Butterly v. Deering

152 A.D. 777, 137 N.Y.S. 836, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8631
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 18, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 152 A.D. 777 (Butterly v. Deering) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butterly v. Deering, 152 A.D. 777, 137 N.Y.S. 836, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8631 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

The defendant, a lawyer, principally devoted to condemnation and assessment proceedings, in 1892 employed as a law clerk the plaintiff, a layman,, at a salary of twenty dollars per week, and the latter left his service in February, 1899, of his own vohtion, as he states, or on defendant’s discharge, as the defendant states. The cause of the separation was a disagreement as to the. right of the plaintiff to share some fees when collected by defendant, and that matter is the subject of the present appeal. The plaintiff’s position, as indicated by the amended complaint, is that on January 9, 1897, the defendant' agreed to pay him forty dollars per week salary and one-sixth of the gross fees collected in cases procured by him or through his instrumentality, and that he was accordingly entitled to recover therefor in the cases enumerated. With his brief plaintiff submitted to the referee a motion (granted with the report) to amend the complaint so that it should state that the defendant agreed with plaintiff, 1. That he, Butterly, should give his services to the said defendant in said lines of work ” and solicit retainers or employments by clients“2. That he should receive from, said Deering as ,a commission a sum equal to one-sixth of the various gross amounts that should be received by the said defendant from property owners in all cases where retainers had been procured, or should be procured, through his instrumentality or • agency, to be paid to him .as the said defendant should receive the same in the various matters,” settlements to be made every first of January ; 3. That his stated salary for clerical work, which had been One thousand (1,000) dollars, should be increased to Two thousand (2,000) dollars from January 1st, 1897.” The amendments are shown by the italics. ■ One question is, whether the amendments quoted could be granted by the referee, and another, whether the report sustains the complaint.

The amendment was properly allowed. The amendment is not that plaintiff should be paid to solicit retainers or employments by clients,” but that such was a duty of his service, whereof another duty was clerical, and that for the one branch of his occupation he should be paid according to the [779]*779retainers procured through his instrumentality or agency, and for the other a salary of $2,000 per year. The finding is that the defendant did not agree to advance the salary to $2,000, but that he did agree to pay one-sixth of the gross fees for cases procured after January 9, 1897, when a settlement in full was found to bar earlier claims. To be precise, the referee found that the agreement was “ that the plaintiff should continue procuring retainers as he had been doing theretofore, and should continue performing services in connection with the procuring of retainers in proceedings * * * and that for such services he, the defendant, agreed to pay the plaintiff, in addition to his weekly salary of $20, a sum equal to one-sixth of the gross fees collected by the defendant from retainers in such cases and proceedings, and it was also agreed that settlements should he made between the plaintiff and defendant as to such fees annually in January of each year.” The finding, appellant urges, does not accord with the complaint. • It is vital that the contract should he ascertained, otherwise further essential findings based on it fail to state facts essential to recovery. If finding 7 means that the plaintiff “ should continue performing services in connection with the procuring of retainers,” and should procure them, it is agreeable to the amended complaint. That it has such meaning is inferable, as respondent urges, from the 9 th finding that the plaintiff, “ from January 9, 1897, to February 21, 1899, pursuant to such agreement of January 9, 1897, continued, in the employment of defendant and performed his part of the said agreement, and obtained and was instrumental in procuring retainers.” But when the cases for which recovery is allowed are enumerated in finding 28, it is not clear what services plaintiff rendered in connection with them. There is, perhaps, some significance in findings 25 and 26, as a generalization of plaintiff’s work. They show that in the matter of retainers he procured, or he was instrumental, or he had something to do with obtaining them, and rendered services in connection with them. Finding 25 states cases in which defendant was retained and received fees, and finding 26 shows that in one of several ways plaintiff was related to the matters. But the recovery is not essentially based on findings 25 and 26, and does not include all the retainers enumerated [780]*780in finding 25, but rather on finding 28, which states the retainers “in which the plaintiff is entitled to share under the agreement of January 9,1897, and procured by the plaintiff or which he was instrumental in procuring, or with which he had something to do in procuring after January 9, 1897, and in connection with which he rendered services as agreed upon January 9, 1897.” As far as this finding states that he procured the enumerated cases or was instrumental in procuring them, it is clearly sufficient, but there is an alternative that he had something to do with procuring them, and after this disjunctive finding is the conjunctive statement that plaintiff rendered services in connection with them as agreed upon January 9, 1897. Assume, now, that some of the cases he procured, that some he was instrumental in procuring, that he had something to do with procuring some, and that in each instance he rendered services as agreed upon January 9, 1897. That raises the inquiry, what was that agreement ? This throws the inquiry-back to the amended complaint and finding 7. It is stated in the complaint to be an agreement to procure or to be instrumental in procuring, but in finding 7 it is found that he was to procure and to perform services in connection with procuring retainers. In the 28th finding it was sufficient to find that the enumeration is of retainers in which the plaintiff is entitled to share under the agreement, and procured by him, or which he was instrumental, in procuring. That fulfilled the cause of action set forth in the complaint. But why was it alternatively stated that he had “ something to do in procuring,” and in connection with which he rendered services as agreed ? The alternative finding presumably means something in itself, and it conforms to the additional words in finding 7 that the agreement was in addition to what had been found that plaintiff “ should continue performing services in connection with the procuring of retainers.” Hence difficulty arises in concluding that the learned referee intended to find that in the cases enumerated in' finding 28 the plaintiff had procured or had been instrumental in obtaining each and every of the retainers. The plaintiff finds an aid to the findings in the 1st finding under the conclusions of law; that is, that the parties entered into a contract whereby the plaintiff [781]*781was to continue to obtain retainers and to procure business for the defendant, whereby the latter was to pay him one-sixth of the fees thereafter collected by him “from retainers and business that thereafter should be procured by the plaintiff or through his instrumentality.” If this be regarded as a finding of fact, it still leaves it doubtful whether the plaintiff procured the retainers enumerated in the 28th finding, or was instrumental in doing so, or whether he merely had something to do in procuring them, and in connection with which he rendered services as agreed upon. , The opinion of the referee indicates that he based his finding of indebtedness on retainers procured.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Arlington Heights Realty Co. v. Citizens' Ry. & Light Co.
160 S.W. 1109 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1913)
Butterly v. Deering
158 A.D. 181 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
152 A.D. 777, 137 N.Y.S. 836, 1912 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 8631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butterly-v-deering-nyappdiv-1912.