Eggers v. Armour & Co. of Delaware

129 F.2d 729, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedAugust 4, 1942
Docket12234
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 129 F.2d 729 (Eggers v. Armour & Co. of Delaware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eggers v. Armour & Co. of Delaware, 129 F.2d 729, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435 (8th Cir. 1942).

Opinion

SANBORN, Circuit Judge.

Walter Eggers (hereinafter referred to as the plaintiff) brought this action to recover damages for the breach of a contract for lifetime employment which he alleges Armour and Company (hereinafter referred to as the defendant) entered into with him on or about January 1, 1939. The defendant *730 denied having made the contract, and asserted its invalidity if made. The case was tried to a jury. At the close of plaintiff’s evidence the court directed a verdict for defendant upon the ground that there was no competent evidence that defendant had entered into the contract alleged. From the ensuing judgment, the plaintiff took this appeal.

The plaintiff asserts that his evidence, including that which he offered and which he charges the court improperly rejected, was sufficient to entitle him to have submitted to the jury the issue of the existence of the contract, and that the court erred in directing a verdict. The defendant argues that the plaintiff’s evidence, adduced and offered, was insufficient to establish the existence of the contract alleged, and that the trial court properly directed a verdict for the defendant. It also contends that if the plaintiff had the alleged contract with the defendant, the contract was, in any event, terminable at will, and that defendant was entitled to a directed verdict for that reason, also.

The facts which the plaintiff’s evidence, including his offers of proof, tended to establish are, in substance, as follows: The plaintiff is a resident of Mason City, Iowa, and at the time of the trial was thirty-three years of age. For approximately ten years prior to October 28, 1938, he had been continuously employed by the defendant in the meat packing plant which it owns and operates at Mason City. On October 28, 1938, the plaintiff suffered injuries in the course of his employment while engaged in carrying beef, and was laid up until December 17, 1938, when he returned to the plant and was put to work first as a watchman and then as a janitor. A few days after his return and while he was working as a janitor, he again injured himself and went to the hospital, where he was treated by defendant’s local physician. Late in December, 1938, and before plaintiff had returned to work after his last injury, E. J. McCann, 1 who was in charge of employing men for the defendant’s plant at Mason City and was also in charge of safety work and of Workmen’s Compensation at the plant, had the plaintiff come to his (McCann’s) office in the plant. The evening before the plaintiff’s visit to the office, McCann had made the statement to plaintiff’s wife that the defendant was “desirous of getting Mr. Eggers back on the job and that the company felt obligated to him, and that a written contract had been drawn up and sent out from Chicago, giving Mr. Eggers a life job at the plant, at wages at least as great as he was receiving at the time of his injury.” Mr. McCann, when the plaintiff called at the office, handed him three papers, saying: “Walt, these are all drawn up by Chicago, ready for you to sign so you can have a lifetime job. * * * I think it would be a good thing for you, Walt.” McCann then asked the plaintiff if he would agree to work, and was advised that he would. The plaintiff took the papers handed to him by McCann to J. E. Williams, an attorney of Mason City, and conferred with Mr. Williams in regard to them. According to the testimony of Mr. Williams, the papers appeared to be a contract, in triplicate, between Jacob E. Decker & Sons, Armour Branch (which is evidently the name of the Mason City division of defendant), and the plaintiff. The contract purported to be executed by the defendant by a vice-president and a secretary, and the name of E. J. McCann, employment manager, appeared in the left-hand lower corner. Mr. Williams could not recall what name appeared as vice-president and what name as secretary. The substance of the contract was that the defendant “was employing Walter Eggers as a watchman or at other work that he was physically able to perform, the period of the employment to be for life or until — or for such time as he was able to appear and do that kind of work, either watchman work or other work which he was capable of performing, and the pay was to be the same as he was receiving at the present time, or more, and the hours the same as he was putting in at the time.” After his conference with his attorney, the plaintiff signed the contract in triplicate and delivered the three drafts to Mr. McCann, who told the plaintiff that “one I (McCann) get, and the other one the insurance people get, at Chicago,” and that the third was a copy. The plaintiff never received a draft of the contract or a copy of it, although he asked for one. After he had delivered the contract to McCann, the plaintiff returned to work at the plant and was given the kind of work that he was able to do and the kind contemplated by the alleged contract. The disability resulting from the injuries which he had received while working for the defendant was such as to prevent him from doing heavy work, but not from doing light *731 work. In December, 1940, the defendant discharged the plaintiff, and has since refused to employ him or to pay him wages, although he has been, is, and will continue to be, ready, willing and able to do the kind of work contemplated by the alleged contract. About one year after the making of the alleged contract, C. J. Walker, defendant’s superintendent at its Mason City plant, being about to leave, called plaintiff into the superintendent’s office and in the presence of plaintiff stated to C. D. Good, who was Walker’s successor, “This is the man I was telling you about, that we have given a life job here at the plant.” Shortly before plaintiff was discharged, C. D. Good, the superintendent, came to the place in the plant where plaintiff was working, and in his presence said to a Mr. Perkins, a foreman, that “they would have to let one man go and that they couldn’t let Mr. Eggers go because he had a permanent job at the plant.”

The plaintiff in his amended complaint alleged that the contract for lifetime employment was made for the purpose of settling his claim for compensation and damages, but at the close of his evidence that allegation was withdrawn, there being no proof to support it. There was evidence that, after he was injured, plaintiff did receive workmen’s compensation for a time and that he signed releases in December, 1938, when he first returned to work.

The applicable law is that of Iowa. Apparently no similar situation has been considered by the Iowa courts. There is no ground for believing that the law of Iowa governing this case differs from the law generally applicable.

We have no doubt that the defendant could obligate itself to furnish the plaintiff for life with such work as he would be capable of performing in his disabled condition and to pay him wages so long as he was able to render service, and that his promise to remain in defendant’s employ and render the required service would be a sufficient consideration to support the obligation. The rule is that a contract for lifetime employment will be given effect, according to its terms, if the intention of the parties to make such an agreement is clear, even though the only consideration for it, so far as the employer is concerned, is the promise of the employee to render the service called for by the contract. Littell v. Evening Star Newspaper Co., 73 App.D.C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 F.2d 729, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 3435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eggers-v-armour-co-of-delaware-ca8-1942.