Stafford v. Sibley

113 Ala. 447
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedNovember 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 113 Ala. 447 (Stafford v. Sibley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stafford v. Sibley, 113 Ala. 447 (Ala. 1896).

Opinion

HEAD, J.

On October 24, 1892, the appellee (defendant below) being engaged in the business of timber and log broker, in Mobile, Ala., by agreement, in writing, employed the appellant (plaintiff below) to serve as timber inspector, in said business, for a period of one year, at a compensation of one dollar, per month, “and in addition thereto a sum of money equal to forty per cent of the net amount which may be realized and collected from inspection charges, interest on money advanced and commissions on same.” It was stipulated that plaintiff was not to be liable for any losses beyond his profits as stipulated. On a former appeal in the cause (106 Ala. 189), we construed the contract to be one of employment in which the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff for his services a monthly salary, of one dollar, and forty per cent of the net profits, to be ascertained and paid monthly. We also held that plaintiff’s percentages were not to be diminished by reason of losses sustained by the defendant or money loaned or advanced by him in the business, except to the extent of his percentage upon the interest and commissions accruing thereon. Those losses, if any, so far as the written contract, unmodified by any subsequent agreement, is concerned, were of the defendant’s own creation, and [450]*450cannot be charged against the plaintiff’s stipulated compensation.

This seems to render 'the rights of the parties plain enough, under the contract, as written. There should have been a settlement and ascertainment of the net profits on the sources of earnings specified in the contract, each month, and the plaintiff’s forty per cent thereof, if any, paid to him. If this was not clone until the relations of the parties, as defined by the contract, terminated from any cause, the business having been carried on, with the plaintiff’s employment, for more than a month, a settlement then or thereafter made, or now to be made, should have been, or should be, upon the basis of separate monthly accountings, producing the same effect as if a settlement had been actually made at the-end of each month during the employment; and the plaintiff would be entitled to the several sums ascertained to be due him, upon the several accountings, with interest, respectively, thereon from the respective dates of the several rests.

But, it is said there was a subsequent oral modification of, or addition to, the written contract, presenting other questions of importance to the rights of the parties. Plaintiff and defendant differ as to the terms of the oral agreement. Plaintiff’s version of it, in short and in substance, is, that a little while after he and defendant had been together, on his, plaintiff’s, suggestion that they could make some money in ‘ ‘speculating in, and selling timber,” defendant agreed to enter into such speculations, upon the same terms as to plaintiff’s compensation, as agreed upon in the written contract in reference to the other sources of profit. If this be the true version, it is of no importance on this appeal, for its effect was simply to add another feature to defendant’s business, and another possible source of profit from which plaintiff might derive compensation, and the record raises no question touching the rights of the parties in respect of any profits made on any speculations had under the agreement. Neither party claims anything against the other growing out of any speculation in timber which is the subject of any assignment of error. The defendant’s version, however, presents a material question, His version is, that after the written contract of October was entered upon, an agreement [451]*451was made for timber speculations, which was that he was to furnish all moneys necessary to buy logs and timber outside, and plaintiff was to receive forty per cent. of the profits and bear forty per cent of the losses, and “defendant was to receive sixty per cent pro and con ; ” * * * “that the sources from which the forty and sixty per cent were to be divided was from inspections, commissions and interest and speculation account.” If this be true, we observe, that the relations of the parties were entirely changed. The existing relation of employer and employe was converted into one of partnership, and, in this action, the court could take cognizance of no transaction in the conduct of the business, occurring subsequently to the change. The adjustment of the rights of the parties growing out of the relation of employer and employe (which is the object of this suit) would have to be made as of the time of the change, leaving the subsequent partnership dealings to be settled by the parties, or in a proper forum. What was the real agreement was, of course, for the jury, in respect of which they should have been, and were, instructed by the court. If the jury should find the plaintiff’s version to be the true one, he should be given the benefit of his forty per cent, of the net profits down to tiie time their business relations terminated; if they find the defendant’s version to be true, they should give the plaintiff the benefit of his forty per cent, on all net profits earned down to the timo the partnership was formed, excluding all transactions thereafter occurring.

The defendant takes another step, and this is the principal matter of controversy in this cause. Prior to the contract of October 24, 1892, the defendant had made advances to one Clanahan, who was then indebted on account thereof, in a large sum. Advances were made to him after the plaintiff’s employment. Losses on these advances proved to be heavy, and defendant now seeks to charge these losses against the net profits upon which plaintiff was entitled to compute his compensation, thus absorbing his entire compensation ; and, it seems, that it was in this way that plaintiff failed to obtain a verdict, when, upon the admitted profits earned, he was otherwise entitled to recover a considerable sum. We have seen, that, on the former appeal, we declared that, under the contract, the plaintiff could not be charged with such [452]*452losses. But, on the trial now appealed from, the defendant testified that by a subsequent oral agreement the plaintiff, to induce defendant to continue making advances to Clanahan, agreed with defendant, that he would share forty per cent, and the defendant sixty per cent, of the profits and losses on the dealings with Clan-ahan ; and thus he insists that plaintiff is liable to account for forty per cent, of these losses.

There are two answers to the demand : 1. ■ Conceding the agreement to have been made as testified to by the defendant, it shows a partnership between the parties, in respect to the business with Clanahan, the settlement of which a court of law will not take jurisdiction of; and 2. Waiving that consideration, the agreement shows itself to have been a special and independent arrangement with different terms from those of the existing arrangement, and forming no part of the arrangement, and there is no plea proposing to set off the loss sustained. The third plea does not do so. It is really a plea of over-payment of the plaintiff’s demand sued for, claiming a judgment over for the excess of the payment. We'need not now decide whether there could legally be a recovery over, on such a plea, nor whether or not it would stand the test of demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
113 Ala. 447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stafford-v-sibley-ala-1896.