Excelsior Needle Co. v. Smith

22 A. 693, 61 Conn. 56, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 67
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 22 A. 693 (Excelsior Needle Co. v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Excelsior Needle Co. v. Smith, 22 A. 693, 61 Conn. 56, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 67 (Colo. 1891).

Opinion

Tobbance, J.

On the 11th day of February, 1889, a contract was made between the plaintiff (described in the contract as the party of the second part) and the defendant and his father, (described as the party of the first part), which contained, among others, the following provision: —

“For and in consideration of the sale and transfer of the aforesaid chattels, good-will and business of the said first party to the second party, said second party hereby agrees to and does employ said Frederick D. Smith for the three years next hereto succeeding; the said employment to date from the date of this instrument; and to pay said Frederick D. Smith an annual salary of two thousand dollars, if the employment by said second party of said Smith shall be within the United States, but if the employment of the said *58 Smith by said second party shall be within the Dominion of Canada, then the second party agrees hereunder to pay the said Smith the sum of two thousand and five hundred dollars per annum; and said second party agrees to and does employ the said Smith as a manager, superintendent or agent in its needle business, and to give him such or some kindred position in said business; said salary to be paid by said second party to said Smith in equal monthly instalments at the end of each and every month during said term. In consideration of the covenants herein of the said second party, the said Frederick D. Smith hereby agrees for said three years to so engage with said company, and to devote his time, attention and skill to the business of said second party.”

The plaintiff brought the present suit to recover damages for a breach of the above agreement on the part of the defendant.

The defendant in his answer denied that he had committed any breach of the agreement. He also filed a cross-complaint alleging that the plaintiff had refused to employ him according to the'terms of the agreement, stating that he was ready and willing to be employed, and claiming damages for a breach of the agreement on the part of the plaintiff.

The case was referred to a committee, and the only questions presented to the committee arose under the contract concerning the employment of the defendant by the plaintiff, and were, first, who broke the contract, and second, the amount of damages sustained by the breach thereof.

The commitee made a report in writing, which, on motion of the defendant, was by order of the court recommitted for the following purposes: — to find as a question of fact what the parties themselves understood by the contract, provided this could be done from the evidence already before the committee and such fact seemed to the committee to be relevant; to find any other or additional facts which the committee deemed it proper to find, upon the evidence already adduced; and to correct such portions, if any, of the report, as might be found by the committee to be erroneous.

*59 The committee then made a final report, to the acceptance of which the defendant filed a remonstrance, on the ground that certain facts claimed to be material and to have been proved by uncontradicted evidence were not made part of the report. The evidence referred to, being only a part of the evidence in the case, was set out in the remonstrance in full. The plaintiff denied the first part of the remonstrance, and demurred to that part of it which set forth the testimony, on the ground that it set forth only a small part of the testimony upon the question, and because the committee had found all the material facts upon the whole evidence adduced on the trial. Thereupon the Superior Court, at the request and by the agreement of the parties, found from the evidence cited in the remonstrance certain additional facts, which are made part of the record.

The questions of law arising upon the record, including those arising upon the remonstrance and the answer and demurrer thereto, as well as the question of the materiality of the additional facts found by the court, are reserved for the advice of this court.

One of the questions made by the defendant in his brief is, whether the facts set out in the remonstrance and found by the court from the evidence therein detailed, should be treated as a part of the report of the committee. Quite a considerable part of the evidence detailed in the remonstrance consisted of the conversations between the agent of the plaintiff and the defendant, as to the kind and nature of the employment that would be given to him under the contract then about to be made.

So far as the evidence aforesaid was offered, or the additional facts found therefrom by the court were found, for the purpose of contradicting, altering, adding to or varying the written agreement, the above question must be answered in the negative. The language of the written contract, while it was in force, was the only legitimate evidence of what the parties intended and understood by it. West Haven Water Co. v. Redfield, 58 Conn., 40. So far as said evidence and facts found tended to show the “surrounding circumstances” *60 under which the agreement in question was made, such evidence was admissible and such facts are relevant. Inasmuch, however, as the court below has found the additional facts which the defendant claims the committee should have found, and the case is one reserved for our advice, we have concluded to regard all the additional facts so found as if they had been embodied in the report itself.

In April, 1889, the plaintiff assigned a certain kind of employment to the defendant, at its factory in Torrington, which it claims was within the terms of the written ■ agreement, and in which it further claims that the defendant without justification refused to engage. The principal question in the case is, whether the defendant was justified in so doing.

The material facts bearing upon this question are the following: — For several years prior to and at the date of the contract the defendant and his father had been engaged in the work of making needles and other things in Cleveland, Ohio. The defendant had attended to the general management of the business, kept most of the books, was in the office when it was necessary, and hired and discharged the help in most cases. There were twenty-five to thirty hands employed. The defendant had the general oversight of all parts of the manufacture there, but of no one part more than another. He did not-do the practical work, but looked after the whole business. In February, 1889, and in and by the contract part of which has been hereinbefore recited, the defendant and his father sold to the plaintiff their entire plant of machinery, tools and stock, both finished and unfinished, including the good-will of the business, for a little over fifteen thousand dollars.

After the sale, the needle works at Cleveland were for a short time run by the plaintiff, and the defendant was employed as superintendent thereof, under the written contract.

Soon after the sale, however, the Cleveland plant was removed to the plaintiff’s factory at Torrington, in this state. The plaintiff then instructed the defendant to take charge *61 of that branch of the needle business exclusively devoted to the making of McKay needles.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 A. 693, 61 Conn. 56, 1891 Conn. LEXIS 67, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/excelsior-needle-co-v-smith-conn-1891.