Dexter v. Ivins

44 N.Y. St. Rep. 244
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 12, 1892
StatusPublished

This text of 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 244 (Dexter v. Ivins) 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
Dexter v. Ivins, 44 N.Y. St. Rep. 244 (N.Y. 1892).

Opinion

O’Brien, J.

The main point made in support of this appeal is "that the plaintiff brought the action to recover an instalment of his salary, as a salesman in the service of the defendants,'and that upon the trial he was permitted to amend his complaint against the defendants1 objection, and by the amendment to convert the action into one to recover damages fór a wrongful discharge from the employment provided by the contract. In other words, it is urged by the learned counsel for the defendants that the plaintiff -sued upon one cause of action, and by an erroneous exercise of the power of amendment at the trial recovered upon another and ■different cause of action. If it is true in fact that the complaint was so amended at the trial, against the protest of the defendants, as to work an entire change in the cause of action, the judgment ■ought not to be upheld, as the power of the court to amend pleadings at the trial does not permit the introduction of a new or entirely different cause of action. A careful examination of the record, however, fails to show that such a proceeding as the defendants rely upon in support of the appeal actually took place at the trial. It is incumbent upon a party seeking to reverse a judgment in this court to show that some error of law prejudicial to him was committed on the trial. Every fair intendment and presumption will be made in support of and not against the judgment. This court will not attempt to infer or spell out some error from rulings or proceedings at the trial that are of equivocal meaning or doubtful import, and will not give to a ruling or decision made during the course of the trial a construction different from what was intended by the trial court and understood by counsel on both sides.

The complaint was upon a written agreement made between the plaintiff and defendants, whereby it was stipulated that the plaintiff [245]*245should enter into the service of the defendants as a salesman and perform service for them in that capacity for one year from ¡November 1, 1887, at a salary of $1,800 per year, payable in monthly payments of $150 per month, besides expenses. It is alleged that the plaintiff performed his part of the contract, but that the defendants have neglected and refused to pay him' his salary due under the contract for the months of June, July and August, 1888, amounting to $450, and that they have also neglected and refused to pay his expenses during the same period amounting to $101. The defendants’ answer admitted the agreement, but alleged that while they were at all times ready and willing to comply with their part of it, the plaintiff for a period of .about three months prior to May 28,1888, disregarded and wholly neglected and failed to perform the terms and conditions thereof upon his part and the directions of the defendants in reference thereto, and then follows this allegation: “ By reason of which failure so to do, the defendants, on or about said 28th day of May, 1888, notified the plaintiff of the breach of the agreement upon his part, and thereafter no service whatever has been ren-. •dered to the defendants by him.” This is not an allegation or ■defence that the defendants had terminated the contract sued upon by a discharge of the plaintiff, but an allegation that the plaintiff had abandoned and failed to perform the agreement. All the ■other allegations of t'he complaint were denied. This condition of the pleadings presented for trial but a' single issue or question of fact, and that was whether the plaintiff had performed his part of the agreement to render services for the defendant as a salesman. There- was ho other issue or question to be tried. The plaintiff produced and put the written agreement in evidence, and testified to what he did under it. ' He also produced and put in evidence numerous letters that passed between the parties from time to time. Two or three of the letters from the defendants to the plaintiff contained complaints as to the manner in which he was performing the contract and as to the results, but none of them contained any explicit notice to the plaintiff of his discharge, or of an intention on the part of the defendants to terminate the contract. The correspondence between the parties was all admissible in evidence under the pleadings as they were originally framed, for the reason that it tended to prove that both parties were acting under the contract and that the plaintiff had not abandoned it as was alleged

It was not admissible oil the part of either party to prove a discharge or termination of the contract, because the plaintiff had not pleaded any such cause of action nor the defendants any such defense. On the trial the plaintiff offered one of these letters in evidence. The defendants’ counsel objected on the ground that the action was brought to recover wages and the letter tended to show a discharge. The court, in- answer to the objections, remarked that he thought the criticism correct but ‘‘ will allow you to amend.” The letter was received and the defendants’ counsel •excepted. ¡Now all that occurred was the receipt of a letter in evidence written by the defendants to the plaintiff. As already [246]*246observed, it was admissible without any amendment, as a part of the correspondence between the parties, tending to show whether the plaintiff was acting under or had abandoned the contract. The-plaintiff had not asked for leave to amend his complaint and did nothing to indicate that he desired ¡or accepted the privilege of amending and no amendment was actually made. The trial proceeded and no proof was given that was not entirely proper and competent to be given upon the issue made by the original pleadings. At the close of the plaintiff’s case, the defendant’s counsel moved to dismiss the complaint, on the ground that the action was one to recover wages a*nd that the proof showed that, prior to-the period for which the wages were claimed, the plaintiff had been discharged ; that there was a complete failure to prove the; cause of action pleaded and that plaintiff’s only remedy was an. action for damages. Neither party, as we have seen, alleged by pleading that the contract was terminated by a discharge, and the-only point presented by the motion was that the plaintiff, while; attempting to prove his case, had shown the discharge and, therefore, had failed in his action. But this position was wholly' untenable. The plaintiff had given evidence cotiipetent and sufficient, for the consideration of the jury upon the issue originally made,, that is, for the recovery of his salary during the period covered by the complaint, and he had given no evidence whatever upon which he could go to the jury in an action for damages on account of a discharge.

The most that can fairly be claimed is that if either party had. pleaded the discharge of the plaintiff as a cause of action or defense then some of the correspondence which- the plaintiff offered; would have been competent to submit to a jury in support of such an. allegation. There were some ambiguous expressions in the defendants’ letters which taken alone might tend to show that it was the defendants’ intention to terminate the contract. But they were far from conclusive, and when all the letters were read and the acts of the parties during the year considered, it was at best a question for the jury whether the plaintiff had been discharged or not. The letters were all competent in an action for the salary and the fact that they also contained some evidence competent on the question of discharge cannot prejudice the plaintiff, so long as they were not used for any such purpose and nothing was claimed for them on that ground.

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Bluebook (online)
44 N.Y. St. Rep. 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dexter-v-ivins-ny-1892.