Stamets v. Plano Manufacturing Co.

82 N.E. 122, 40 Ind. App. 620, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 110
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 15, 1907
DocketNo. 6,094
StatusPublished

This text of 82 N.E. 122 (Stamets v. Plano Manufacturing Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stamets v. Plano Manufacturing Co., 82 N.E. 122, 40 Ind. App. 620, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 110 (Ind. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinions

Rabb, J.

The appellee sued appellants in the court below upon a bond executed to the appellee by appellant Stamets, as principal, and his coappellants as his sureties. The bond was executed on December 7, 1897, in the penalty of $2,000, and it recited that Stamets was engaged, or about to engage, in the service of appellee as collector of its securities, salesman of its goods, solicitor of agency contracts (creating local agencies for the sale of its goods), and also as adjuster and collector of its accounts from local agents, in which employment large sums of money and securities of appellee would come into the hands of said Stamets, and conditioned for the faithful performance of his duties under said employment by Stamets, and the prompt accounting to appellee by him for all moneys and securities of appellee’s coming into his hands. The bond expressly stipulated that it should be a continuing obligation, and covering the full period or periods of employment of said Stamets by appellee, whether under the present contract of employment, or under future contracts of employment. It is averred in the complaint that, at the time the bond was so executed by the appellants, the appellant Stamets and appellee had entered into a written contract, which is set out in the complaint, by the terms of which said Stamets was to enter the service of the appellee and perform such services as appellee should direct, and in such territory as should be assigned him, for which appellee agreed to pay said Stamets a certain sum per month for time actually employed in its service, and it was expressly stipulated in this service contract that the appel[622]*622lee should have the right to change the residence of said Stamets, which, in the contract, was designated as Oakland City, Gibson county, Indiana. This contract also stipulated that, before Stamets entered upon the. performance of his contract of service, he should give bond to appellee in the penalty, and with sureties to its satisfaction. The bond in suit was given pursuant to the contract, and said Stamets thereupon entered into the employ of the appellee pursuant to the terms of said contract of employment and bond. He was continuously in the employ of the appellee until March 12, 1901, new contracts of employment being executed by the parties for each subsequent year’s employment, in-practically the same language as that of the first contract, except that the salary of Stamets was increased.

The complaint alleges that, while serving appellee under said employment, and in his capacity as collector and adjuster of its accounts with its local agents, said Stamets, from time to time received large sums of money, securities, and property of appellee, which, in violation of his duties as such employe, and of the conditions of said bond, he failed to account to appellee for, and converted to his own use. The complaint assigns thirty-five separate and distinct breaches of the bond sued on, five of the assigned breaches being for the unlawful conversion of different sums of money collected by Stamets, as agent for appellee, during his first year’s employment, and aggregating $563, and thirty of said assigned breaches being for the conversion of moneys and securities belonging to appellee and coming into said Stamets’s hands in the course of his employment as appellee’s agent, subsequent to the expiration of the first year’s employment. A paper, claimed by appellants to be a demurrer to the complaint and to each breach of the bond separately and severally, was filed by each of the appellants Harris, Haury, VanZandt and Klenck. This alleged demurrer reads as follows: ‘ ‘ The defendant [naming him] demurs severally to the first, second, etc., breaches of plaintiff’s complaint, on [623]*623the grounds that neither of said breaches states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. ’ ’ This alleged demurrer was overruled by the court belO|W, and to the ruling of the court the defendants jointly except. Appellant Stamets filed a separate answer in four paragraphs. The other appellants joined in an answer of six paragraphs, the first of which was the general denial. The third is addressed to so much of plaintiff’s complaint as seeks recovery for defalcations of Stamets subsequent to the expiration of the first year’s employment, and alleges that Stamets was employed .by the appellee for a term ending on December 1, 1898, and was out of appellee’s empl >y from that date until February 27, 1899, when he was reemployed at an increased salary ; that he was first employ ed by appellee on November 1, 1897, to act .as its local agent at Oakland City, to sell'machinery and overseeing two or three agents of appellee in the immediate vicinity; that the answering defendant then, and continuously thereafter, lived in said town, and that the appellee, on February 25, moved Stamets from Oakland City to Evansville, thirty miles away, assigned to him a different line of employment in a different field of labor, enlarged his duties and field of labor, and increased his compensation, without the knowledge of the answering defendants. The court sustained appellee’s demurrer to this paragraph of answer. The cause was tried by a jury, and the court, over the objection and exception of the appellants, instructed the jury as follows: “ (2) If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that the defendant Stamets was constantly in the employ of the plaintiff from December 1, 1897, to March 16, 1901, the mere fact that the compensation to be paid by the plaintiff to said Stamets for his services during any given period of that time was not fixed and reduced to writing at the beginning of such period, but was afterward agreed upon and reduced to writing before the expiration of such period, would not be a defense to this action, and would not prejudice the plaintiff’s right to recover on the bond in [624]*624this action, if the evidence otherwise justifies such recovery, for any breach of the bond shown by the evidence to have been committed during the period of such employment. ’ ’

Instruction four, given by the court on its own motion, reads as follows: “It is charged in the complaint that from the time of his entering upon the performance of his duties under the service contract dated November 1, 1897, until his alleged discharge from the plaintiff’s service, the employment of defendant Stamets was continuous, and was under the several service contracts before mentioned, and that during such service the plaintiff entrusted to Stamets a large amount of its business, consisting of securities to be collected, goods to be sold, the creating of local agencies for the sale of its goods, the work of adjusting the accounts of divers of its local collectors and local sales agents, and the collection, and transmission to the plaintiff, of large sums of money due it in various localities where it had been or was then doing business. If you find from the evidence that these allegations are true, then, under the law, the defendants and each of them are liable in this action for each and every breach of the condition of the bond that has been charged in the complaint and proved to you by a preponderance of the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 N.E. 122, 40 Ind. App. 620, 1907 Ind. App. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamets-v-plano-manufacturing-co-indctapp-1907.