Replacement Parts Co. v. McCaughey

40 A.2d 846, 70 R.I. 486, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 2
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 25, 1945
StatusPublished

This text of 40 A.2d 846 (Replacement Parts Co. v. McCaughey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Replacement Parts Co. v. McCaughey, 40 A.2d 846, 70 R.I. 486, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 2 (R.I. 1945).

Opinion

*487 Moss, J.

This is an action in assumpsit, brought in a district court to recover an alleged indebtedness of $107.28 on book account. After a trial a decision was rendered for the plaintiff for that amount. The defendant took an appeal to the superior court and there filed a plea in setoff for the amount of $2500 for work and labor performed by the defendant and for money which he alleged was due and owing to him by the plaintiff on an account stated.

At a jury trial in the superior cburt a verdict for the defendant on this plea was returned and damages were assessed at $2453.38. A motion by the plaintiff for a new trial, based upon the usual grounds and also on the ground of newly discovered evidence, was denied in a rescript by the trial justice; and the case is now before us on the plaintiff’s exception to this decision and on two exceptions taken by the plaintiff at the trial to rulings by the trial justice as to the admission of certain testimony, all other exceptions taken by the plaintiff being waived.

Most of the facts involved in the case are not in dispute. The plaintiff corporation during the period of time involved and for a good many years prior thereto was engaged in the business of selling automobile spare parts, with its place of business in the city of Providence. During the latter part of that prior period the defendant was employed by the plaintiff in its store as a salesman and later as manager also, at a regular salary, which, while he was manager, was $38 per *488 week. Then, the principal stockholder, by the name of Spielmacher, who apparently controlled the corporation, took over position of manager and the defendant became an outside salesman in Rhode Island from the summer of 1938 at the same salary. This arrangement continued in effect until April !, 1939.

Beginning on the latter date and continuing to March 20, 1942, when he voluntarily left the employment of the plaintiff, he was working on the basis of a commission of 27% % of the difference between the selling prices of the goods sold by him and their cost prices to the plaintiff. He was actually paid by the plaintiff weekly $38, (less slight deductions for old age insurance and unemployment insurance), until February 29, 1940, when the amount of the gross payment was reduced to $35 per week, which continued to February 1, 1941, when it was further reduced to $30 per week, for the rest of the time of his employment.

It is noteworthy that thesé reductions correspond fairly closely with reductions in the amounts of the profits from his sales and the consequent reductions in the amounts of his monthly commissions on these sales. The result was that, as agreed by counsel for both parties, his commissions, earned during this whole period of his employment on a commission basis, amounted to $5123.56 and the payments to him, before the deductions for the insurance funds, amounted to $5213.88, the difference being $90.32, one of the sums sued for by the plaintiff. It is also admitted that at the end of this period he owed the plaintiff $16.96 for merchandise bought by him from the plaintiff, the total of these two sums, $107.28, being the amount sued for by the plaintiff.

The main contention by the defendant, in support of his plea of setoff and his claim in his bill of particulars, is that he received from the plaintiff, in part payment of his earned commissions of $5123.56, only $2934.68, leaving a balance of $2188.88 due him on such commissions. At the trial this contention was supported by testimony by him that by an *489 agreement between him and Spielmacher, made when he went on a commission basis, he was to receive, in addition to his commissions on sales, payments at the rate of $15.60 per week for the use of his motor car in making the sales; but that these payments had actually been made to him out of, and charged against, his commissions.

This testimony was flatly denied by Spielmacher, who testified in substance and effect that the agreement between them was that out of the commissions payable to the defendant, at the rate of 27%% of the gross profit on sales made by the latter, $15.60 per week should be treated as payable to him for the use of his car in the business; and that only the remainder of the commissions should be treated as payable to him, and should be paid to him, for his personal services to the plaintiff.

Spielmacher also testified, in effect, that this deduction of $15.60 per week, shown monthly on the flaps of pay envelopes, was made for the purpose of determining the amounts payable by the plaintiff and defendant into the state old age insurance and unemployment insurance funds, and also of assisting the defendant in determining his taxable net income to be stated in his federal income tax returns. The defendant testified that in making such returns he did deduct the travel pay in determining his net income.

That such deductions were made by the plaintiff in determining the monthly tax contributions payable into the old age and unemployment insurance funds is clearly shown by defendant’s exhibits 1 and 2. These include five flaps which were received by him attached to five weekly pay envelopes delivered to him by the plaintiff during the period involved in this case. Each of these flaps shows, for the four or five weeks period covered thereby, the deduction, solely in the process of determining such insurance payments, as above noted, of traveling expense of $15.60 per week from the defendant’s commissions for the period covered. .

Only one of the pay envelopes to which these flaps were attached was introduced in evidence, the others not having *490 ■been kept by the defendant. That one is for the week ending May 4, 1940; and it shows “Total Wages” for that week of $35 and deductions therefrom of “Old Age Tax” of 82^ and “Unemploy. Tax” of.$1.23, making a total of $2.05, and leaving $32.95, paid in the envelope to the defendant.

The conclusion that such deduction for “travel” was so made for tax purposes is supported by defendant’s exhibit 4, in which he verified, by his signature for each week of the period from July 1, 1939 to June 27, 1941, the payment to him of $15.60 for “Rental of Car of Fred McCaughey.” We find no evidence, except testimony by the defendant, that it was agreed between him and the plaintiff that he was to be paid not only his commissions, but also $15.60 per week for traveling expenses.

A Mrs. Hunter, who was the bookkeeper of the plaintiff during the whole period involved in this case and for some time before that, testified for the plaintiff. She said that from the time when the defendant was first employed as an outside salesman, he had a' drawing account of $38 per week; that after an interval the sum paid to him on that account had exceeded the amount of the commissions on his sales for that interval and therefore his drawing account was reduced to $35 per week; and that later, for a similar reason, it was reduced to $30 per week. She also testified that the arrangement between the defendant and Spielmacher, as to the commissions and the drawing account as testified to by the latter, was told to her by both of them; and she was positive that the defendant regularly called such account his “drawing account.”

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Bluebook (online)
40 A.2d 846, 70 R.I. 486, 1945 R.I. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/replacement-parts-co-v-mccaughey-ri-1945.