Jordan v. Robert Half Personnel Agencies of Kansas City, Inc.

615 S.W.2d 574, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 2769
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 30, 1981
DocketWD 31215
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 615 S.W.2d 574 (Jordan v. Robert Half Personnel Agencies of Kansas City, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jordan v. Robert Half Personnel Agencies of Kansas City, Inc., 615 S.W.2d 574, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 2769 (Mo. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

CLARK, Judge.

David T. Jordan recovered a jury verdict against Robert Half Personnel Agencies of Kansas City, Inc. and Donald Apple on claims for tortious interference with an employment contract and for breach of a fiduciary duty. The parties each have appealed with the consequence that normal designations of appellant and respondent are not appropriately descriptive for purposes of this opinion. Proper names will therefore be used with indication of the source for claim of the error contended to require appellate correction.

Jury trial of this case generated some six hundred pages of transcript and more than forty documentary exhibits. The gist of Jordan’s claim, however, was that the Half Agency through its agent and employee, Apple, had disclosed to Jordan’s employer that Jordan was seeking other employment and had thus precipitated Jordan’s discharge. Some few details adding structure to this outline are necessary as a preliminary to discussion of the points raised on appeal.

Jordan, a certified public accountant aged 62 at the date of trial, entered the employment of Troupe, Kehoe, Whiteaker and Kent, an accounting firm, as a salaried employee in 1966. While still in their employment and presumably secure in his position, he registered for job placement with the Half Agency, hoping to better his compensation and future prospects.

The Half Agency with national affiliation specializes in accounting, banking and data processing employment opportunities and advertises with the objective of bringing together employer and employee for a negotiated service fee. The Kansas City branch office, defendant below, is locally owned and independently operated under a franchise agreement from R-H Franchises, Inc., a New York corporation. Donald Apple was, at material times, an employment counselor in the service of the Half Agency.

Jordan registered with the Half Agency in 1970. Anticipated job opportunities, however, did not materialize and there was no contact between Jordan and the agency between 1970 and 1975 except for a telephone conversation between Jordan and Apple when Jordan called to inquire about a newspaper advertisement which aroused his interest.

On August 21,1975, William Troupe, senior partner in the accounting firm, informed Jordan that his services were being terminated based on “his negative attitude, refusal to accept responsibility and poor retentive powers.” No mention was made of Jordan’s listing at the Half Agency and no direct information thereafter reached Jordan relating his discharge to this cause. After leaving the Troupe firm, Jordan sought regular full-time employment but he obtained only temporary assignments and derived income from that source and from personal business at a significantly lower amount in total than had been his salary at the Troupe firm.

Evidence to this point was undisputed. In sharp disagreement, however, were the parties’ assertions concerning communications between Apple and Troupe and the true reason for the decision to discharge Jordan. While Apple resolutely denied having revealed to Troupe the confidential in *579 formation about Jordan’s employment registration, Troupe had stated in an early deposition that he had, in fact, been told by Apple that Jordan was a job applicant registered with the Half Agency. When Troupe was called by Jordan as a witness at trial, Troupe acknowledged that he knew of Jordan’s registration with the Half Agency but he was unable to recall the source of the information. Throughout, Troupe denied that Jordan’s apparent but unproductive efforts to obtain other employment had caused or influenced a decision to terminate his services.

Other evidence on the critical fact issues relating Jordan’s discharge to a breach of confidence by Apple and the Half Agency came from Jordan and from witness Keech, a fellow Troupe employee. Keech testified over objection that he had heard comment, after Jordan was dismissed, that Troupe was aware of Jordan’s registration with the Half Agency dating back for some time. Jordan testified, also over objection, that he had been told by one David Mitchell, another Troupe employee, of conversations among other employees who discussed as a generally acknowledged circumstance Troupe’s prior knowledge of Jordan’s registration with the employment agency.

Jordan’s petition sought damages from the Half Agency and from Apple and named, as a third defendant, R-H Franchises on the stated theory that the Half Agency was apparently, if not actually, the agent and servant of R-H Franchises. As a consequence, Jordan claimed that R-H Franchises was answerable in damages for the acts of Apple. At the close of Jordan’s evidence, the court sustained the motion of R-H Franchises to dismiss on the ground that Jordan had made no case for liability of the franchisor.

The petition on which the case was tried sought actual damages of $100,000 and punitive damages in a like amount. The punitive damage claim was not submitted and the case went to the jury on the prayer for actual damages only. The verdict returned in favor of Jordan and against both Apple and the Half Agency was for $150,000. Jordan had not earlier moved to amend his prayer and did not do so before entry of judgment. On the date the verdict was returned, the trial court did not enter judgment but on the following day, without notice to the parties, reduced the verdict sua sponte for the stated purpose of conforming it to the prayer of the petition and entered judgment for $100,000. Thereafter, Jordan unsuccessfully moved to amend his petition and for judgment in accordance with the sum awarded by the jury.

As will hereafter appear, disposition of this appeal on grounds requiring reversal of the judgment and the award of a new trial remove from necessary consideration points of asserted error unlikely to recur. Such points will not be restated. Where appropriate, however, issues posing the potential for repetition of errors on retrial are noted.

I — The Involuntary Remittitur

Jordan complains that the action of the trial court in reducing the jury verdict from $150,000 to $100,000 without affording him the opportunity to elect between remittitur or a new trial is without procedural sanction or precedent. He also urges that proper evaluation of the evidence leads to the conclusion that the petition prayer was, upon receipt without objection of evidence placing damages at $174,212, thereby amended without more, and that he is entitled to reinstatement of the jury verdict and a judgment thereon.

The contention is not made here that the amount of the jury verdict was excessive because the product of bias, passion or prejudice and we therefore need not consider the scope of trial court authority when an excessive verdict is challenged on these grounds. Suffice it to say that remittitur is not available to cure an excessive verdict resulting from bias or prejudice. Woodford v. Illinois Central Gulf Railroad Co., 518 S.W.2d 712 (Mo.App.1974).

In asserting that the error in entering judgment should be remedied by direction for re-entry of judgment in accordance with the jury verdict, Jordan argues that his petition should be construed as amended to *580

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Bluebook (online)
615 S.W.2d 574, 1981 Mo. App. LEXIS 2769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jordan-v-robert-half-personnel-agencies-of-kansas-city-inc-moctapp-1981.