Percival v. National Drama Corporation

185 P. 972, 181 Cal. 631, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 406
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 1919
DocketL. A. No. 5214.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 185 P. 972 (Percival v. National Drama Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Percival v. National Drama Corporation, 185 P. 972, 181 Cal. 631, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 406 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The defendant appeals from the judgment. The complaint sets forth a cause of action based on a *633 written contract dated April 21, 1916, whereby the defendant engaged the plaintiff to render to it “such services as may be required of him” from April 21, 1916, to September 1, 1917. Plaintiff also agreed to give his exclusive, services to the defendant and that he would not “render services at any other place or to any other firm in the United States or Canada from the date of this contract until it is closed, except under the management” of the defendant. It was also agreed that the defendant should have the right, if it so desired, to have the plaintiff work for other firms or corporations, but only in the capacity of art director. The nature of the services to be rendered to defendant was not described in the contract. Plaintiff’s compensation was to be $50 per week until September 1, 1916, and thereafter $60 per week. It is alleged that the plaintiff entered into the service of the defendant and continued therein until September 30, 1916, and that the defendant, then, without cause or justification, wrongfully discharged the plaintiff and ever since has refused to permit plaintiff to perform services under the contract. Damages were demanded for the full balance unpaid that would have become due him under the contract up to the end of the term specified. The answer denied that the defendant had discharged the plaintiff. The court made findings to the effect that the defendant wrongfully discharged the plaintiff as alleged in the complaint and gave judgment for the full amount demanded. In support of the appeal the defendant contends that the finding that there was a discharge is not supported by the evidence.

Plaintiff’s action was begun on October 20, 1916, less than three weeks after the alleged discharge and more than ten months before the expiration of the contract. [1] In the absence of proof of a discharge and that it was wrongful, plaintiff would be entitled to recover only the amount of salary due him at the time the action was brought instead of his full salary for the entire term. (Winsor v. Silica Brick Co., 31 Cal. App. 89, [159 Pac. 877].)

The evidence shows that the defendant’s business was the production of photoplays. At the time the present contract was made defendant was not actively engaged in production but expected to be engaged therein. In fact, it never did resume such production but went out of business. It was *634 a New York corporation. Its office was in New York City, but its producing plant was at Los Angeles, and it had an office at the plant, at which the principal officers were stationed during the time prior to the making of the contract when it was engaged in production. The contract was made in Los Angeles. Thomas Dixon, director-general of the defendant, was the only officer of the corporation who had authority to hire and discharge employees. Plaintiff’s contract was signed in defendant’s behalf by W. C. Burns, its treasurer, but he acted under specific instructions from Dixon, who had left Los Angeles for New York just before the contract was signed. About July 13, 1916, defendant rented its plant to the Fox Film Corporation and removed its officers and headquarters to New York, leaving at Los Angeles some of its property and retaining an office at the plant, which was occupied by Jordan Dixon, son of Thomas Dixon, who was left behind by defendant as custodian of the property and paymaster of the plaintiff and one or two other employees of defendant who remained at Los Angeles.

Plaintiff, up to this time, had taken an inventory of defendant’s property, which occupied him for a part of the time for about two weeks, and was the only service defendant had required of him. After defendant removed to New York plaintiff was not called on to render any further services, but continued to report to defendant’s office in Los Angeles for duty and was regularly paid his weekly salary by Jordan Dixon, up to and including September 30, 1916. No further payments were made. The last six or seven installments of salary paid to the plaintiff were advanced by Jordan Dixon out of his own funds. Said Dixon was notified by the defendant that after September 30, 1916, any further payments made by him on its account, without its authority, would be on his own responsibility, but this was not communicated to plaintiff.

For proof of a discharge plaintiff relies on testimony of certain conversations had with Jordan Dixon, on evidence of efforts of the defendant to obtain a rescission of the contract, of the defendant’s failure to pay his salary, of its lease of its plant to the Fox Film Corporation, and of its failure to answer a certain telegram sent by the plaintiff.

When Jordan Dixon paid plaintiff his salary for September 30, 1916, he told plaintiff he had no more money. *635 Plaintiff then said: “Won’t I get my money next week?” To which Jordan Dixon replied: “I don’t think so, unless they answer some of my communications, and they have not been answering them.” On October 7, 1916, another weekly payment of salary became due and it was not paid. Plaintiff then asked Jordan Dixon what the intentions of the defendant were about paying plaintiff any more salary, to which Dixon replied that he did not know, but thought they were of the worst. The plaintiff then said: “What will I do; will I sue for my money?” Dixon answered: “I guess you might as well.” On or soon after September 30th, Dixon told the plaintiff, in response to the plaintiff’s request for information whether he was to consider himself discharged, that he, Jordan Dixon, had no authority to pay the plaintiff or to dismiss him or anything else.

The evidence shows that this statement of Jordan Dixon as to his want of authority was correct, except, perhaps, as to the matter of payment. Defendant’s pay-rolls and testimony of several of its officers show that authority to employ and discharge employees was vested in Thomas Dixon, director-general, and that Jordan Dixon’s authority, such as he had, was conferred on him by Thomas Dixon. The latter testified that he authorized Jordan Dixon to serve as custodian of defendant’s property, and as paymaster of its employees, but gave him no authority to employ or discharge anyone, and instructed him to report all matters of importance to New York for decision. The plaintiff’s evidence on this point goes no further than to show that Jordan Dixon took charge of the adjustment of disputes regarding the lease, and had something to do with the exhibition of defendant’s pictures when it was in Los Angeles, and that he paid plaintiff’s salary until September 30, 1916. [2] The defendant did not, by directing or permitting Jordan Dixon to exercise these powers, confer upon him any authority, real or ostensible, to discharge the plaintiff, or to make any admissions binding on the defendant as to its intentions on that subject. In view of this lack of authority in Jordan Dixon, of which plaintiff was informed as aforesaid, the various statements made by said Dixon to plaintiff do not afford any support for the finding that the plaintiff was discharged. Furthermore, even if he had authority to discharge the plaintiff, his statements did not purport to amount to a *636 discharge.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P. 972, 181 Cal. 631, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/percival-v-national-drama-corporation-cal-1919.