McDonald v. Wesendonck

30 Misc. 601, 62 N.Y.S. 764
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedFebruary 15, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 Misc. 601 (McDonald v. Wesendonck) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McDonald v. Wesendonck, 30 Misc. 601, 62 N.Y.S. 764 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinions

Giegerich, J.

The complaint proceeds upon a contract of employment alleged to have been entered into on or about June 1, 1895, by the terms of which the defendants employed the plaintiff as their agent, for the sale of certain goods imported by them, for the period of one year, at an annual salary of $2,000, payable in equal monthly payments at the end of each month, and that, in addition thereto, the plaintiff was to receive a commission of one and a half per cent, on the amount of the gross sales made by him, and reimbursement for all his traveling expenses. The complaint furthermore alleges that the plaintiff remained in the defendants’ employ under said contract from the said 1st day of June, 1895, to the 1st day of October, 1895; that for the period in question there became due to him for salary the sum of $666.64, and for percentages on gross sales the sum of $150'; that the defendants have1 paid the plaintiff the sum of $125, and that there is now due plaintiff a balance of $691.64. The answer is a general denial.

. The issue of fact raised by the pleadings, and submitted to the jury upon the evidence, was whether the plaintiff’s employment was at the hands of the defendants or not. According to the plain-' tiff’s testimony, his employment resulted from the defendants’ acceptance of his oral proposal, made on the said 1st day of June, 1895; and, at the conclusion of his direct examination, there was no room for the assumption, either from the documentary evidence so far as produced, or from the testimony itself, that the defendants, when employing him, acted 'on behalf of any other person, or were connected with any other firm. ■ On cross-examination the defendants sought to bring out evidence to the effect that in the month of [603]*603May, 1895, the plaintiff had had a conversation with one Hashagen, of the firm of Hashagen & Christinet, bearing upon a possible employment by that firm, and this evidence was excluded upon plaintiff’s objection to its competency, relevancy and materiality. As subsequently developed the defendants’ case resolved itself into an attempt to show that the plaintiff was employed by Hashagen’s firm, and not by the defendants, and it is now asserted that the evidence thus excluded was relevant to this issue. When offered, however, the evidence in question appeared to have no materiality, and bore only upon a possible contract of employment by a third person, or third persons, which had either failed of inception, or had been abandoned before the contract in suit was made. The court was only called upon to rule on the evidence as it then stood, and failing the defendants’ renewal of the offer, after the materiality of the proof developed, or their statement of the purpose of the proof when offered, legal error cannot be predicated of the exclusion. Enright v. Franklin Publishing Co., 24 Misc. Rep. 180, 182. The defendants subsequently adduced evidence which tended to show that they did not employ the plaintiff; that the interview had between the latter and the defendant Wesendonck, on June 1, 1895, and at which the plaintiff claims the oral contract of employment was made, related exclusively to the business of the said firm of Hashagen & Christinet, and that he (Wesendonck) merely asked plaintiff’s opinion regarding the line of goods dealt in by the firm last mentioned; that during the period in suit the defendants merely acted as bankers for such firm, and that reimbursement for advances was to be had out of moneys collected from persons to whom the said firm sold goods, which were shipped by them, and bills therefor were made out in their name, accompanied with a request that remittances be forwarded to the defendants. It was also shown that during the period in question the defendants were engaged in the hosiery and commission business in Leonard street in the city of New York, and the firm of Hashagen & Christinet were importers of dry goods, having an office at No. Ill Fifth avenue, in the same place, Christinet then living in Paris, and Hashagen attending to the business of the firm in this country. It further appeared that the plaintiff received samples of goods solely from Hashagen & Christinet, to whom only he made reports and sent all orders, and who replied to all letters received by him; that the plaintiff sold no goods other than those manufactured or carried by [604]*604the said firm, and that while engaged in the sale thereof the plaintiff used their business card, his name appearing in the left-hand corner thereof. The testimony of the plaintiff regarding his employment by the defendant Wesendonck was corroborated by that of one Thurston, who claimed that on the same day the said defendant engaged him as a salesman, and that he was present at the interview which resulted in the contract of employment in suit. For the purpose of showing that the agreement was made with the defendants, the plaintiff put in evidence a letter of introduction issued by “ The Bradstreet Company ” to the effect, .among other things, that he (the plaintiff) represented one of their subscribers, the defendants in this action. The plaintiff finally admitted that he received the same from Hashagen, .one of the members of the said firm, and after this fact had been established the defendants sought to read in evidence the following letter written to them by such firm-, pursuant to which they caused such letter of introduction to be issued, viz.

“New York, June 26, 1895.
“Messrs. Wesendonck, Lorenz & Co, City:
“ Dear Sirs — Enclosed you will find route list and names of the different hotels for Mr. McDonald’s western trip. Confirming the receipt of your advance of $150 as traveling expenses, we wish to say that for all further requirements Mr. McDonald is to write to you, and you would oblige me by making checks payable to 1?. F. McDonald, charging our account with their amounts. On Monday next I shall start on my eastern trip, and would ask you to have about $150 ready for me by Saturday, when I shall furnish you with route list, &e.
“We have engaged the services of Mr. Martin Thurston as salesman for the city, &c., at a salary of $1,500 per a. I would thank you for sending him check bi-monthly for his salary, charging our account with same.
“Tours very truly,
“Hashagen & Christinet.
“ Kindly let me have two traveler’s cards from one of the mercantile agencies — one for Mr. P. F. McDonald for the Western States and another one for myself for Eastern and Middle States. I should prefer Bradstreet’s to Dun’s.
“Tours truly, H. & C.”

[605]*605Wesendonck testified, without objection, that this letter was in Hashagen’s handwriting, and when it was, for the second time, offered in evidence, the latter’s death had been established. The writing, however, was excluded upon plaintiff’s objection as to its competency, relevancy and materiality, and the defendants excepted. The fact, that the letter was obtained by the plaintiff from Hashagen, so connected him with the transaction as to give the defendants the right to show how the letter of introduction came into Hashagen’s hands. Apart from this, such letter was admissible in evidence, because of the declarations therein contained against the interests of the writer, since deceased, who had peculiar means of knowing the matters stated.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Misc. 601, 62 N.Y.S. 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcdonald-v-wesendonck-nyappterm-1900.