Komp v. . Raymond

67 N.E. 113, 175 N.Y. 102, 13 Bedell 102, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 956
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 1, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 67 N.E. 113 (Komp v. . Raymond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Komp v. . Raymond, 67 N.E. 113, 175 N.Y. 102, 13 Bedell 102, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 956 (N.Y. 1903).

Opinion

Martin, J.

The complaint contained two counts or causes of action. The first was based upon a written agreement between the parties, and the second was for work, labor and services performed by the plaintiff after the expiration of the term provided for by the written agreement. The answer admitted the making of the contract and averred as a defense an accord and satisfaction. Other defenses were pleaded, but they are wholly immaterial upon this appeal.

Upon the trial the defendant practically conceded the plaintiff’s right of action and assumed the affirmative of proving as a defense a valid accord and satisfaction. The defendant introduced the contract in evidence, whereby the plaintiff agreed to enter into the employment of the defendant for the period of five years from January 1, 1891, his services to be rendered in the empire of Japan, and to accept in full payment therefor the sum of fifteen hundred dollars for the first year, seventeen hundred and fifty dollars for the second, two thousand dollars for the third, twenty-two hundred and fifty dollars for the fourth, and three thousand dollars for the fifth ; one hundred and twenty-five dollars of such salary to be paid each month in Japan, and the balance to remain with the defendant until the termination of the agreement, at six per cent interest. The defendant agreed to employ the plaintiff upon the foregoing terms and conditions, to pay, in addition to such salary, the necessary traveling expenses of the plaintiff incurred in its business, to grant him a vacation of three months if he desired during either the third or fourth years, and to pay the necessary traveling expenses of the plaintiff if he took such vacation from Japan to Rew York and return.

Upon the back of this agreement there was a statement of *105 account made by the defendant upon the theory that the plaintiff was required to receive in compensation for his services the amount named therein in yens and not in American dollars, wherein the amount due the plaintiff was stated to be twelve hundred and fifty dollars. Then followed a receipt as follows: “ Rec’d payment, Mch. 3d, 1896, Twelve hundred and fifty dollars being full payment of his contract expiring Jany. 1st, 1896, with salary, int. and allowance, besides closing his acct. to Mch. 1st, 1896. Signed, Fred’k Komp.” Upon the introduction of this evidence the defendant rested.

The plaintiff then offered to prove that he fully performed the contract upon his part, and that upon his return to New York he requested a settlement with the defendant; that he met a representative of the défendant, who on the trial was conceded to have had authority to act for it, between whom it was agreed that he was entitled to additional salary for two months amounting to five hundred dollars, and to an allowance in lieu of his vacation of four hundred dollars, which, with the sum unpaid upon the contract, with interest, amounted to $6,966.75 if payable in American dollars. The defendant’s representative, however, contended that under the contract the plaintiff was to be paid for his services in Japanese yens, which would leave the amount due to the plaintiff only twelve hundred and fifty dollars. Thus the only question of difference between the parties involved the proper construction of the written contract, and was whether under it the plaintiff was entitled to his pay in American dollars, or whether in Japanese yens, which were worth about fifty cents each in American currency. That question the court refused to try.

At the first meeting between the plaintiff and the defendant’s representative they were unable to adjust the matter, the plaintiff claiming he was entitled to $6,966.75, and the defendant that he was entitled to only twelve hundred and'fifty dollars. At a subsequent conference between them the defendant asked the plaintiff if he had decided to take the check for twelve hundred and fifty dollars, and the plaintiff replied, “Not exactly *106 the way that you want me to take it. * * * I will tell you what I will do. You claim this thing should be settled in yens, and I claim the thing should be settled in American dollars, as it reads American dollars on the face of the contract. How, I have got to have money, and you know it. * * * You pay me this money and I will sign this receipt. If I can show or bring proof to you and convince you that you are wrong in having me sign this, insisting on my signing this when I claim that it should be settled in dollars, will you pay me the balance of $5,715 ? I will sign the receipt on these conditions if you will make that agreement with me, if you will agree that if I can show you, if I can convince you and bring proof to you that you are wrong about this thing, that it should be dollars instead of yens, will you pay me that balance of $5,715 later on?” To this the defendant’s representative replied, “ Yes, that seems fair.” The plaintiff then said, “How, if you do not pay me that balance I will take the thing to court and we will leave it to a court and jury to settle.” The defendant’s representative replied, “ That won’t be necessary, I will agree to that.” The plaintiff said, “ All right, now hold on; you know just what this is?” He said “Yes.” The plaintiff said, “How, you understand if you don’t pay me that balance that I shall take the whole thing to court for - settlement. He said, All right”’and then the plaintiff took the check and signed the receipt. All these facts the plaintiff offered to establish by proof, to which the defendant objected and the objection was sustained. The plaintiff also offered to prove that after signing the receipt the representative of the defendant, when asked for the balance, put the plaintiff off from day to day, and finally admitted that he was convinced the plaintiff was right, but alleged that he could not make the president of the defendant pay. He likewise offered to prove that the defendant’s representative never believed he had a valid right to insist that the contract was payable in yens, and never honestly believed that any such right existed. All this evidence was rejected by the court and the plaintiff duly excepted. He *107 thereupon asked permission to introduce evidence of the matters stated in the foregoing offer and to go to the jury upon the question involved. This was denied and the court thereupon, dismissed the complaint, with costs, to which the plaintiff duly excepted.

Upon a previous trial of this case the plaintiff had a judgment for the amount of his claim, which the learned Appellate Division, by a divided court, reversed upon the ground that the foregoing receipt amounted to a contract or release for the remainder of the defendant’s indebtedness to the plaintiff, and that the court erred in receiving parol evidence of the transaction and agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant’s representative, of which the giving of the receipt was a part. Obviously, the learned trial judge relied upon that decision in determining the case upon the trial now under review, and the affirmance by the Appellate Division was also founded thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 N.E. 113, 175 N.Y. 102, 13 Bedell 102, 1903 N.Y. LEXIS 956, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/komp-v-raymond-ny-1903.