Ferries v. Copco Steel & Engineering Co.

73 N.W.2d 850, 344 Mich. 345, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 274
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1955
DocketDocket 58, Calendar 46,572
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 73 N.W.2d 850 (Ferries v. Copco Steel & Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ferries v. Copco Steel & Engineering Co., 73 N.W.2d 850, 344 Mich. 345, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 274 (Mich. 1955).

Opinion

Carr, C. J.

Plaintiff herein entered the employ of the defendant corporation in February, 1952, as a steel salesman. No written contract was drawn but the parties agreed orally that he should receive a monthly drawing account and that if the office of salary stabilization of the Federal government, referred to in the record as the wage stabilization board, approved the arrangement he would receive a 2-1/2% commission on sales. Defendant, under date of March 29,1952, made application for such permission and the same was granted on November 18th, following, effective as of the date of the application.

In accordance with the agreement between the parties and the approval of the office of salary stabilization, plaintiff was paid 2-1/2% commission on sales of steel made by him for defendant from March 29 to December 31, 1952. The parties are in accord that the arrangement was subject to termination by either on 30 days’ notice. It was not, in other words, a contract for a definite period of time. In the latter part of 1952 defendant’s representatives had conversations with plaintiff for the purpose of reaching, an agreement, if possible, for a change in compensation. Whether such agreement was made, and whether defendant terminated the arrangement then in effect, are matters in dispute in the present case.

Claiming that the contract made in February, *347 1952, was still in force and effect, plaintiff continued to work for defendant during the first 4 months of

1953. He was paid $666 per month, which was his drawing account during the latter part of the prior year. Defendant did not make payment of commissions that plaintiff claimed he had earned, and in consequence the latter terminated his employment at the end of the 4-months’ period above mentioned. The present case resulted, plaintiff insisting that he was entitled to receive the commissions. On the trial before a jury in circuit court the parties presented their respective claims, each supported by testimony. A verdict was returned for plaintiff, allowing him his commissions on sales of steel made by him for defendant in 1953. It does not appear that there was any dispute as to the amount of the recovery if plaintiff was entitled to verdict and judgment.

A motion for a new trial was submitted by defendant, a number of reasons being advanced in support thereof. It was asserted that the verdict of the jury was against the great weight of the evidence, that the proofs in the case established that the arrangement between the parties, in force from February, 1952, to the end of that year, had been terminated, that a new agreement had been made by the parties, at least tentatively, and that defendant was not obligated to pay a commission on the sales made by plaintiff in its behalf during the period in question. The motion was denied, and defendant has appealed.

On the trial in circuit court it was the claim of defendant, supported by testimony, that its representatives in their discussions with plaintiff had refused on behalf of the corporation to continue the agreement then existing as to the method of compensating plaintiff for his services. It was insisted that an offer had been made, in which plain *348 tiff had acquiesced, that he would receive a monthly-salary of $666 with a possibility of a bonus. Apparently it was the position of defendant that whether such bonus should be granted, and the amount thereof, rested entirely in its discretion.

Plaintiff in his testimony disputed defendant’s claims as to the nature of the conversations and the statements made by the parties thereto. In substance, he testified that he refused to accept any arrangement that did not involve the payment to him of a commission of 2-1/2% on sales. It was his claim also, as it is in this Court on appeal, that defendant at no time advised him that the contract made in February, 1952, would be terminated as of the end of that year, and he further insisted that on his refusal to accede to defendant’s suggestions as to changes in the arrangement he was told by the representatives of the corporation that a plan would be worked out that would be agreeable to him. He claimed that this was not done, however, and that he continued his employment until the last of April, 1953, in reliance on the contract under which he had worked previously.

From the record before us it is apparent that there was a material dispute between the parties as to precisely what was said during the conferences held in November, and perhaps in December, of 1952. If plaintiff’s version was correct, the original agreement between the parties was not altered, nor was it terminated.' The mere expression of a desire by defendant’s representatives for a different method of compensation did not accomplish such result. Concededly, defendant had the right to terminate the contract, but plaintiff testified, in substance, that such right was not exercised, and further claimed, as above indicated, that no new agreement or modification of the original arrangement was effected. It was, and. is, plaintiff’s position that he had a right *349 to assume under the facts claimed by him that he was entitled to continue in accordance with the agreement of the preceding February.

The testimony given by defendant’s witnesses was in conflict with that of plaintiff. As before indicated, they insisted that plaintiff was advised by them, in substance, that the original contract was ended, and that a new or modified arrangement was made! Questions of fact for the determination of the jury were presented. From the verdict it is apparent that the jurors accepted plaintiff’s version as to what had been said by and between the parties, finding in accordance therewith that the contract as first made had not been abrogated by action of the defendant or by the making of a new agreement.

Under the proofs submitted to the jury it cannot be said that the verdict was against the great weight of the evidence. As triers of the facts, the jury had the right to accept the testimony of the plaintiff if it believed that his version as to what had transpired between the parties was correct. The verdict not being against the great weight of the evidence, the trial court and this Court are bound thereby in the absence of reversible error on the trial. Rich v. Daily Creamery Co., 303 Mich 344, 347.

Following the giving by the trial judge of his charge to the jury, counsel then representing defendant expressed his approval thereof. Subsequently there was a substitution of attorneys, and counsel representing defendant on this appeal assert that isolated statements made in the course of the charge were erroneous and prejudicial to defendant. From our examination of the record we are impressed that the factual issues were fairly and clearly submitted to the jury, that defendant’s rights were adequately protected, and that the statements of the judge to which defendant now objects were proper. *350 The jury could not, by any reasonable possibility, have been misled thereby.

It is also urged that the trial court erred in not giving certain requests submitted by defendant’s counsel.

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Bluebook (online)
73 N.W.2d 850, 344 Mich. 345, 1955 Mich. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferries-v-copco-steel-engineering-co-mich-1955.