Chester v. Schleisner Co.

167 F. Supp. 697, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3182
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedNovember 14, 1958
DocketCiv. A. No. 8799
StatusPublished

This text of 167 F. Supp. 697 (Chester v. Schleisner Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chester v. Schleisner Co., 167 F. Supp. 697, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3182 (D. Md. 1958).

Opinion

CHESNUT, District Judge.

In this case the plaintiff, an employee of the defendant, sued the defendant to recover for an alleged verbal promised bonus of $5,000 or a Cadillac automobile for his services, in addition to a salary of $12,500 a year, which latter has been paid. As a result of a trial the jury, after five or six hours deliberation, rendered a sealed verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $5,000. Prior to the submission of the case to the jury the defendant moved in writing for a directed verdict for the defendant, which was overruled at the time. The defendant has now made a motion for judgment n. o. v. in favor of the defendant, and in the alternative, has filed a motion for a new trial. I will first discuss the ques[698]*698tion arising on the motion for judgment n. o. v.

The principal and controlling evidence at the trial was the following: On direct examination the plaintiff testified that for many years prior to his employment by the defendant, he had been employed as manager of the shoe department of the Baltimore branch of I. Miller; that he was acquainted with Sehleisner, the president of the defendant corporation which conducts a department store on North Howard Street in Baltimore City, and that Sehleisner proposed to the plaintiff that he become manager for the shoe department of the defendant; and after some negotiations he agreed to do so on the promise by the defendant to pay him a salary of $12,500 a year and in addition give him a bonus (at the end of the year) of $5,000 in cash or a Cadillac automobile; that he accepted this offer and after a year’s satisfactory service he asked for the bonus but was “put off” or evaded by the defendant, and that after about 18 months he left the employment to make a more satisfactory arrangement with others for the conduct of a shoe store in Florida; and that although demanded, he had never been paid the $5,000 bonus.

On cross-examination defendant’s counsel produced and the plaintiff identified his signature to a letter dated about two weeks after he began his employment with the defendant, purporting to state the terms and compensation for the employment. The text of the letter is set out in a note.1 The substance of the letter is (1) a reference to prior negotiations for compensation, (2) an intended reduction of the terms thereof in the letter (that is an integration thereof), (3) a statement what the salary was to be, to wit, the payment every two weeks of $520.83 for all services required from the plaintiff, (4) no duration of the term of employment other than payment every [699]*699"two weeks, and (5) a reference to prior talk regarding additional compensation not agreed on but postponed for later ■consideration if and when subsequently mutually agreed upon.

With respect to the letter, which included no promise as to a bonus, the plaintiff said that he did not immediately sign the letter when submitted to him but finally did so after two weeks’ delay, and further said that he mentioned to the defendant that the letter did not contain the promise as to the bonus and that Schleisner said that he did not wish ■other employees to know that there would be a bonus to the plaintiff. The plaintiff further said that he felt it necessary to sign the letter because he had severed his long-time prior employment and would be out of a job with the defendant if he did not sign.

There were some other features of the testimony which are not really material on the point now under discussion. The plaintiff’s amended complaint included demand not only for the bonus but for the proportion of the bonus for the period of employment exceeding the first year, and for other unliquidated damages for an alleged discharge due to “harassment”. At the conclusion of the case the defendant asked for a directed verdict with respect to all three claims of the plaintiff. This was granted by the court with respect to the second and third features of the amended complaint, but overruled as to the first claim, that is for the bonus. The defendant’s motion for a directed verdict for the defendant is thus now related only to the contention as to the alleged verbal promise of the bonus.

In the relatively short duration of the trial the court did not have sufficient time to fully explore the applicable law which was then referred to by counsel as to the parol evidence rule, the contention of the defendant being that the letter stating the terms of the plaintiff’s employment could not be contradicted, varied or added to by an alleged (but denied) purely verbal promise to pay an additional sum as a bonus. After hearing the arguments of counsel on the motion and further opportunity to study the question submitted, I reach the conclusion that on all the evidence in the case the letter referred to signed by the plaintiff was, on its face, and with no legally admissible contrary evidence, a full integration of the agreement of the parties as to the plaintiff’s compensation for the services to be rendered.

As pointed out by Wigmore in his well-known monumental treatise on the Laws of Evidence, the so-called parol evidence rule is, when critically considered, something of a misnomer. Its application results in the exclusion of parol evidence not strictly speaking because it tends to contradict or vary the terms of the writing but because the excluded evidence is not relevant to the issue; or, in other words, it is a rule of substantive law which renders immaterial verbal modification of an integrated agreement. And I note with interest that this view of the so-called parol evidence rule has been recently adopted by the Court of Appeals of Maryland in the late case of Rinaudo v. Bloom, 209 Md. 1, 120 A.2d 184, in an opinion by Chief Judge Bruñe. See the fuller discussion in Wigmore, 3d Ed. Vol. 9, § 2400. See also Slice v. Carozza Prop. Inc., 215 Md. 357, at page 368, 137 A.2d 687.

I think it unnecessary to review in particular detail the many Maryland cases illustrating respectively the application or rejection of the so-called parol evidence rule, as each case must necessarily depend upon its own particular facts and circumstances. Many of the Maryland cases are well reviewed in the recent opinion of Chief Judge Bruñe, supra. The jurisdiction of this court in this case is based on diversity of citizenship and while particular consideration should be given to the applicable Maryland decisions, I have not had my attention called to any federal case which would render the verbal evidence in this case admissible even though not admissible under the Maryland rule as provided in the liberal provision of Rule 43(a) [700]*700of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A.

I note the discussion in Wig-more and also in an article in 53 Yale Law Journal, 603, with respect to the more improved method of dealing with a question of this kind at the trial. The suggestion is that the first inquiry should be whether the written agreement relied on was in fact intended by the parties to be a full and complete integration of their whole agreement and that to determine this the court should (in the possible absence of the jury) hear the whole relevant evidence on the point and then judicially determine whether the written agreement was a full integration, and if so, then to exclude oral testimony, otherwise to permit it.

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Related

Montgomery Ward & Co. v. Duncan
311 U.S. 243 (Supreme Court, 1940)
Slice v. Carozza Properties, Inc.
137 A.2d 687 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1990)
Rinaudo v. Bloom
120 A.2d 184 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1956)
Bopst v. Columbia Casualty Co.
37 F. Supp. 32 (D. Maryland, 1940)
Grierson v. . Mason
60 N.Y. 394 (New York Court of Appeals, 1875)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
167 F. Supp. 697, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chester-v-schleisner-co-mdd-1958.