Klerlein v. Fred Werner Co., Inc.

98 Pa. Super. 440, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 11, 1929
DocketAppeal 350
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 440 (Klerlein v. Fred Werner Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klerlein v. Fred Werner Co., Inc., 98 Pa. Super. 440, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The learned court below in entering judgment for the *442 defendant non obstante veredicto inadvertently fell into error as respects certain facts, which may have affected its action.

(1) The plaintiff did not ask for an accounting, or claim commissions due him in this action, from May, 1920, to April 30, 1925, as stated by the court, but only from July 1, 1924, to April 30, 1925. In his statement of claim he expressly limited his demand to commissions earned since July 1, 1924.

(2) The meeting of stockholders of the defendant company at which it was unanimously resolved that the assets of the company should be sold and the corporation dissolved was not held on April 30, 1926, but April 30,1925, the same day that the plaintiff sold to Mr. Werner, the president of the company, his entire holdings of stock in the company; and the same day he left the company’s employ. This may have been merely an error in typewriting.

(3) There was no proof in the case, by admission or otherwise,-that the defendant corporation has ever been dissolved. The proof is that the stockholders on April 30, 1925 voted to do so, but that is only the first step in the dissolution of a corporation, and there is no evidence that the subsequent steps necessary for a dissolution were ever taken and completed. On the contrary, in its affidavit of defense, the defendant admitted that it was an existing corporation on April 21, 1927, and Frederick C. Werner deposed that “he is president” of the company. The fact that a stockholder votes to dissolve the corporation has no effect on any indebtedness of the corporation to him. The defendant company, was admittedly his debtor at the time in the sum of $1,111.63, which it afterwards, on May 22, 1925, paid him. His present contention is that it owed him more than that amount, because it had failed to credit him with commissions due him. The amount due, whatever it might be, could not be affected by his voting in favor of dissolving the corporation, *443 ■which necessarily implied the application of its assets to the payment of its debts before distributing the balance among its stockholders.

The learned trial judge submitted two questions of fact to the jury. (1) "Whether under the plaintiff’s agreement he was entitled to commissions on all goods sold by the defendant in a particular territory,- — all sales within that territory, by whomsoever made — as asserted by him; or only on such goods as were sold by him, as claimed by the defendant’s officers; (2) whether when plaintiff received the statements of December 30, 1924 and May 20, 1925, and signed the latter, he knew that they did not include commissions on sales made in his territory by persons other than himself. It was only in case they resolved the first question in the affirmative and the second in the negative that the jury could find a verdict in favor of the plaintiff. Their verdict in his favor establishes (1) that the agreement was as claimed by him, and (2) that he had no knowledge that the statements submitted to him failed to include all items due him under his agreement.

Two “preliminary statements.,” as Mr. Werner called them, were sent plaintiff covering the period in dispute. Neither of them was itemized or gave any further information than the gross amount of sales on which plaintiff was entitled to 4% commission, the gross amount of sales on which he was entitled to 2% commission, and the payments or advancements made him on account. The first statement, covering the period from July 1, 1924 to December 30, 1924, was sent on December 31, 1924 or January 1, 1925; the second, covering the period from January 1, 1925 to April 30, 1925, was dated May 20, 1925, and was received by plaintiff on May 22, 1925, after leaving defendant’s employ. Each statement was a mere summary of total sales during the period, without itemization of any kind, and cannot be held to be an account *444 stated: McGinn v. Benner, 180 Pa. 396; Tully v. Felton, 177 Pa. 344, 352, 357.

The defendant admitted that it had sold goods in the territory claimed by plaintiff from July 1, 1924 to April 30,1925, through other persons than the plaintiff and that as to these sales no commissions had been allowed the plaintiff in the statements furnished as aforesaid. This being so, and the jury having found that he was entitled to commissions on all sales made by defendant company in that territory, it follows that the plaintiff has not received from the defendant all the commissions he was entitled to; and the jury having also found that the plaintiff did not know that these commissions were not included in the statements so furnished him as aforesaid, the defendant must account to. the plaintiff for the proper commissions on such sales as were not covered by said preliminary statements; unless it must be held that the plaintiff is estopped from demanding the same.

The plaintiff had been in the employ of the defendant company and its predecessor in business for many years. Statements were customarily rendered him in the form used in the last two “preliminary statements,” though at least once, in 1912, the evidence showed a complete, itemized statement. But the fact that in the past he accepted statements of his commissions which were not itemized, and from time to time signed receipts to such periodical statements in this loose form, did not estop him from demanding an itemized statement, or from questioning the correctness of a statement which he had receipted under the belief that his employer had credited him all that he was entitled to, after he learned or had reason to suspect that they had withheld from the statement sales which should have been included in calculating his commissions.

Assuming as we must, under the verdict of the jury, that the plaintiff was entitled to commissions on sales *445 made by the defendant through other agencies than the plaintiff, the defendant’s officers knew the true state of facts, and knowing them they could not claim an estoppel against the plaintiff because he did not object to statements furnished him, which did not, on their face, show the details from which the omission of part of his credit would appear, and he did not know that they were omitted. “An estoppel can be claimed only by one who has acted in ignorance of the true state of facts”: Tustin v. Phila. & Reading C. & I. Co., 250 Pa. 425, 436; Hill v. Epley, 31 Pa. 331. As defendant’s general manager and president-prepared and sent out the statements they knew what they contained and what they omitted, and they will not be heard to say that although they knew they were incorrect and the plaintiff did not, he is estopped from questioning them when he learns of the erroneous basis of computation.

Three things prevent a ruling as matter of law that the plaintiff knew that the statements of December 30, 1924 and May 20, 1925, did not include sales in his territory by others than himself. (1) The plaintiff could not by checking up his own sales determine whether sales by others were included in the totals; for the evidence was that orders of carpets are taken on the basis of “pieces” or “rolls,” and these are not uniform but run from 75 yards to 160 yards each.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 440, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klerlein-v-fred-werner-co-inc-pasuperct-1929.