Hallsmith-Sysco Food Serv. v. Gallagher, No. Cv91-306143 (Mar. 2, 1992)

1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 1990
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1992
DocketNo. CV91-306143
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 1990 (Hallsmith-Sysco Food Serv. v. Gallagher, No. Cv91-306143 (Mar. 2, 1992)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hallsmith-Sysco Food Serv. v. Gallagher, No. Cv91-306143 (Mar. 2, 1992), 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 1990 (Colo. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.] MEMORANDUM OF DECISION The plaintiff, Hallsmith-Sysco Food Services ("Hallsmith"), has filed this action seeking to recover monies it claims to have advanced to its former employee, Defendant Thomas Gallagher, against commissions to be earned by him as its salesman in 1989 and part of 1990. CT Page 1991

The defendant raises, as special defenses, waiver, estoppel, failure to state a claim, and the absence of an agreement to pay back advances on commissions received in 1989.

The defendant has counterclaimed, alleging that Hallsmith withheld compensation and pay for unused vacation due him in violation of 31-71b, 31-71c and 31-76k C.G.S. The defendant further claims that Hallsmith 1) breached an agreement to pay him $1,200.00 per week in wages by failing to pay him that amount for the last week he worked, and 2) breached its employment agreement with him by failing to pay him for two weeks of vacation that he accrued in 1989 but did not take prior to leaving Hallsmith.

Gallagher worked for Hallsmith as a salesman from 1987 through March 16, 1990. (He had worked for Hallsmith for an earlier period and had left for a few months before returning in 1987. The earlier period is not at issue.)

On September 7, 1987, Hallsmith, through its agent, Richard Hovsepian, memorialized the terms of Gallagher's employment with a document setting forth the amount of Gallagher' draw and maximum earnable commissions for a period of one year. (Ex. B). No evidence was presented that any such written agreement was created as to subsequent years, however, commission statements issued by Hallsmith to Gallagher for each month of 1989 indicate that his draw in 1989 was $675.00 per week. The court finds, on the basis of the testimony presented, that by January 1989 the terms of Gallagher's employment were that he was to be compensated solely by the commissions he earned on the products he sold to Hallsmith's customers. While he was allowed a weekly draw in the amount of $675.00, this draw was not a salary but a method of giving him a steady income in anticipation of his earning commissions that would exceed the draw. According to Mr. Hovsepian, the practice of Hallsmith up to January 10, 1990, when Hovsepian left to join a competitor, was to review the amount of each salesman's draw, and to adjust it each year to a figure that was in line with the actual commissions earned; however, according to Hovsepian, at least until January 10, 1990, Hallsmith did not require salesmen whose draw exceeded their earned commissions to pay back their overdraft but merely wrote it off.

During 1989, Hallsmith had a sales force of approximately 80 salesmen.

A witness for the plaintiff, Bruce Horton, testified that Hallsmith had an employee handbook detailing the method of compensating salesmen, and Gallagher signed a receipt indicating that he had been given a copy, however, neither party introduced into evidence either the handbook or any written explanation of CT Page 1992 its compensation plan for sales personnel.

In the absence of any written description of the applicable compensation plan, and in view of the fact that no witness was ever asked actually to describe in full the way the draw/commission plan operated in 1989, the court is left to determine the terms of the arrangement between the parties by the documentary evidence of what they did during the period at issue.

Exhibit C, a record setting forth Gallagher's commissions and draws for calendar year 1989, records that Gallagher began January 1989 with a recorded overdraw against commissions in the amount of $1,129.64 and that he failed to earn commissions to cover his draw of $675.00 per week throughout January, February and March of 1989. In April 1989, when his earned commissions for the month exceeded his draw, Hallsmith deducted $300.00 from his earned commissions as a partial recovery of his past overdraft. It made additional recoveries of $300.00 in May, June, July, August and December. After March 1989, Hallsmith did not carry forward on Gallagher's monthly commission statements a total of his overdraft and, except for months when it recovered $300.00, it reported "prior overdraw" as "0.00."

Mr. Horton, a vice president of Hallsmith, testified that in or about January 1990 Gallagher said he was having financial problems and requested help in the form of an increased draw. Gallagher's sales territory was subject to seasonal changes, such that winter was his time of lowest commissions and summer was his time of greatest commissions. Hallsmith agreed to increase Gallagher's draw from $675.00 to $1,200.00 and caused to be prepared a document titled Promissory Note, which Gallagher signed on January 19, 1990. That document states that Hallsmith "agreed to advance" Gallagher a draw of $1,200.00 per week and then provides as follows:

Thomas W. Gallagher agrees and promises to pay to Hallsmith-Sysco Food Services at 380 South Worcester Street, Norton, Massachusetts any and all commissions deficit, accrued from this advance on his draw, starting June 1, 1989. Thomas W. Gallagher agrees to have all commissions and weekly draw amounts withheld till the total sum of the deficit is paid in full.

The Note shall become immediately due and payable without notice or demand upon the severance of employment of Thomas W. Gallagher, whether self or Hallsmith-Sysco Food Services resulting.

Thomas W. Gallagher may pre-pay this note at any time. CT Page 1993

Hallsmith claims that the above agreement was consideration for the increased draw and obligated Gallagher to pay back his overdraft for 1989 as well as 1990. Gallagher did not refute the testimony that the increased draw had resulted at his request as help for his financial problems, however, he claims to have understood that his obligation to pay back his increased draw would be limited to 1990 and would be limited to recoveries from the commissions he actually earned in 1990, without obligating him to make up the deficit if he failed to earn sufficient commissions to cover the increased draw over the course of the rest of his period of employment with Hallsmith.

On its face, the promissory note makes no mention of 1989 but is limited to an obligation to pay any deficit "accrued from this advance on his draw," that is, from the time be began to receive a draw of $1,200.00 instead of $675.00. The plaintiff did not establish that it had any general policy of recovery of overdrafts, and Mr. Hovsepian testified that the policy as he knew it was to extinguish any deficits and simply lower a salesman's draw for the next year if he was not earning commissions in at least the same amount as his draw. The failure of Hallsmith to keep a running total of overdrafts on the monthly commission statements confirms Mr. Hovsepian's testimony as to Hallsmith's practice in 1989, (Ex. C) and the court therefore concludes that repayment of advance draws for 1989 was not a term of the parties' agreement. Accordingly, no overdraft may be recovered as to 1989.

The preparation of the promissory note indicates that the arrangement entered into by the parties in January 1990 was a departure from the usual arrangement of Hallsmith with its commission salesmen.

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Bluebook (online)
1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 1990, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hallsmith-sysco-food-serv-v-gallagher-no-cv91-306143-mar-2-1992-connsuperct-1992.