Stinger v. Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc.

830 S.W.2d 715, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1053, 1992 WL 85171
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 30, 1992
DocketA14-91-00535-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 830 S.W.2d 715 (Stinger v. Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stinger v. Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc., 830 S.W.2d 715, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1053, 1992 WL 85171 (Tex. Ct. App. 1992).

Opinions

OPINION

ELLIS, Justice.

This is an appeal from a directed verdict granted in favor of Stewart & Stevenson Services, Inc., appellee. Appellant, Daniel H. Stinger, sues appellee for breach of contract and fraud in connection with an incentive arrangement agreement. We affirm.

Because this is a review of a directed verdict, the following is a recitation of the facts most favorable to appellant. Appellant testified that in 1979 Carsey Manning, the Vice President of Stewart & Stevenson, contacted him regarding an offer for employment. At the time, appellant was working for General Motors in the Aeronautical Engineering department making a salary of $36,000 per year. The reason Stewart & Stevenson wanted appellant as an employee is because they understood he was an expert in gas turbine engines and' wanted to start up a gas turbine operation in the industrial or commercial end of their business. Manning told Stinger that Stewart & Stevenson offered relatively low salaries, but fairly high commissions. Manning also indicated that if he would be willing to take employment at Stewart & Stevenson that he would be substantially rewarded in the future for giving up his position at General Motors and could make commissions in the range of $100 to $300,-000 annually if he was successful in the gas turbine operations that they were trying to start up.

Appellant accepted appellee’s offer and began employment as a manager of gas turbine sales in February of 1979. He received a written two year agreement setting out appellant’s base salary of $36,000 and bonus calculated on a set formula for sales profit that could be no less than $7500 per year and no more than twice appellant’s salary. Appellant received the base salary for both years and bonuses well over the $7500 minimum.

After appellant’s agreement expired on January 31, 1981, appellant’s received yearly written commission arrangements from Stewart & Stevenson outlining new terms and conditions for appellant’s commissions. Appellant received these arrangements for 1981-2, 1982-3 and 1983-4. None of the new arrangements received by appellant included terms regarding salary. Each arrangement ended with the following paragraph:

[717]*717IV. OBJECTIVE OF THIS ARRANGEMENT
This arrangement is an incentive arrangement and is not an employment contract.
It is the intent of this arrangement that the results will be for the mutual benefit of both the Company and the employee as long as the employee is employed by the Company and it is agreed that this arrangement may be modified or changed upwards or downwards at any time at the Company’s discretion.

Stinger testified that he understood these final paragraphs to mean that Stewart & Stevenson could modify its agreement up or down at its discretion, but that he thought the commission arrangement guaranteed him a certain set commission. In 1985, appellant himself participated in the committee process by which discretionary commissions were allocated to salesmen at Stewart & Stevenson.

Between March and July of 1984, when discussions were underway concerning commissions for the 1983-84 year, appellant testified that the reviewing committee asked him what he thought about the fact that the turbine group he was in would not receive commissions because of a loss in a job called Sohio. The calculation was based on the following paragraph in the commission arrangement:

If a job generates a workorder loss, the amount of commission will be zero, except at the sole discretion of the Company, a commission may be paid due to the circumstances relating to the job.

Appellant testified that he was involved in the Sohio project, however, he felt it was unfair to allow that job to affect commissions because (1) the job had not been sold by the gas turbine group he was in; and (2) the commission should be zero not a negative number to be subtracted from commissions. After appellant wrote the company a memo outlining his complaints, Stewart & Stevenson made the commission zero, not a negative number, and appellant received a commission of $69,000 plus $1200 to be distributed among other employees in the gas turbine group for the 1983-4 year.

Prior to the expiration of the last written commission arrangement for 1983-84, Manning told appellant that the written arrangement would remain in effect until appellant received a new written arrangement. Manning also told appellant that the committee approved raising the ceiling limitation on his commissions from three times his salary to five times his salary.

In July of 1984, Joe Manning, the President, and Carsey Mannin, who was being promoted to Chief Operating Officer, asked appellant if he would like to be promoted to Assistant Chief Operating Officer. Carsey Manning told appellant that “management had approved a salary of $80,000 annually”, but appellant testified that Manning did not indicate when the $80,000 would begin. Appellant accepted the position, but then six to eight weeks after their discussion, complained to Manning that his pay check did not reflect the increase in salary. Manning told appellant that the Chairman of the Board of Stewart & Stevenson did not approve the salary and had instead decided to raise appellant’s salary to $65,-000. Manning represented to appellant that he would take care of it and get appellant’s increased salary but did not specify when.

In 1984 and 1985 Stewart & Stevenson experienced losses in its business. The compensation committee proposed a bonus of $7,500 for appellant for the fiscal year of 1984-1985. Appellant found the amount unsatisfactory. On April 21, 1985, appellant wrote a letter to various officers of appellee and threatened to terminate his employment if he did not receive a larger commission which he believed would better reflect his performance. Manning went back to the committee and had the bonus increased to $25,000. Appellant accepted the check but remained dissatisfied about his bonus.

On May 5, 1985, Tom Langham, President of Stewart & Stevenson, met appellant to discuss his complaints. As a result of these discussions Langham and Stinger reached a new agreement, pursuant to which Stinger was to receive a discretionary $25,000 bonus, a raise to $75,000 per [718]*718year, and a promise that appellant and the company officer would meet to work out a new incentive plan subject to the company’s approval. Appellant testified that his agreement with Langham contained two additional terms: 1) that the terms set forth above would be met by May 15, 1985 and 2) that his name would at some unspecified time in the future be submitted to the board of directors for consideration as a company officer. Under the second provision, the company was not required to actually make appellant an officer, but was merely obliged to consider him for that promotion. In return for the company’s agreement to perform these terms by May 15, 1985, appellant agreed to continue his employment.

Appellant was out of town on May 15, 1985. When he returned to the office around 6:00 or 7:00 o’clock that evening, he saw no written confirmation from the company regarding his conditions for continued employment. As a result, appellant cleaned out his desk that evening and terminated his employment effective May 15, 1985. After appellant’s departure he did not receive any checks for commissions. On June 14, 1986 appellant sent a letter to C.

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Bluebook (online)
830 S.W.2d 715, 1992 Tex. App. LEXIS 1053, 1992 WL 85171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stinger-v-stewart-stevenson-services-inc-texapp-1992.