Carpenter v. Overland Tire Co.

130 A. 665, 102 N.J.L. 196, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 308
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedOctober 19, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 130 A. 665 (Carpenter v. Overland Tire Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carpenter v. Overland Tire Co., 130 A. 665, 102 N.J.L. 196, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 308 (N.J. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

White, J.

The plaintiff, Carpenter, who was not a real estate agent, and who was in the employ of the General Electric Company, was approached by the president (dwell) of the defendant company, which owned a factory, that it desired to sell, and was told by Olwell that if he would bring about a sale of it to the General Electric Company the defendant would pay him a commission of $5,000 for so doing. Carpenter immediately entered into negotiations with Mr. Evans, the proper officer of the General Electric Company, to bring about such a sale, acquainting Mr. Evans with the £aet *198 that should it go through he, Carpenter, was to receive a commission from the defendant company. ' Evans became interested and examined the property. He thereupon told Carpenter to “keep his hands off” the sale, as the General Electric Company was going to buy the property on the outside through its Mr. Whiteside, the latter negotiating through other brokers (with whom the property had been listed for sale by the defendant), and pretending to purchase in his own behalf or in behalf of some other concern not connected with the General Electric. Plaintiff was’ thus placed in the embarrassing position of having to decide whether to obey the instructions of his regular employer, the General Electric Company, thereby forfeiting his right to commission on the sale from his principal, the defendant company, or of holding fast to his prospective commission by being loyal to his principal and, in so doing, declining to carry out the instructions of his regular einployer, possibly thereby jeopardizing his regular employment. When this suit was first tried the plaintiff testified that he obeyed the instructions of his employer, and did, in fact, “keep his hands off;” but at the second trial, after a rule to show cause had been made absolute bjr the Supreme Court, he testified that he attempted surreptitiously to disobey his emplojrer’s orders by trying to call up dwell, the defendant’s president, over the telephone to acquaint him with what the General Electric Company intended to' do, but that he failed to get in communication with him. As a matter of fact, within twelve hours after plaintiff’s conversation with Evans, dwell, the president of the defendant company, met the plaintiff (they lived in the same boarding house and were close friends) and told him that the defendant company had sold the property to a man named Whiteside through outside brokers, whereupon the plaintiff told dwell that Whiteside was in reality the General Electric Company, dwell was surprised and naturally somewhat indignant at learning this fact, and, at plaintiff’s request, a day or so afterwards signed a paper, which was dated back to the time of their first interview, putting in writing an agreement for the defendant company to pay plaintiff the $5,000 commission in case of a sale through him to the Gen *199 eral Electric “people,” Olwell’s comment being that the word “people” would include Whiteside, who was an officer of one of the subsidiaries of the General Electric Company. There was some controversy as to just what was the purpose of this paper, Olwell testifying that it was only given to assist Carpenter to get a share of the commission of the outside brokers, and that he expressly stipulated that his company was not to he required to pay two commissions, and that if he got “in a jam” Carpenter was to return the paper to him. Carpenter, on the other hand, insists that the paper was intended to be real, and was for the purpose of putting in legal form, namely, in writing, the oral contract as originally made.

Upon the first trial the Supreme Court set aside the verdict upon a rule to show cause on the ground that the evidence was uneontradicted that Carpenter had failed in his loyalty to his principal by complying with the order of his regular employer to “keep his hands off” the sale, and that, therefore, he could not recover. Upon the second trial, and the verdict again coming before the Supreme Court on a rule to show cause, it was again set aside on the same ground, the court taking the view that plaintiff’s testimony on that trial that he had ineffectually attempted to acquaint Olwell with the proposed scheme to purchase in the name of a third party did not alter the legal result because the attempt to counteract or destroy the effect of his disloyalty was unsuccessful. The third trial which also came up to the Supreme Court on rulo to show cause, developed substantially the same evidence as the second trial, and upon the verdict again being set aside there was a stipulation on the fourth trial whereby the evidence of the third trial was read from the record, and the learned trial judge, in accordance with the view of the Supreme Court as expressed in the per curiam on the third rule to show cause, directed a verdict in favor of the defendant from a judgment upon which this appeal has been taken.

As was said by the Supreme Court in the per curiam on the second rule to show cause: “One essential requisite of an agent in the law is loyalty to his principal, and it is, of course, fundamental that an agent cannot recover from the principal in a case where he has been a party to the sacrifice *200 of that principal’s interests without the latter’s knowledge and by fraud or intentional concealment.” 2 C. J. 694, 712; 9 Id. 536; Rogers v. Genung, 76 N. J. Eq. 306; Sternberger v. Young, 73 Id. 586.

We incline to the view that the Supreme Court properly held that the evidence was uncontradicted that Carpenter acquiesced in and complied with the instructions to “keep his hands off,” which he received from his regular employer, and that the result of such acquiescence and compliance was to permit a sale to be procured through other agents (at the incidental additional cost, of course, of their commission) from his principal, acting in ignorance of the real situation, at a lower price and less advantageous terms than such principal would have been willing to accept had he known who the real purchaser was; and that this being so, the subsequent effort of the plaintiff to remedy this situation by destroying the effect of his disloyalty was immaterial because it did not, in fact, succeed. If, when Evans told plaintiff to “keep his hands off” in order that Evans’ company might be allowed a free hand to deceive plaintiff’s principal as to who the purchaser was, and thereby acquire the property at a lower price, the plaintiff had told Evans that he would not permit his principal to remain in ignorance of the true situation, of course, the contemplated deceit would have been dropped right there. Plaintiff did not do this, but, in fact, as he himself testified, after Evans told him to “keep his hands off” he “did nothing further with reference to the negotiations for the sale.” Doubtless plaintiff was placed in a difficult situation, involving on the one hand the loss of his commission, or on the other possibly the loss of his employment, but that cannot alter the legal effect Of his actions so far as the defendant is concerned. If the latter is bound to pay him a commission it must be on the basis that he acted with complete loyalty to it throughout the entire transaction.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 A. 665, 102 N.J.L. 196, 1925 N.J. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carpenter-v-overland-tire-co-nj-1925.