New York Insulated Wire Co. v. Broadnax

107 F. 634, 46 C.C.A. 518, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4077
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1900
DocketNo. 102
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 107 F. 634 (New York Insulated Wire Co. v. Broadnax) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
New York Insulated Wire Co. v. Broadnax, 107 F. 634, 46 C.C.A. 518, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4077 (2d Cir. 1900).

Opinion

SHIPMAN, Circuit Judge.

On July 5, 1892, the defendant employed Francis Broadnax as electrical engineer for two years from August 20, 1892, at the salary of §4,000 per annum. The immediate engineering work which lie was to enter upon was to make plans for, have ihe charge of, and inspect the work incident to the defendant’s subcontract with the Westinghouse Electric & Manufacturing Company for wiring at the World’s Fail*. The last-named company had the contract for the entire electrical work. This subcontract was one of importance, for it required the use of nearly 2,000,000 feet of wire, and the installation of between 63,000 and 64,000 lights, upon ground about one and one-half miles long, and, exclusive of the Midway, from a half mile to three-fourths of a mile wide. This work was completed with reasonable promptness, in view of unforeseen requirements and changes by the officers of the World’s Fair, was turned over to the Westinghouse Company on June 28, 1893, and was apparently accepted. Broadnax was discharged the day before. After his discharge the defendant continued to do electrical work in the buildings until November, 1893. At first Broadnax bad charge of the work, with two of the witnesses, Swallow and Harris, as his assistants. Swallow was assistant engineer. His duty was to lay out the plans for the work, and he had some part in seeing that they were executed, while Harris had direct charge of the men at work, and also saw that the plans were carried into effect. In February, 1893, James W. Godfrey was appointed by the defendant its business manager in the Fair, and remained in Chicago until August, 1893. Upon the trial, the plaintiff rested, after having put Broadnax upon the stand to make out his prima facie case, who was subjected to a brief cross-examination. The defendant introduced its witnesses, and, after it rested. Broadnax briefly contradicted some of their statements. The defendant endeavored to justify the discharge by testimony of alleged misconduct in the following respects:

“(1) He was generally Inattentive to Ills work, and did not give Ills personal inspection to tlie work, as lie had agreed to do, and as ordered more than once by the company, with resultant loss to the company, as hereinafter more fully set forth. (2) He disobeyed express orders of the company. (3) He did not give proper supervisión to the work of the Standard Underground Cable Company under its subcontract, with tlio result that company never had any complete report of the work of the cable company, to its disadvantage in its suit against the cable company. (4) He knowingly employed unnecessary, useless, and incompetent workmen, at tlie expense and to the detriment of the company. (5) He used the services of employes of the company as spies upon other workmen employed by Godfrey, the business manager of the company, in his fight against Godfrey. (6) He knowingly made contracts of employment with Swallow and Harris which were improvident and unauthorized. (7) He made negligently inaccurate reports to the company. (8) He purposely failed and neglected to attend the joint meetings of the heads of the various departments of the electrical work at the Fair, though it was a part of his duty, and though he was frequently requested, to do so. [636]*636(9) He knowingly and willfully attempted to get Swallow and Harris to be unfaithful to their duties to the company.”

The defendant’s principal witnesses were Gallaher, the secretary and managing director of the defendant, who was at the World’s Fair 17 or 18 times during Broadnax’s term of service;'Harris, Swallow, and Ruebel, the president of a St. Louis ’corporation which had a subcontract with the defendant in its wiring business at the Fair. Godfrey, though in court at the trial, was not examined. The defendant, being of opinion that these witnesses made out a strong case, and that the discharge was justified on the facts as shown by undisputed evidence, moved, at the close of the entire testimony, for a direction of a verdict for the defendant, which was denied. It will be seen, by looking at the charges of misconduct, that much of the evidence in support of them would naturally rest upon Swallow and Harris, who were the daily assistants of Broadnax. Harris testifies that the most marked alleged actso of infidelity to the pecuniary interests of the defendant were committed with his help. They testified that idlers and incompetent persons were kept upon the pay roll by the orders of Broadnax; that he attempted to induce them to be unfaithful and to delay the work; that he disobeyed the defendant’s general order which required him to be in the office daily between certain hours, and to be upon the work at other times. Gallaher testified in regard to his inattention to business, his lack of push, and the unexpected cost of the work. Swallow testified that Broadnax was in the office, day after day, in idleness, and Ruebel testified that he could not be found during the office hours. The witnesses Swallow and Harris testified with sufficient vigor, but the testimony of Harris shows that its value was uncertain, and with respect to the main uncontradicted point, in regard to neglect to attend the joint meetings of the heads of the various departments at the World’s Fair, its importance, as it came from the lips of the witnesses, was because it corroborated the views of Gallaher respecting the laziness and inattention to business of Broadnax, rather than because of itself it constituted a cause of discharge. The question of the existence of adequate reasons for the discharge properly belonged to the jury.

The next point is that the omission or the refusal to charge as requested in divers particulars, especially that the omission to charge that a verdict for the defendant must result if certain particularly specified acts were found to have been committed, was erroneous and misled the jury. The defendant presented 22 requests to charge. Many of them were intended to direct the attention of the jury to particular acts, and called upon the court to instruct them that, if a particular act was found to have occurred, discharge was justifiable. The omissions to charge the requests from 5 to 13 are the alleged errors which are chiefly relied upon, and which are as follows:

“(5) If the jury believes that Broadnax did not give daily and personal inspection to tbe work of tbe New York Insulated Wire Company, as ordered and directed by said wire company, and thereby became unfamiliar with its work, to tbe damage of tbe wire company, then tbe discharge of Broadnax was justifiable. (6) If tbe jury believe that Broadnax did not give-proper inspection of tbe work of tbe Standard Underground Cable Company, that [637]*637Broadnax did not obtain proper reports of the work of the Standard Underground Cable, Company, so as to make it impossible for the New York Insulated Wire Company to know the character of the work performed by the Standard Underground Cable Company, to the detriment of the New York Insulated Wire Company, then the discharge of Broadnax was justified, and the verdict of the jury should he for the idefendant. (7) If the jury believe that Broadnax refused and neglected to attend the meetings between the chief engineer of the World’s Fair, the Westinghouse Company, the Standard Underground Cable Company, and the New York Insulated Wire Company, purposely and without good excuse, and by reason of such refusal and neglect became unable to properly direct the work of the New York Insulated Wire Company, in accordance with his contract of employment as chief engineer, then his discharge was justifiable.

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Bluebook (online)
107 F. 634, 46 C.C.A. 518, 1900 U.S. App. LEXIS 4077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/new-york-insulated-wire-co-v-broadnax-ca2-1900.