Carson v. Hosiery Co.

15 Pa. Super. 476, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 386
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 10, 1900
DocketAppeal, No. 113
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 15 Pa. Super. 476 (Carson v. Hosiery Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carson v. Hosiery Co., 15 Pa. Super. 476, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 386 (Pa. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Opinion by

W. D. Pokteb, J.,

The plaintiff was employed by the defendant company as a salesman under a contract in writing, was discharged from said employment before the expiration of the term agreed upon, and subsequently brought this action. He does not print his Statement, and we are unable to determine from the record as [479]*479presented in the paper-book whether he seeks to recover certain instalments of his salary becoming due after his discharge, or the entire damage arising from an alleged improper discharge from his employment. When the court below gives binding instructions against a plaintiff, he ought upon his appeal to print the statement of his cause of action as presented to the court below, in order that the question upon which the court passed may be made plain. In the present case, however, the principles involved in the question passed upon are equally applicable in an action for salary upon the contract and an action for damages for the violation thereof.

There was no dispute as to any fact material to the disposition of the questions involved. The contract was in writing, there was no ambiguity upon its face, and there was no evidence which would have warranted a finding that any word therein used had, with regard to that particular subject-matter, a technical meaning different from that which it ordinarily conveyed. The construction of this contract and the ascertainment of the rights of the parties thereunder was for the court. There was no dispute as to the fact of the discharge before the expiration of the term of service, nor that the plaintiff had pursued the course of action for which the defendant company asserted the right to discharge him. The question whether under the written agreement and the undisputed facts there was a sufficient reason for the' dismissal of the plaintiff was a question of law for the court: Matthews v. Park Bros., 146 Pa. 384; 159 Pa. 579; Gallagher v. Wayne Steam Company, 188 Pa. 95. The plaintiff had received from his employer a written order to be in Albany upon a certain day and there see all the trade; from there to proceed to Utica, Oswego, Courtlandt, Ithaca, Elmira and Milton. He replied to this in writing, stating that he had no money with which to start on the trip, and saying “ forward check and I shall go.” In a postscript he suggested that the cost of the trip from Elmira to Milton be paid by the defendant company. To this letter the defendant company replied declining to furnish the money, notifying him that they expected him to be in Albany upon the day mentioned, and changing the route to be followed by the plaintiff by directing that upon leaving Elmira he go to Troy, Muncy, Sunbury and Harrisburg, Pa., “ to see the trade, and stop at Milton to see us, [480]*480then the question of expense in coming to Milton will be small.” Under the terms of the contract the plaintiff was to pay his own traveling expenses, and he had no right to call upon the defendant company to advanoe him any money for that purpose. His salary had at that time been paid in advance, and he had no claim whatever upon which he could call upon the defendant company to pay him money. The plaintiff admits that he took no steps whatever to obey this order, and completely ignored the commands of his employer. He challenges the right of his employer to discharge him because of his refusal to obey this order, upon the ground that under the terms of the contract the employer had no right to give the order. He does not seem to have so construed the contract at the time of his reply to the defendant’s first order, for the only reason then given for not going was that he did not have any money. If, however, he had not covenanted to obey such an order he is still in a position to insist upon the terms of the contract.

The whole case, therefore, must turn upon the construction of the contract. In construing such a contract we must do so with a view to the general purpose which the parties were seeking to accomplish when they formulated the details of the arrangement. All the testimony agrees, and the instrument indicates upon its face, that this written contract was in the nature of a proposition submitted by the plaintiff and afterwards accepted by the defendant. The contract throughout uses the personal pronoun “ I ” when referring to the plaintiff; it was a statement to the defendant of what the plaintiff proposed to do for it, and the compensation which he expected to receive therefor. When the plaintiff’s proposition was accepted, and the contract in this form executed, he became thereby engaged with the defendant company for the sale of such goods as they might manufacture or have to sell. He was guaranteed a salary of $2,500 a year, payable in monthly instalments, for a period of two years, and was to receive, in addition, five per centum on all sales in excess of $50,000 per year, and he was to have the sale and receive credit, no matter by whom sold, for all goods sold in Massachusetts, New Jersey, Delaware, Maryland, New York, and all of Pennsylvania except certain portions designated. It was “ further agreed that, in consideration of the aforesaid $2,500 per year, the plaintiff was to pay all his own [481]*481expenses connected with the sale of the goods of the said company in the territory mentioned.” The clause of the contract which is now material is that which designates the duties of the plaintiff, and is as follows, viz : “I am to call on the jobbing or wholesale trade, and such retail trade as in my judgment will not conflict with my wholesale customers, and as often as deemed necessary to advance the interests of the West Branch Hosiery Company, and I further agree to call at any time upon any customers in my territory that said company may desire without any expense to said company.” The only discretion which the plaintiff reserved to himself when he made this proposition was that he should only be required to call on such retail trade as in his judgment would hot conflict with his wholesale customers. His duty to call upon the jobbers and wholesale dealers was unrestricted, and it was his duty to call upon retail dealers whose trade would not interfere with that of those to whom he sold goods at wholesale ; upon the question of this interference the plaintiff had a right to exercise his own judgment. If we eliminate from the contract all reference to the retail trade it would then, read: “ I am to call on the jobbing and wholesale trade as often as deemed necessary to advance the interests of the West Branch Hosiery Company, and I further agree to call at any time upon any customers in my territory that said company may desire without any expense to said company.” The general undertaking was to call as often as deemed necessary to advance the interests of the defendant company. As often as deemed necessary by whom? The plaintiff was making this proposition to the defendant company; it was its interests that were to be advanced; and when a servant undertakes to do such things as are deemed necessary to advance the interests of his master, it is for the master and not the servant to determine what is necessary. The concluding clause of the sentence, in which the plaintiff further agreed to call at any time upon any customers in the territory that the company might desire, without expense to the company, was simply intended to make clear this same idea: that the defendant company should have the right to determine when it was necessary in order to further its interests that the plaintiff should call upon dealers, and that when it did so the plaintiff should make those calls without expense to the company. The [482]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 Pa. Super. 476, 1900 Pa. Super. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carson-v-hosiery-co-pasuperct-1900.