Greenburg v. S. D. Childs & Co.

147 Ill. App. 477, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 120
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 22, 1909
DocketGen. No. 14,350
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 147 Ill. App. 477 (Greenburg v. S. D. Childs & Co.) 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
Greenburg v. S. D. Childs & Co., 147 Ill. App. 477, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 120 (Ill. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Mb. Pbesiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff, George G. Greenburg, sued the defendant, S. D. Childs & Co., in assumpsit. The declaration consists of the common counts, and the defendant pleaded the general issue. The defendant, at the close of the plaintiff’s evidence, and also at the close of all the evidence moved the court to take the case from the jury, but the court denied both said motions and submitted the cause to the jury, who found the issues for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at $2,000, and the court overruled motions by the defendant for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, and rendered judgment on the verdict. The plaintiff had been in the employ of the defendant for about seventeen years prior to J anuary 1,1904. In December, 1903, and shortly before J anuary 1,1904, when plaintiff’s term of employment would expire, he purchased the stock, business and good-will of T. P. Moore & Co., intending to go into business for himself when his term of employment with the defendant should expire.

T. F. Moore & Co. was a corporation engaged in the same business as the defendant and a competitor of defendant. The plaintiff testified that he paid $5,000 for what he purchased from T. F. Moore & Co., an'd that shortly after his purchase he had a conversation .with J. A. Smith, the defendant’s president, which he relates substantially as follows: Smith began the conversation, saying he had learned that I had purchased the Moore business and was going into business for myself, which I said was correct. He said that I had been in defendant’s employ a great many years, and he had placed absolute reliance and faith in me, and did not want me to leave, and that, if I would discontinue the Moore & Co. business, with the understanding that none of the assets or anything of Moore & Co. were to go to any competitor of defendant, defendant would take the materials, dies or machinery I had on hand, just as rapidly as the orders on hand, or other requirements, called for them, and pay me for them. I said that would be satisfactory to me, and agreed to dismantle the Moore plant immediately, which I did. Part of the stuff in the Moore plant was conveyed to the manufacturing end of defendant’s business, 155 West Jackson'street, and the machinery was taken to defendant’s new building, 279 East Monroe street. My salary was increased $500 per year, and I made a new contract with defendant for three years. Nothing was put in writing. Smith further said that if I would remain with defendant I would become a director in the company, and would be given stock, in consideration of money or other credit. There was no agreement at that time how much stock I was to have or how much I should pay for it. A few days later it was held out to me that I would be made a director in the company, and that, when I paid up $3,000, I would he given $10,000 worth of stock in the company.

The plaintiff further testified: The materials taken to defendant’s place of business were brass, german silver, copper, bronze and sheet iron, and small stuff, jump rings, slabs and stuff of that kind. The machinery was taken to the Monroe street plant. A large number of dies and tools, also completed work and some work partially completed, were taken to defendant’s place. Smith said that defendant would deliver the completed goods and credit them on my account, and as to the uncompleted goods, he would credit me for the material in them, and that such of the dies as orders would require to be used, he would compensate me for their value.

Mr. Jerome A. Smith, defendant’s president, called by defendant, testified that he was in his seventy-fifth year, and denied that he ever had any conversation with the plaintiff in reference to taking, using or paying for any of the Moore stock. He testified that he once had a conversation with the plaintiff, in which he offered to sell him stock, which conversation occurred before anything came up about the Moore matter, and that he never offered to plaintiff $10,000 of stock, at its par value, for $3,000.

L. D. Childs, defendant’s treasurer, testified that he was present during part, but not all, of the conversation between plaintiff and Mr. Smith, and did not hear any conversation between them on the subject of taking over the Moore stock.

Whether or not there was such agreement as testified to by the plaintiff, depends mainly on the testimony of the plaintiff and Mr. Smith, and it was for the jury to decide as between them, which evidence was the more credible. That plaintiff purchased the Moore stock, for the purpose of going into business on his own account, that the stock, after the conversation between plaintiff and Mr. Smith, was conveyed to the defendant’s premises, as plaintiff testified, and that a considerable part of it was used in filling orders in the defendant’s business, the evidence tends to prove and the jury were warranted in believing. The plaintiff was in charge of the metal department of defendant’s factory, and orders received by the defendant went to that department, and the plaintiff must have known what parts of the Moore stock were used in filling orders in defendant’s business.

That the defendant regarded the plaintiff as trustworthy is evident from the fact that it had retained him in its employ for seventeen years, and that no fault had been found with him on the score of integrity or otherwise is shown by the fact that defendant protested against his quitting its employ, and raised his salary from $2,500 to $3,000 per annum, as an inducement for him to remain with it. Mr. Smith testified that, in his conversation with the plaintiff, he said to him that he had been with defendant for a good many years, that defendant liked him, and that he, Mr. Smith, was very sorry that he had made up his mind to leave defendant. This was a very great endorsement of the plaintiff as to capability and integrity, to go to the jury. It was a significant circumstance for the consideration of the jury that, immediately after the conversation between plaintiff and Mr. Smith, the plaintiff sent the materials which he had purchased, with the intention of going into business for himself, to the defendant’s premises. This, if the agreement between him and Mr. Smith was as plaintiff testified, was the natural thing to do. Mr. Smith testified that he did not know of the removal of the Moore stock to the defendant’s factory, but Mr. Duckgeischel, who, Mr. Smith testified, was foreman of manufacturing at the factory, called by defendant, testified that the Moore stock was moved to the factory about January 1, 1904, that parts of it were used in manufacturing articles ordered, and that he gave to the plaintiff memoranda of such parts as were so used.

The evidence in the case is voluminous, occupying over 500 pages of typewriting, and it is impracticable to refer to it specifically in this opinion. Suffice it to say that the evidence is, as we think, after very careful consideration of it, sufficient to sustain the verdict. We will now refer to the contentions of the defendant’s counsel.

They contend that the court should have taken the case from the jury, on the ground that plaintiff, as defendant’s agent, placed himself in a position in which his interest was such as tended to cause him to be neglectful of his employer’s interests; and counsel cite numerous authorities as to the duties, obligations and limitations of an agent, which, as we think, have no application to the facts of the case.

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Bluebook (online)
147 Ill. App. 477, 1909 Ill. App. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greenburg-v-s-d-childs-co-illappct-1909.