant’s suit and appellant’s defenses thereto. In such statement the court recited that appellee was suing upon an alleged oral contract, stating its exact terms with reference to salary and commissions and how and when both were earned and payable. In referring to appellant’s defenses the court said, “The defendant denies this, and says the contract was a written contract,” omitting any reference to the details of the written contract concerning salary and commission and payment thereof, as pleaded by appellant. Such omission, however, did not, in our opinion, either confuse the jury or lead them to believe that the written contract alleged by appellant was not an issue in the case. The issue in the ease and the one the jury surely understood to be the controlling one was whether appellee was employed under the oral contract upon which he sued or upon the written contract under which appellant defended; and it was necessary to recite the precise terms of the alleged oral contract relied upon by appellee in order that the jury might, in case their verdict was for appellee, find in accordance with its provisions. It was not in like manner necessary to furnish the jury with the details of the written contract in ease the jury should find for the defendant for the reason that its terms were immaterial, since, if the jury believed that the written contract was the true one, verdict would have been for appellant without reference to its terms, due to the fact that appellant claimed it had paid appellee in full thereunder, save $125, which was tendered in court.

[2] It may further be said that, if the manner of presenting the issue is susceptible of the criticism directed against it, such action was harmless, since it appears that the jury were required to determine precisely whether the oral or written contract was the true one. By the first interrogatory the jury were asked whether appellee had an oral contract with appellant for the year 1913, stating its terms, or whether it was the written one as alleged by appellant in its pleading. It is thus clear that, whatever the jury may have thought concerning the intention of the court to ignore the written contract, as disclosed by the preamble to his charge, all doubts were dispelled when they were required to pass directly upon the question.

[3] The next issue presented is the action of the court in refusing to propound to the jury two special issues submitted by appellant as follows:

“(4) Did defendant, on or about September 24, 1912, mail to Pratt a contract in writing, covering Pratt’s employment by defendant for the year 1913?
“(5) If you have answered question No. 4 ‘Yes,’ then did plaintiff accept said contract?”

The trial court did not, in our opinion, err in refusing to submit special issue four. All authority is agreed that the true function to be attained by special issues is to have the jury determine from the evidence the existence or not of the material facts sought to be established by the respective parties. One of the material, if not controlling, facts to be found by the jury in the instant case was whether appellee was employed under the contract alleged by him or under the one alleged by appellant. Consequently it is clear that, even though special issue 4 had been submitted, and the jury had found that appellant did mail the contract to appellee, it would not have established the fact upon which it bore, since mailing the contract would in no respect establish that appellee accepted it or agreed to its terms. Question 5, however, was pertinent and material, and presented to the jury a material and controlling issue, and, in the absence of any substantial presentation of such issue, the failure to submit the issue would have been error.

[4] The court did, however, present the precise issue, and in a manner as fair and impartial as did the refused charge. It is to be borne in mind that it was claimed by appellee that he was employed under the oral contract alleged by him, while it was maintained by appellant that he was employed under the written contract alleged by it. Consequently the issue was which was the true contract? In submitting the issue thus made the court by his first interrogatory inquired of the jury whether appellee had with appellant for the year 1913 an oral contract, reciting its terms, or whether it was the written contract set out in the pleadings of appellant. Here in one question was fairly put the issue made by both parties, because in answer to the question the jury was compelled, in making its answer, to find that the true contract was either oral or written.

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Bluebook (online)
184 S.W. 732, 1916 Tex. App. LEXIS 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/briggs-weaver-machinery-co-v-pratt-texapp-1916.