Shaughnessy v. D'Antoni

100 F.2d 422, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2674
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1938
DocketNo. 8803
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 100 F.2d 422 (Shaughnessy v. D'Antoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaughnessy v. D'Antoni, 100 F.2d 422, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2674 (5th Cir. 1938).

Opinion

SIBLEY, Circuit Judge.

This appeal is from a judgment dismissing for want of a cause of action the suit of Clark D. Shaughnessy against Blaise D’Antoni to recover a balance due for services rendered and damages for breach of a contract whereby the former was to serve the latter for a period of ten scholastic years beginning Sept. 1st, 1927, and ending June 30, 1937. The petition exhibited a written contract, the presently material parts of which are:

“Blaise S. D’Antoni agrees to employ the services of Clark D. Shaughnessy for the purposes hereinafter enumerated and the said Clark D. Shaughnessy agrees to engage his services to the said Blaise S. D’Antoni for the said purposes hereinafter enumerated. The said Clark D. Shaughnessy shall engage his services to such university or college in the City of New Orleans which the said Blaise S. D’Antoni may designate and with which institution his services may be required in the capacity of Professor of Physical Education and Athletics, and/or Director of the Department of Physical Education, and in such capacities the said Clark D. Shaughnessy shall use his best efforts in the upbuilding thereof and of athletics in general, and shall act as head coach of football . . . And in the event of non-employment by the said Shaughnessy in any university or college in the City of New Orleans then the said Shaughnessy shall advise the said D’Antoni in any athletic matters or things in which he, the said D’Antoni, may be personally concerned or with which he may have a sympathetic interest. The term of this contract shall be for a period of ten years beginning from Sept. 1st, 1927, and ending June 30, -1937. Blaise S. D’Antoni agrees to pay Clark D. Shaughnessy a salary for said services as follows: The sum of $15,000 per year from Sept. 1st, 1927, to June 30, 1932, payable at the rate of $1,-500 per month at the end of each month during this period; the sum of $20,000 per year from Sept. 1st, 1932, to June 30, 1937, payable at - the rate of $2,000 per month at the end of each month during this period . . . Clark D. Shaughnessy shall have the option to cancel this contract after the expiration of three years’ service; Provided, however, that notice in writing of such cancellation must be given to Blaise S. D’Antoni on or before the thirtieth day of June, 1930, otherwise said contract is to remain in full force and effect.”

The contract is dated Aug. 6, 1928. The petition alleges that it was signed on that date, in substitution of an earlier and more or less similar contract covering the period from Sept. 1st, 1927, to Sept. 1st, 1937, under which the first year of ten months had already been fulfilled; that at or before the beginning of the contract [424]*424D’Antoni desired Shaughnessy to employ his services with Loyola University in the City of New Orleans, and Shaughnessy did begin rendition of the services there and continued to perform them until April 1st, 1933; at that time his pay was in arrears and his situation at Loyola had become uncertain and unbearable so that he, having received an offer from the University of Chicago, asked D’Antoni what, he intended to do about carrying out his obligations under the contract and D’Antoni refused to say anything whatever; so Shaughnessy accepted the offer at Chicago University and went thither, The petition alleges further that Shaughnessy properly fulfilled his contract and was ready and willing to do whatever D’Antoni might lawfully direct him to do .thereunder, but D’Antoni failed and refused to -f.ulfil the contract, to Shaughnessy’s damage both in the arrears of pay prior to April 1st, 1933, and as to the remainder of the term in the difference between the sums promised and those received at Chicago University. It was also alleged that Shaughnessy never made any contract with Loyola University, ■ and looked only to D’Antoni for his salary, and that what was paid by officials at Loyola was paid for and on account of D'Antoni, who himself paid large sums in addition.

It is argued orally that D’Antoni in making the contract was only an agent acting for a disclosed principal, Loyola University, and is not personally bound for its performance. On the face of the contract we think otherwise. It .is signed by D’Antoni, and the promise is that he will pay. The services are not necessarily to be rendered at Loyola University, but may be at any other college in New Orleans; and in default of employment at any such, services are to be. rendered to D’Antoni himself. It does not appear what, if any, connection D’Antoni had with Loyola University. It certainly does not appear that he had authority to make this contract for and to bind the University, and that Shaughnessy so understood. It appears rather to have been made by D’Antoni, the credit being given to him. The references in the contract to Loyola University and to an additional salary (not sued for) “equal to” a stated percentage of the net profits of football games there, are explainable by the fact that it was intended that he work at Loyola and he was in fact working there when this contract was made. • Nothing in the contract purports to bind the University to do or to pay anything.

In the brief it is argued that D’Antoni’s obligation was met by securing the employment of Shaughnessy by' Loyola University, and that it and not he thereafter must pay. We do not so read the contract. The petition states that at no time did Shaughnessy enter into any contract with Loyola University, but that all the while he was serving ' D’Antoni under this contract through arrangements D’Antoni had made with Loyola University.

The main contention, and that which the District Judge seems to have sustained, is that the contract being for a service of more th,an .five years was prohibited by the law of Louisiana and was ab initio and in toto illegal and void, so that no action can be founded on it. The. Civil Code of Louisiana declares: Art. 12: “Whatever is done in contravention of a prohibitory law is void, although the nullity be not formally directed”; and Art. 1893: “An obligation without a cause, or with a false or unlawful cause, can. have no effect.” These are principles of general jurisprudence. If one contracts to do a thing prohibited by law he cannot be compelled to do it, nor can he collect the promised cause or consideration for having done it. The contract is void, wholly void. Neither party can found any right on it.

The asserted prohibition of law here relied on is Art. 167: “Persons who have attained the age of majority can not bind themselves for a longer term than five years.” Art. 168 continues: “Engagements of service contracted in a foreign country for a longer term shall be reduced to five years, to count from the day of the arrival of the person bound in this State.” These Articles are not derived from the Code Napoleon, but were incorporated by the Louisiana Legislature in the Civil Code of 1825. In Pitcher v. United Oil & Gas Syndicate, 174 La. 66, 139 So. 760, the Supreme Court said that public policy prevents those who seek employment from being constrained to such a term as might seriously affect or restrict their ability to better their condition by a change of employment or employer. These Articles are for the benefit of the employe and they limit his ability to fetter his own freedom. In several cases contracts to serve more than five years have been re[425]*425fused enforcement after five years have expired. See Page v. New Orleans Public Service, Inc., 184 La. 617, 167 So. 99; Hill v. Missouri Pac. Ry. Co., D.C., 8 F. Supp. 80. No case has decided whether such a contract is void ab initio, or whether it is good for five years but is not binding thereafter.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 F.2d 422, 1938 U.S. App. LEXIS 2674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaughnessy-v-dantoni-ca5-1938.