Coulter v. Independent Order of Foresters

166 F. 805, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5318
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 25, 1909
DocketNo. 24
StatusPublished

This text of 166 F. 805 (Coulter v. Independent Order of Foresters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coulter v. Independent Order of Foresters, 166 F. 805, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5318 (circtedpa 1909).

Opinion

J. B. McPHERSON, District Judge.

Plaintiff’s statement of claim sets out his cause of action in the following language:

“On or about the 9th day of August, 1905, in consideration that the plaintiff had agreed with the defendant to enter into its service as state manager for the state of Pennsylvania, and to remove himself and family'from the city and state of New York to the city and county of Philadelphia aforesaid, and there keep and maintain an office for the transaction of the business of the defendant in said state, and to serve the defendant in that capacity at a («ríain salary, at the rate of two hundred dollars per month, wiih an additional compensation of one hundred and fifty dollars per month, which was intended to cover the cost of rent, light, heat, and telephone service for said office, and traveling expenses in conducting defendant’s business as a fraternal insurance corporation, and such further sums of money as the plaintiff should expend in removing his family, himself, and his household goods, etc., from the city of New York to the city of Philadelphia aforesaid, all of which several sums of money were to be paid by the defendant to the plain[806]*806tiff during his continuance in such service, the defendant corporation then and there undertook and promised the plaintiff to receive him into its service in the capacity aforesaid, and to retain and employ him in such service, at the salary and other compensation aforesaid, until the next regular meeting of the supreme court of said corporation defendant, which said meeting was and is intended to he held on or about the 1st day of August, 1909; that the defendant’s promise and undertaking to employ and retain him in such service, with the salary and compensation aforesaid, was the inducement for the plaintiff to make such contract of employment, and to remove himself and family from the city of New York to the city of Philadelphia to enter the defendant’s service, and without which promise and undertaking the plaintiff would not have entered into such contract and service.”

It appeared at the trial, that the plaintiff, a physician by profession, had been in the employ of the defendant, a beneficial, or fraternal insurance, association, from 1892 to 1900, serving for the first two years of this period as medical referee for Great Britain and Ireland, and for the last six years serving as manager for New York City, Connecticut, and Rhode Island. He then resumed the practice of medicine, and was living in New York City, when Dr. Oronhyatekha, the supreme chief ranger, or the highest executive officer of the order, made him certain propositions in January, 1904, which resulted in an agreement. Some of its terms are undisputed. The plaintiff was to remove to Philadelphia to enter the defendant’s service as a manager or deputy chief ranger for the state of Pennsylvania, and was to receive a certain monthly sum for salary and expenses. This agreement was to last until August, 1905, when the supreme court of the order was to meet, and when all commissions issued by the supreme executive officer to deputy chief rangers terminated by virtue of section 94, subsection 4, of the general laws of the order that were adopted in April-May, 1902. (This provision was in effect repeated in section 70, subsection 4, of the general laws adopted in July-August, 1905). The foregoing undisputed terms of the agreement of January, 1904, were fully carried out, and no violation thereof is charged by the plaintiff. He averred, however, that the agreement had two mare terms, and these were both in dispute. The first was to the effect that the plaintiff should be allowed the cost of removing his household from New York City to Philadelphia; and the second was, as the plaintiff put it, “an understanding” that the agreement was to be renewed for a further term of three or four years after the meeting of the supreme court of the order in August, 1905. I shall speak further of this “understanding” in a moment; for the present, a few words more should be said about the alleged agreement concerning the expenses of removal. These were not paid, and it will be observed that, while the plaintiff includes them in his statement of claim, he does not clearly aver how and when his right to such expenses accrued, but on the whole leaves the impression, I think, that the right is based upon a contract made in August, 1905. At the trial, however, it appeared beyond question that whatever right existed to the repayment of these expenses rested wholly upon the agreement of January, 1904. The jury reached a verdict in the plaintiff’s favor for the sum claimed on this behalf, and the defendant now urges that the plaintiff’s statement does not make the proper averments to support the finding, and it is [807]*807contended that for this reason judgment should be entered for the defendant notwithstanding the verdict. I agree that the plaintiff’s statement is probably inadequate upon this point, but, as the defendant had actual, although informal, notice of the claim (as appears from its affidavit of defense filed in January, 1908), and as the whole subject was fought out at the trial, I think the plaintiff should be allowed to amend. Accordingly, permission is hereby given to amend by inserting the proper averments concerning this item within 10 days.

Returning to the alleged “understanding” that the agreement of January, 190-1, was to be renewed in August, 1905, it is further to be observed that as both the plaintiff and the defendant agree that a new contract of some kind was in fact made in August, 1905, the scope of the “understanding” ceases to be of importance. What the terms of the new contract were, was in dispute. The plaintiff testified that the agreement of January, 1904, was renewed in August, 1905, and was to continue until the next meeting of the supreme court (which was held in July, 1908), while the defendant offered evidence to the effect that the plaintiff was to be continued in his office of manager, or deputy chief ranger, only so long as he succeeded in securing members át a cost that did not exceed $5 for each person. He was not able to obtain members at this rate, and accordingly his services were dispensed with on July 1, 1907; Dr. Oronhyatekha having meanwhile died, and the order of dismissal having been made by his successor in the office of supreme chief ranger.

It was the defendant’s contention at the trial that the general laws of the order authorized the dismissal, whatever the contract might originally have been, and a binding instruction to this effect was asked for. The point was reserved, as the position, if well taken, was controlling, but I thought it desirable to have also the jury’s finding upon the disputed question of fact concerning the terms of the parol agreement that was made in August, 1905. If the agreement was to the effect testified to by the plaintiff, certain questions would arise, whereas different questions would be presented if the defendant’s evidence upon this point was accepted as satisfactory. The dispute was therefore submitted to the jury, but after a prolonged deliberation they were unable to agree upon this branch of the case, and so reported to the court. As already stated, they did agree that the plaintiff should recover for the expenses of removal under the contract of January, 1901-, and accordingly the verdict was taken for this amount.

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Bluebook (online)
166 F. 805, 1909 U.S. App. LEXIS 5318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coulter-v-independent-order-of-foresters-circtedpa-1909.