Caskie v. International Railway Co.

184 N.E. 489, 261 N.Y. 47, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1255
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 17, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 184 N.E. 489 (Caskie v. International Railway Co.) 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
Caskie v. International Railway Co., 184 N.E. 489, 261 N.Y. 47, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1255 (N.Y. 1933).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

Plaintiff sued in the sum of $200,000 on three causes of action for legal services extending from September, 1922, to January, 1930, and recovered judgment for $80,000. By stipulation, it was reduced by the Appellate Division to $55,000 for the reason that the first cause was barred by. the' Statute of Limitations. The second cause of action alleges $25,000 as reasonable value of services rendered between June 30, 1923, and March 1, 1928, in relation to the investigation of conditions growing out of a strike 'conducted by defendant’s employees. The third cause is for $150,000 as reasonable value of services between December 1, 1923, and December 31, Í929, in reorganizing defendant’s claim department and in supervising the defense of negligence actions.

That plaintiff performed valuable services which inured to the benefit of defendant has been fully proved and indeed is not disputed. During the years extending from 1924 to 1929 he was employed also as general attorney for the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company and at the same time acted,- with the title of general attorney- and head of the claims and negligence departments, for defendant whose offices were in Buffalo. He never per *51 sonally participated in trials. For that duration he spent three hundred and ninety-three days in Buffalo on defendant’s affairs and while' in Philadelphia he kept in touch with many of them by means of telephone, telegraph and written reports. In support of the allegations in the complaint that his professional services were rendered at defendant’s special instance and request and upon its promise to pay reasonable value, plaintiff testified that Thomas E. Mitten, who was an important stockholder in defendant corporation as well as in the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company and who reposed great confidence in him, not only assigned to him the laborious work which he performed but also assumed, in behalf of defendant, to promise compensation to plaintiff in addition to the salary which he was receiving from the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company. The evidence shows that Mr. Mitten detailed plaintiff to the three tasks of clearing up the situation at Buffalo in respect to jitney buses which operated in competition with defendant, in respect to obtaining convictions against employees who had used violence against defendant’s passengers and property and to reforming the system of handling claims and defending actions for negligence. When he accepted these definite tasks at Mr. Mitten’s request, he had no idea of the length of time which would necessarily be consumed. He had in mind the possibility of finishing in a month. The work at Buffalo assigned to him by Mr. Mitten appeared at the time to be of a transient nature. His Philadelphia tenure was permanent.

The principal defense consists of allegations that no express or even implied promise to pay plaintiff existed on the part of any one authorized to contract in behalf of defendant, but that, on the contrary, the services of plaintiff, as an employee of the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company, were loaned by it to defendant and that defendant has reimbursed that corporation for his services. During the years that plaintiff was employed *52 by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company his salary ranged from $9,600 a year in 1919 to $15,000 in 1922, $20,000 in 1923 and $24,000 from 1925 to 1929, with an additional bonus of ten per cent each year. To this salary and bonus were added gifts of several hundred shares of stock. Mr. Mitten, in addition to his large holdings in the Philadelphia company and in defendant, was also the principal stockholder and president of Mitten Management, Inc., which held a contract with each corporation for the complete charge and supervision, subject to the direction of the board of directors,” of the properties and business of each. He was also a director of defendant and chairman of its executive committee and was recognized as the controlling force in the affairs of both corporations. In 1920 he was president of the Philadelphia company and at the beginning of that year Mr. Tully, who had long been connected with that corporation, became president of defendant. The two corporations, both dominated by Mitten, maintained the most harmonious relations. Shortly before Tully assumed the presidency of defendant, he and Mitten orally made an arrangement whereby defendant would have the right to draw upon any employee, both operating and professional, of the Philadelphia organization for assistance, and defendant, upon receiving a bill, would pay to.the Philadelphia company the salaries of these men while engaged in service for the Buffalo corporation at the rate which they were accustomed to receive in Philadelphia. That company did, from time to time, bill defendant for such services by numerous employees. In September, 1922, the assistant auditor of the Philadelphia company in writing requested plaintiff to send to him the time which plaintiff and others of its employees had spent at Buffalo in order that their salaries could be charged to the proper account. Defendant paid the Philadelphia company $6,666.66 for the time spent by plaintiff on its affairs from January, 1922, to April, *53 1923, and again, after plaintiff had presented his claim upon which this action is^founded, defendant paid to that corporation, upon its demand, the sum of $33,333.34 for the use of plaintiff’s services during portions of the years extending from April, 1923, to December, 1929. The whole amounted to $40,000. In addition defendant paid plaintiff for his expenses during the time embraced in the complaint the sum of $17,297.93. Mr. Joyce, a director and member of defendant’s executive committee, testified, after the withdrawal of objections to such testimony, that he distinctly and clearly understood that plaintiff would perform necessary services for defendant and that it would be charged by the Philadelphia company for those services. During all these eight years plaintiff never told him that he expected compensation from defendant and this witness never suspected, until three months after Mitten’s death, that plaintiff expected to be paid by defendant. Two other members of defendant’s executive committee testified to like effect. An attorney who was retained by defendant, through plaintiff, to assist him in special work during the year 1923 testified that plaintiff had informed him that plaintiff was at that time paid by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company for his work for defendant at Buffalo. Arthur A. Mitten, the son of Thomas E. Mitten and also chairman of defendant’s executive committee, knew nothing of any understanding between his father and plaintiff for extra compensation for services rendered to defendant, and never prior to his father’s death heard of any such claim by plaintiff. Plaintiff admits that, although he knew intimately the president, the members of the executive committee and all the men active in defendant’s affairs from 1922 to the end of 1929, he never told one of them that Mr. Mitten had promised him that defendant would pay him for his services. However, in a letter to one of the directors in April, 1929, plaintiff did refer to bis services to defendant, without compen *54 sation “ as yet,” and the fact that he had assumed his work at Buffalo at Mr. Mitten’s request. He states, “ I feel myself responsible to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
184 N.E. 489, 261 N.Y. 47, 1933 N.Y. LEXIS 1255, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caskie-v-international-railway-co-ny-1933.