Cammack v. J. B. Slattery & Bro.

148 N.E. 781, 241 N.Y. 39, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 522
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 15, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 148 N.E. 781 (Cammack v. J. B. Slattery & Bro.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cammack v. J. B. Slattery & Bro., 148 N.E. 781, 241 N.Y. 39, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 522 (N.Y. 1925).

Opinion

Hiscock, Ch. J.

From the somewhat multitudinous findings in greater part proposed by the parties and from requests to find supported by uncontradicted evidence the following facts appear, which are decisive of this appeal:

In July, 1915, the parties made a contract which in part provided for the manufacture by defendant of a certain type of radiators which embodied ideas and conformed to plans developed by the plaintiff and in return for the right to do which it was to pay plaintiff certain royalties on radiators thus manufactured and sold by it.

By other portions of the agreement plaintiff undertook “ during his pleasure ” to discharge the duties of a sales manager, although not so called in the agreement, in marketing the radiators thus to be manufactured by *43 defendant. To quite an extent performance of the services specified was optional and if rendered at all might be performed by salesmen selected by him. But in addition to these duties optional either as to performance or as to method of performance, there were certain duties which, subject to the right to quit at any time and subject to exceptions hereinafter to be referred to, plaintiff absolutely undertook to discharge. Amongst “these were the ones that he would devote not less than six months in each year to the sale of radiators and that he would report to defendant conditions of business at least three times each week when not on the road or on a vacation. Defendant had the right in case plaintiff became unable and incapacitated by illness or by any other reason beyond his control from discharging his duties or if he neglected to discharge them, to hire salesmen whose salaries and expenses should be charged to the “ commission account of plaintiff.” It was also further provided that in the event plaintiff should “ discontinue or retire from the sale ” of radiators commissions on future sales should be “ waived by him and thereupon cease and his sole compensation be the royalties ” already mentioned. For his services in this capacity of sales manager plaintiff was to receive a certain commission on the price of radiators sold. The agreement did not explicitly specify any time for its duration and while it recited that it was under seal, as a matter of fact only the corporate seal of the defendant was attached thereto.

On or about March 1st, 1917, by an agreement not under seal the parties purported to modify their original contract, the main modifications being a reduction in the amount of royalties and commissions to be paid to plaintiff. The parties continued to operate under the modified contract until some time in 1921, when the defendant attempted to terminate its contract by serving upon plaintiff written notice of its intention so to do, first in May, 1921, and again on November 7, 1921, Notwithstanding these notices, *44 however, it continued to manufacture radiators as provided in the agreement. But in January, 1920, plaintiff discontinued his services as sales manager and in the latter part of February of that year went away to some health resort in an endeavor to overcome the habit of the excessive use of alcoholic liquors and to cure himself of the effects thereof and from that time he remained continuously away and failed to attend to any of the business of the defendant as provided in the agreement. While the trial judge in accordance with the theory of the complaint has found notwithstanding these facts that plaintiff “ performed all of the covenants and conditions of said agreement on his part to be performed except those where the defendant waived performance ” it sufficiently appears from special findings that although it was after the execution of the original contract that plaintiff became so addicted to the excessive use of intoxicants as to become incapacitated and fail to discharge his duties under the contract, the trial justice has excused this failure and found full performance on the theory that his desire for intoxicants became uncontrollable and, therefore, amounted to a form of sickness which, under the terms of the contract, excused him from performance.

Under these circumstances the trial justice has found that plaintiff was entitled to royalties and selling commissions on all radiators manufactured and sold during the year June. 1st, 1921, to June 1st, 1922, less certain sums paid by defendant to other salesmen to discharge plaintiff’s duties and has rendered judgment for the substantial sum of $17,529.01 of which $8,601.77 is for selling commissions during the period above specified when plaintiff failed to render any services.

On these facts we come to certain questions of law. The defendant argues that the contract which it made for the manufacture and sale of radiators was not entered into for any definite time and that, therefore, it was *45 terminable at will and that notices of a desire and intention to terminate were duly served upon the plaintiff. If we assume, as I think is the fact, that defendant might have terminated its contract at any time and did serve purported notices of intention so to do, the answer is that it did not as a matter of fact terminate the contract but continued to manufacture and sell radiators during the year 1921-1922. Under these circumstances this argument of defendant becomes quite academic because, of course, it would be unreasonable and inequitable to hold that the defendant might in form terminate its contract and then continue to manufacture radiators without the payment of any royalties such as it had agreed to pay.

It is also argued that by the purported contract of 1917 the commissions to be paid to plaintiff under the original contract were reduced and this argument quite largely resolves itself into a discussion of the question whether the original contract was under seal and whether, therefore, it was necessary for the purported modifying contract to be under seal as it concededly was not. We think that the courts below have been correct in their disposition of this question. The original contract recited that it was under seal and while only the seal of the defendant as a matter of fact was attached, it is well settled that under such circumstances the party whose seal is not attached is to be regarded as having adopted the seal which has been affixed and, therefore, as making the contract one under seal. (Rusling v. Union Pipe & Constr. Co., 5 App. Div. 448; affd., 158 N. Y. 737.)

This being so it is the rule in such a case as this that it was necessary that a contract designed to modify the first one so far as unexecuted should itself be under seal. (McKenzie v. Harrison, 120 N. Y. 260.) While much has been said about the anachronistic absurdity of giving to seals at the present day the solemnity and force which they once justly possessed and while courts have undoubtedly been quite ready to escape *46 from an alleged invalidity of a contract predicated upon failure to use a seal, nevertheless this court has been unwilling to make a decision generally annulling and destroying well-settled rules pertaining to the use of seals. Such a decision without reservations, which we would be unable to make, would result in affecting contracts in a manner which would be chaotic and unjust.

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Bluebook (online)
148 N.E. 781, 241 N.Y. 39, 1925 N.Y. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cammack-v-j-b-slattery-bro-ny-1925.