M. Shiloff Grocery Co. v. Eberline

202 N.W. 86, 199 Iowa 562
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 17, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 202 N.W. 86 (M. Shiloff Grocery Co. v. Eberline) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. Shiloff Grocery Co. v. Eberline, 202 N.W. 86, 199 Iowa 562 (iowa 1925).

Opinion

Evans, J.- —

The note sued on by plaintiff was for $25, and the account sued on was for $141.94. The defendants pleaded payment of the note and the jury sustained this defense. The defense to the account was not pressed on the trial, and the jury allowed the full amount thereof. We.are not concerned with either of these items on this appeal, in that no error is predicated upon this branch of the case. The real- controversy here is over the defendants’ counterclaim.

It appears that the plaintiff was engaged in the general grocery business in Sioux City, and that, as an adjunct thereto, he operated a butcher shop. The defendant H. Eberline was employed by him as butcher, and was put in charge of that part of the business. The controversy arose in the second year of de *564 fendant’s employment by plaintiff. The first year’s employment began April 1, 1921. At the end of that year, settlement was had between the parties, and the employment was continued. In April, 1922, however, the contract of employment was reduced to writing. This provided that the plaintiff was employing the defendant from month to month at $35 per week, which purported to be full payment and compensation for his service, with this further proviso:

“* * * provided however, that if the said employment shall have continued satisfactorily for the balance of said year, then and in that event, first party agrees to pay to second party, as additional compensation, an amount equal to one half of the net profits of the meat business for the year 1922, * * *”

The defendant quit the service of the plaintiff on August 14, 1922. By his counterclaim the defendant claimed a recovery from the plaintiff for one half of the profits of the business accruing since April 1, 1922. He pleaded the written contract, and alleged that the same had been subsequently modified orally, to the effect that settlement for profits should be made quarterly, instead of annually.

The defendant was permitted to prove: (1) The amount of net profits for the quarter ending July 3, 1922; (2) the aniount of net profits from July 3 to August 14, 1922.

The principal error assigned here pertains to the alleged oral modification 'of the written contract.

I. 'The plaintiff’s most important contention is that the alleged oral modification of the. contract- was void and of no effect, because it was wholly without consideration. The plaintiff predicates this error upon the general rule that an oral modification of a written contract, in order to be valid, must have the support of a consideration; that, where the alleged oral modification consists wholly of benefit to one party and burden to the other party, it is without consideration.

Is this rule applicable to this record?

The employment of the defendant purported to be from month to month, at a fixed compensation, with a further conditional proviso. The written contract imposed no obligations upon the defendant to continue for any fixed time-. He was at liberty, 'under the contract,, to quit at any time, either with or *565 without good reason. The proviso in the contract simply held out an inducement to him to continue his employment throughout the fiscal year. The substance of his testimony is that he was dissatisfied with the form of the proviso in the written contract, and that, within a few days after it was entered into, he had decided to terminate his employment; that, in order to induce him to continue, the plaintiff orally agreed to a modification of the proviso in the manner already indicated. Was this a sufficient consideration to support the oral modification ?

The written contract was -executory. The proviso thereof imposed no obligation ■ upon the defendant. It operated upon him only as an inducement to continue his employment until the close of the year. If it became insufficient as such inducement, the defendant had complete liberty .of action to discontinue his employment. It was permissible to him to declare his purpose to his employer. If, thereupon, the employer chose to increase the inducement, and the defendant chose to continue his employment because of such increased inducement, we see no reason for saying that the promise of the employer lacked consideration. If this promise had been made after the contract of employment had been performed, a different question would be presented. But the promise had reference to-a continuation of the service, and the service was continued, in reliance upon the promise. We hold, therefore,- that the oral modification was not invalid for want of consideration.

Some complaint is made because the court failed to instruct the jury that a consideration was essential to the validity of such oral promise. No requested instruction to such effect was presented, nor was the attention of the court direeted in any way to this particular subject. The plaintiff: objected to the defendant s evidence on -¡^e on¡y ^g ground that it SOUght to vary a written agreement. - The objection was not predicated in terms upon a want of consideration. Whether, in any event, it would have been proper for the court to'submit this question, to the jury upon proper request, we need not determine. Whether the oral agreement was in fact made, is in dispute, the testimony of the respective parties being in sharp .conflict thereon. The defendant has substantial corroboration in .the fact that *566 the parties did get together on July 3d and strike a balance and fix the amount of profits for the preceding three months. We hold that the issue was for the jury, and that it was submitted in proper form.

II. Was there sufficient evidence of the amount of the net profits of the quarter ending July 3d to warrant a finding for the defendant by. the jury ?

Each of the parties kept a book. A comparison of their books on July 3d disclosed complete agreement between them upon all items, and it was stipulated in the record that the net profits for such quarter were $895.21. This of itself answers our question.

III. The defendant, however, was permitted to introduce purported proof of the profits for the six weeks following July 3d, ending on August 14th. All such evidence was received subject to proper objections by the plaintiff. This evidence was submitted to the jury under instruction permitting an allowance to the defendant for alleged profits for such period following July 3d. In this regard, there was manifest error; and this is so for several reasons.

• (1) The oral agreement pleaded and proved by the defendant contemplated the allowance of profits only for a completed quarter of service on his part. Such was the inducement held out to him. He did not complete the quarter following July 1st, and was not entitled to cast profits upon a fraction thereof.

(2) The testimony of the defendant on this question was very objectionable in form. It purported to be secondary evidence, the purported foundation of it being the loss of his own book. His evidence, however, did not purport to state the contents of the book, even in substance. He simply made a guess that the profits would amount to $450. It further appeared that the plaintiff’s books were in court, and were submitted to the defendant for his guidance. He testified, in substance, that such* books showed a profit of more than $450.

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Bluebook (online)
202 N.W. 86, 199 Iowa 562, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-shiloff-grocery-co-v-eberline-iowa-1925.