Hall v. Hall

298 S.W.2d 950, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1957
Docket3426
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 298 S.W.2d 950 (Hall v. Hall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Hall, 298 S.W.2d 950, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

TIREY, Justice.

This action is one for breach of an oral contract and damages. At the conclusion of the evidence motion for instructed verdict was overruled and the jury in its verdict found substantially (1 and 2) that about October 13, 1953, H. D. Hall and J. D. Hall, Jr., mutually agreed that H. D. Hall should develop and sell Visador products in the northern territory for a reasonable time thereafter, and that three years was a reasonable time; (3j 4 and 5) that H. D. Hall’s contract was terminated by J. D. Hall, Jr., as of September 1, 1955 without just cause, and that H. D. Hall was damaged thereby in the sum of $27,000; (6) that defendant is due appellant on commissions for sales made during the month of August 1955 the sum of $900 (there is no contest to this finding). (We think the testimony tendered is ample to sustain each of the findings of the jury.)

Appellant seasonably filed his motion for judgment on the verdict of the jury. Ap-pellees seasonably filed their motion for judgment and for judgment notwithstanding the verdict in which they set out that under the provisions of Art. 3995, subsection 5, Vernon’s Ann.Civ.St., they were entitled to a judgment as a matter of law, and further alleged that there was no evidence introduced tending to establish or support the jury’s finding that appellant had been damaged in the sum of $27,000, and that such assessment of damages is contrary to the measure of damages as provided by law. (Appellees did not specifically ask the court in the last motion to disregard the jury’s finding of $27,000, nor any other finding.) In the decree we find this recital; “ * * * and the court being of the opinion and finding that the cause of *952 action asserted by plaintiff, in this suit is founded upon an oral contract which, under the pleadings, evidence and verdict of the jury, is unenforceable under the terms and provisions of Art. 3995, subsection 5 of R.C.S. of Texas, and the Texas Statute of Frauds, and that plaintiff is not entitled to recover anything from defendants for the alleged executory breach of said contract, but the court finds that plaintiff should recover against defendants a judgment for $900.00 for commissions accruing on sales made prior to September 1, 1955, the date defendants terminated the contract sued on by plaintiff” and decreed accordingly.

Appellant assails the judgment on three points. They are substantially: (1) The court erred in refusing to render judgment in conformity with the verdict of the jury as required by Rule 300, Texas Rules of Civil Procedure; (2) the court erred in holding that the contract sued on is within the statute of frauds and is void; and (3) the court erred in holding (by implication) that the contract in question has not been taken out of the statute of frauds.

A statement is necessary.

Appellant went to trial on his first amended original petition and his first and second supplemental petitions. In his original petition we find this allegation:

That “on or about the 12th day of October, 1953, plaintiff and the defendants, acting through their duly authorized agent, J. D. Hall, Jr., who was at the time and still is acting as general manager of said partnership business, entered into a verbal contract in which it was agreed between plaintiff and defendants that plaintiff should be District Sales Manager for defendants in the development of the following territory, to-wit: North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Minnesota, Iowa, Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, Indiana, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Delaware, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Massachusetts, Vermont, New Hampshire, Maine plus north tip of West Virginia, less metropolitan St. Louis and Athens, Ohio; and was by the terms of said contract to have complete control of all sales problems arising in connection with the development of said territory. It was further agreed in said contract that plaintiff was to pay all expenses incurred by him in the development of said territory and in the sales of defendant’s merchandise throughout said 20 states.
“By the terms of said contract it was further agreed that for his services in developing said territory and selling defendants’ merchandise therein, plaintiff was to receive from defendant, The Visador Company, a 12 per cent commission on all sales made in said territory, including all orders taken by plaintiff, as well as all orders sent or phoned in to the company by dealers in said territory.”

In appellees’ motion for judgment non obstante veredicto we find the following allegations :

“The allegations of plaintiff’s pleadings in this cause establish, as a matter of law, that plaintiff’s cause of action is based upon an oral contract under the terms of which plaintiff alleges that plaintiff was employed by defendant to perform personal services, that no time was fixed in the oral agreement as a period during which plaintiff and defendant agreed such services would be rendered, but such period of performance was affirmatively alleged to have been left indefinite by the parties plaintiff and defendants. That the alleged contract, as a matter of law, did not obligate the plaintiff to perform services for defendant for a specified period of time and the law reserved to plaintiff the right to quit defendants’ service at any time without cause or notice to defendants. That the defendants, under said alleged contract, had the corresponding right to discharge plaintiff at any time without cause or *953 notice, such rights of plaintiff and defendants in this regard being mutual. That plaintiff affirmatively alleged that defendants had discharged the plaintiff on August 31, 1955. That, as a matter of law, defendants’ act of discharging plaintiff was not a breach of the alleged oral contract and plaintiff’s petition failing to state a cause of action against defendants, defendants are entitled to recover a judgment that plaintiff take nothing against them in this cause.
“That the evidence introduced upon trial of this case undisputably establishes that the parties plaintiff and defendants did not agree upon a fixed term of service by plaintiff but that the parties left said term indefinite. That the alleged oral contract under the proof and as a matter of law was terminable at the will of either party without notice and without cause and the act of defendants in discharging plaintiff was not a breach of the alleged contract. Under the evidence the defendants are entitled to a judgment that plaintiff take nothing against them by this suit.”

Evidence was tendered to the effect that the Visador Company is a partnership owned by the Hall family, consisting of H. D. Hall, J. D. Hall, Jr., and other members of the Hall family, including sisters, nieces and nephews. The business was established in 1951 at Dallas, Texas, and is engaged in the manufacture and sale of ornamental door lights for front doors. From the beginning, J. D. Hall, Jr., has been general manager of the business, and H. D. Hall, the older of the two brothers, for two years prior to the contract sued on, was employed by appellees on a straight salary basis to develop what is denominated in the record as the “southern territory,” which consisted of all of the United States, except what is denominated in the record as the “Northern territory,” which consists of 20 contiguous states in the most northeasterly part of the United States.

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Bluebook (online)
298 S.W.2d 950, 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-hall-texapp-1957.