Hager v. Reilly

88 A. 492, 241 Pa. 297, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 780
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 28, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 105
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 88 A. 492 (Hager v. Reilly) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hager v. Reilly, 88 A. 492, 241 Pa. 297, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 780 (Pa. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Stewart,

The controversy here arises out of a contract of employment. The plaintiff in the bill, a carpenter, engaged to give to the defendant, whose business was that of contractor and builder, his entire services in connection with the defendant’s business operations for the term of one year from 1st January, 1902. The material parts of the contract with respect to the questions involved, are as follows:

“It is hereby further agreed......that the said party of the first part (the defendant) shall pay to the said party of the second part (the plaintiff) the sum of $40 per week from March 1,1902, as wages, and in addition [299]*299thereto, as wages, shall pay to the said party of the second part ten per cent, of the net profits realized during the term of the employment, on all building contracts that may be entered into by the said party of the first part from the first day of January, 1902, including therein the contract upon a certain church building known as the Third Presbyterian Church of Pittsburgh, Pa., entered into prior to that date, but now being completed by the said party of the first part; it being distinctly understood between the parties hereto that the payment of the foregoing ten per cent, of profits by (to) the said party of the second part is to be as wages, in addition to the above-mentioned sum of $40 per week, and is in no way or in any manner or form whatsoever to be construed as entitling the said party of the second part to any interest in the said business or profits thereof, and the said ten per cent, is to be ten per cent, of the net profits after charging against his building contracts the costs and expenses that the said party of the first part incurs in the expense of carrying on his said business.” '

By the clause next following it was provided that at the pleasure of the party of the first part the employment might continue for another year, and so on from year to year until either party should give to the other, three months’ notice prior to the 31st of December of the current year of his intention then to terminate it. It is there further provided that the ten per cent, of the net profits is to be calculated and ascertained on or about the 31st day of December, no uncompleted building, however, to be considered in any way whatever in the ascertainment of profits for the year until the contract for the same shall have been fully completed and ended.

The plaintiff’s employment by the defendant continued from 1st January, 1902, until 31st December, 1905, when it terminated. The bill was filed for an account of the profits made during the entire period of [300]*300such employment. The answer denied that any profit was made on contracts completed during said period, and further that there was nothing due plaintiff on account, inasmuch as the receipts on contracts completed during said period were less than the expenses of the business. A decree for an account followed and the matter was committed to a referee. The referee finds that no profits were realized during the year 1902, and that the expenses of that year amounted to $5,446.68; that in 1903 there was a loss of $6,445.12; that in 1904 there were net profits of $22,744.15, and that for 1905 the net profits were $122,740.38. After deducting the cash payments made to the plaintiff during the entire term of his employment he awarded him the sum of $5,045.72. The report of the referee was confirmed by the court and final decree was entered in accordance with the finding. In reaching his result the referee treated the contract as severable in years, calculated the net result of each year’s business separately, including therein all contracts completed within the year whether they showed profit or loss. The effect was to give to the plaintiff his ten per cent, on the profits earned during the years 1904 and 1905 unaffected by the losses sustained in the two preceding years. It is the contention of the appellant that the contract is entire in its character, covering the whole period of employment, and that the percentage on profits due the plaintiff is to be based on the net results of the entire period; in other words, that the losses of 1902 and 1903 are to be deducted from the profits of the succeeding years and the percentage to be based on the balance. We find nothing in the contract to support this view. The term of employment, as fixed in the contract, was for the one year of 1902; it was left optional with the defendant whether he would continue the employment of plaintiff thereafter, but in case he did so elect, the employment was to be by the year on the same terms. Had the employment terminated with the year 1902, the contract provided [301]*301the method of measuring plaintiff’s compensation complete in itself, and, with like facility and certainty the same method was to he pursued in ascertaining the compensation for any succeeding year’s employment. The year 1902 was a fixed and definite term to which both contracting parties were alike bound; whether the employment should continue beyond that term was uncertain and no fixed limit was set in years beyond which the employment could not extend under this particular contract. The contract provided for but one definite term, to wit: the year 1902, and as to such term the contract was entire. So, too, with respect to each succeeding year over which the employment extended; each was distinct and complete in itself, unrelated so far as the contract provided, with the years that preceded or followed. This must have been the mind of the parties, for the compensation was fixed and determined by the contract when it could not have been known whether the employment was to embrace anything more than the year 1902. To hold otherwise, that the contract was entire, covering the whole period of plaintiff’s continuous employment, would lead to the certain result that there could be no demand for the compensation in profits until final discontinuance of the employment no matter how long postponed, whether for four years or forty. And yet this is what the defendant contends for. We cannot accept this as a reasonable construction of the contract, and we find nothing in the contract supporting it.

Another contention is that, conceding the contract to be severable in years, the defendant under its terms was not chargeable with profits in any year except such, as were actually received by him during the year, notwithstanding the work had been physically completed within the year; that all profits were to be reckoned as of the year when payment was made for the completed structures. Among the contracts were those of St. James’ Memorial Church and Sacred Heart Convent [302]*302completed in 1904, but not paid for in full until 1905. The referee included the profits on these in his reckoning for the year 1904. The contention of appellant is that they should have been reckoned in with the business of the year 1905 in computing the profits of the latter year. By this method of estimation the profits for the year 1904, which the referee finds to have been $22,724.15, are reduced to $7,463.27, and by carrying the difference over to the year 1905 and excluding from the reckoning of that year all profits on work not completed within the year, the estimate of the referee is reduced from $138,021.36 to $129,944.58. The materiality of this will be apparent when we come to consider appellant’s contention as to contracts uncompleted December 31, 1905. The referee finds a sufficient answer to appellant’s claim in the particular mentioned in the following provision of the contract:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dixon v. Ringsby
405 P.2d 271 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1965)
City of Wheeling v. Chester
134 F.2d 759 (Third Circuit, 1943)
Hoy v. Hoy
188 N.W. 263 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 A. 492, 241 Pa. 297, 1913 Pa. LEXIS 780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hager-v-reilly-pa-1913.