Ehlers v. Langley & Michaels Co.

237 P. 55, 72 Cal. App. 214, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 370
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 8, 1925
DocketDocket No. 4743.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 237 P. 55 (Ehlers v. Langley & Michaels Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ehlers v. Langley & Michaels Co., 237 P. 55, 72 Cal. App. 214, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 370 (Cal. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

KNIGHT, J.

The plaintiff, an employee of the defendant corporation, was dismissed from his employment without notice, and later brought this action to recover the amount of salary and commissions accruing during the thirty-day period following his discharge, contending that such summary dismissal was in violation of the express terms of the contract of employment, which he claims required a thirty-day notice to be given before the employment thereunder could be terminated. The action was tried by a jury, resulting in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the- sum *216 of $814.57, that being the amount of salary and commissions plaintiff would have received if he had _been allowed to remain in such employment for the additional thirty days. Judgment was entered upon said verdict and defendant appeals.

The contract of employment was made up of certain letters which passed between the parties. Those letters were afterward lost or destroyed and, consequently, the terms of the contract were established by secondary evidence. Appellant concedes that the evidence adduced at the trial in relation to the contents of said letters was conflicting and for that reason has not urged on this appeal the point that said contract of employment did not require the giving of the thirty-day notice contended for by respondent.

The main contention upon which appellant seeks a reversal of the judgment is grounded upon the principle of law that it is the duty of the servant to obey all lawful and reasonable orders and instructions of the master, and that willful disobedience thereof warrants peremptory dismissal. (Civ. Code, secs. 1981, 2000; Wiley v. California, Hosiery Co., 3 Cal. Unrep. 814 [32 Pac. 522]; May v. New York Motion Picture Co., 45 Cal. App. 496 [187 Pac. 785].)

The appellant company is engaged in the wholesale drug business in San Francisco, and in connection therewith conducts a department for the sale and installation of drugstore fixtures, of which department respondent had been the successful manager for two years. The controversy here arose over certain contracts secured by the appellant company for the manufacture and installation of fixtures, and the performance of certain construction work for a firm in Petaluma, which contracts were, in accordance with the usual custom of appellant company, sublet on this occasion to the Mullen Manufacturing Company of San Francisco, to whom it had previously sublet similar contracts.

Appellant contends that it was an office rule of appellant company, known to respondent, that no part of the work of the subcontractor should be paid for until the entire contract was completed and a written acceptance of the work received from the customer; that before the work of the subcontractor on this particular job was completed, respondent fraudulently procured a written acceptance of the work from the customer, contrary to business morals *217 and injurious to appellant’s business standing and reputation, and that therefore the summary dismissal of respondent was justified. Respondent denied that he had practiced any fraud or deceit whatever in obtaining written acceptance of said work, and further denied that there was any such rule as appellant contends for in operation at the time the Petaluma transaction occurred. These disputed questions of fact were resolved by the jury in favor of respondent, and we are of the opinion that the jury’s conclusions find ample support in the evidence.

Testimony was given by respondent to the effect that some eight months previous to "the dispute concerning the Petaluma job, the appellant company installed certain fixtures in a drugstore in Oakland under a contract which also had been sublet to the Mullen Company; that at that time the impracticability of the rule requiring a written acceptance to be secured from the customer before any of the work of the subcontractor was paid for came into question and was discussed by respondent with Mr. Pattioni, the vice-president and manager, and Mr. Norton, the secretary of appellant company; that the discussion arose on account of the objections made by Mullen, who asserted that it was impossible for him to accept contracts subject to such a rule for the reason that the customer might, for some fanciful reason, refuse to accept the work at all and in that event he, as the subcontractor, would never be paid. Respondent further testified that following said discussion it was understood by said corporation officers that written acceptances from the customer would not be insisted upon; and that thereafter said acceptances were not, in fact, procured, although completion of the work was always required as a condition precedent to payment.

The particular circumstances relating to the Petaluma job were as follows: The entire job was covered by three contracts, the first of which was the main agreement and called for the manufacture and installation of fixtures to the extent of $5,625, of which amount appellant received $1,400 when the contract was signed; the second contract specified certain paneling for a fixed price of $1,020; the third contract, an oral one, related to screens and window-backs. The fixtures were manufactured and assembled by the Mullen Company *218 at its factory in San Francisco, and shipped to Petaluma. After installation work, under the first contract and construction work called for by the additional ones had been in progress for a week or nine days, and the work under the first contract had been practically finished, respondent, following his usual practice, so reported to Mr. Norton, the secretary, stating that Mullen would like to have his check delivered in time to meet his pay-roll on the following Saturday, May 13th. Norton replied that the check would be ready. On May 12th, Norton told respondent that Mr. Michaels, the company’s president, had seen the check lying on the cashier’s desk and had stated that it should not be delivered until a written acceptance was obtained from the customer. Respondent so informed Mullen and the latter protested that the delay would work a hardship on him because he had depended on said cheek to meet his pay-roll. In order to obviate the embarrassment, respondent that night, personally inspected the work at Petaluma, ascertained that the material called for by all three contracts was on the job, and that the work under the first contract had been practically completed; that the only thing remaining to be done was to shove the showcases into position “like you would a table or desk”; thereupon respondent obtained from the customer the necessary written acceptance, which was filed in the company’s office and the next day the Mullen check for the sum of $4,200' was delivered to Mullen.

About ten days later respondent was called before a meeting of four of the officers of the appellant company, those present being Mr. Michaels, the president; Mr. Pattioni, the vice-president and manager; Mr. Norton, the secretary; Mr. Terry, the treasurer; also the company’s sales manager; and a member of the drug firm for whom the work was being done. After some questioning, respondent was arbitrarily discharged from his employment by the president, Mr. Michaels.

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Bluebook (online)
237 P. 55, 72 Cal. App. 214, 1925 Cal. App. LEXIS 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ehlers-v-langley-michaels-co-calctapp-1925.