Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Gibson

135 Ill. App. 290, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 498
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 1, 1907
DocketGen. No. 13,351
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 Ill. App. 290 (Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Gibson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fidelity & Casualty Co. of New York v. Gibson, 135 Ill. App. 290, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 498 (Ill. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

Me. Justice Holdom

delivered the opinion of the court.

It is urged in argument and assigned for error that the verdict is contrary to the weight of the evidence and wholly unsupported by it; improper and prejudicial remarks of counsel for appellee to and in the hearing of the jury; that the trial judge should have directed a verdict for appellant, and finally that the damages are excessive.

Did the letters which passed between appellant and the forge company, found in the record, upon the subject of appellee’s discharge, constitute all the proof on that subject, or were they substantiated by other proofs or by facts and circumstances developed by the evidence at the trial, then appellant would have been entitled to a directed verdict in its favor. But we are convinced from the evidence and the attitude of appellant developed by the record that the letters were insincere, self-serving and contradictory of the actual part which appellant in fact took in bringing about the discharge of appellee. They were thin masks invented for the sole purpose of concealing the real actions of appellant and the purposes intended and ultimately successfully brought about. The letters were subterfuges resorted to for the purpose of concealing the course pursued by appellant in demanding and successfully bringing about the discharge of appellee by Ms then employer. Their purpose was so apparent and the pretense so transparent that neither the jury nor the trial judge was deceived by them, and they are equally impotent to influence this court in the way intended, or to divert our attention from the real to the pretended facts.

Appellee was secure in Ms employment, notwithstanding his suit against his employer, until the representative of appellant, Post, came upon the scene and appellee was called into the office of the forge company and confronted with Post and Mr. Holbrook of the forge company. Post wanted appellee to make a statement of his case, which he declined to do, and referred Post to his lawyer of record in the court where the action was pending. Post then asked appellee to make a statement of the case without the advice of his lawyer; this he also refused to do. The action of appellee in refusing to accede to Post’s desires was but the exercise of ordinary prudence on his part. He was a “die maker,” not a lawyer, and as to his legal rights, if any he had, he naturally and properly depended upon the advice of Ms lawyer to guide him. At the conclusion of this interview Mr. Holbrook said to appellee, “That will be all; you can go back to your work.” On October 21 following that interview he was discharged. (R. p. 17.)

Mr. Holbrook, a witness for appellant, said on cross-examination (R. p. 81): “Up to the 21st day of October we had no fault to find with his—appellee’s— work. We had no personal controversy with Mr. Gibson. Nothing in the way of his work caused us to discharge him. He was ' a good employe—a good man.” This was the character given appellee after twelve years’ service.

Notwithstanding there was no cause for appellee’s discharge, yet the employer still had the lawful right to discharge him with or without cause, for any reason, however capricious and unfounded it might be. So far as appellant is here involved, what does the record disclose, if anything, it had to do with bringing about the discharge of appellee, and if it did cause such discharge, what were its motives?

It seems appellee was a member of a “labor union.” The Unión interested itself in the matter, and appellee went with a committee from the Union, consisting of Messrs. Brown, Melican and Worth, to call on Mr. Post in an endeavor to have him consent to the reinstatement of appellee in his employment with the forge company. All parties agree that the talk was extended, at times animated and somewhat heated. Appellee testifies that Brown was the first spokesman, and after all had been ushered by a page into the private office of Post, said, “Are you the general manager?” and Post answered, “I am the general manager of The Fidelity & Casualty Company. What can I do for you?” Whereupon Brown said, “I came here.in reference to Mr. Gibson, one of our members. You had him discharged from the Union Drop Forge Company.” Post then said, “Oh, yes, we had him discharged. We did not intend to let him work to earn money to fight us with.” Melican of the committee then spoke to Post, saying, “Well, we came to ask you to reinstate this man.” Post said, “Oh, that man has a claim against The Union Drop Forge Company. I had him discharged. We do not intend to let him work to earn money to fight us with.” Then Brown told Post that Mr. Holbrook was willing that Gibson should return to.work if he, Post, would consent. Post then said, “You tell Holbrook to write me. I don’t intend to let him earn money to fight us with,” and that he further remarked that Gibson would not get work at any other place where appellant carried insurance if he could prevent it; that the claim was very unjust in his opinion.

Meliean swears that Post said he had appellee discharged and he did not propose to have him go back to work there again, and would not allow him to work anywhere else if he could help it. Meliean then said to Post, “You won’t allow a man to earn a livelihood?” and Post replied, “No, I don’t propose to allow a man to make a dollar that he can use in fighting a suit against the company.” (R. pp. 43 and 44.)

William Worth substantially corroborates appellee’s and Meliean’s testimony as to what Post said at the meeting referred to, and Brown, the other man present, could not be found.

Mr. Holbrook, who testified for appellant, in his examination in chief said a conference was had with appellant, represented by Post, touching the advisability of keeping appellee employed, paying him wages and furnishing him with ammunition to fight with, and finally decided to let him go. (R. p. 66.)

Post in his direct examination testified that he directed an adjuster to call upon Mr. Holbrook and explain to him that it was appellant’s opinion that where a suit was brought by an employe after waiting until the Statute of Limitations had nearly run, and without, in so far as could be seen, any merit, it did not seem such employe should be longer retained by the employer; that the investigator should explain to Mr. Holbrook that if they chose to discharge Gibson it would be entirely satisfactory to appellant, and that a discharge would not prejudice the defense of the suit. Post admits that he told the “Union Labor” committee that he thought appellee’s suit against the forge company was very unjustly brought, and that it did not seem to him that such a persecution in the courts should be countenanced.

Nelson, the investigator of appellant,, in his testimony for his employer says Post told the “Union Labor” committee that it looked rather queer to the other employes to have a man working for the company he was suing. It looked to the other employes that they could bring suit and still be retained and hold their positions.

We are unable to solve this evidence in favor of appellant’s contention that the discharge of appellee was the voluntary action of his employer. Mr. Holbrook never thought of discharging him until the interview with Post had taken place in which appellee had refused either to discuss or settle his personal injury suit without the advice of his attorney. From that interview he was sent back to his work by Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
135 Ill. App. 290, 1907 Ill. App. LEXIS 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fidelity-casualty-co-of-new-york-v-gibson-illappct-1907.