Van Sickle v. Katz Drug Co.

151 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 952, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 39
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 26, 1941
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 151 S.W.2d 489 (Van Sickle v. Katz Drug Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Sickle v. Katz Drug Co., 151 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 952, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 39 (Mo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

*956 CAYB, J.

This is an action for actual and punitive damages based upon an alleged failure by the defendant to furnish the plaintiff, upon his request, a proper service letter as provided for in Section 5064, Revised Statutes of Missouri, 1939. There was a judgment for plaintiff in the sum of one dollar, actual damages, and $500, punitive damages. The court instructed the jury not to allow actual damages in an amount in excess of one dollar. The defendant has appealed.

The parties will hereinafter be referred to as plaintiff and defendant.

The defendant assigns errors in the refusal of the court to give defendant’s Instruction A, which was the demurrer offered at the close of all the evidence; and also refusal to give defendant’s Instruction B,. which told the jury in effect that if the verdict should be for the plaintiff the jury could not allow the plaintiff “punitive damages in any sum whatever.” Defendant’s other assignments of error were directed to the giving of certain instructions by the court on behalf of the plaintiff, which will be discussed in the opinion.

In substance plaintiff’s amended petition alleged that he had been employed by the defendant for a certain period of time (in excess of' 90 days) and that his duties while so employed were to serve food and sandwiches to customers and to mix and dispense soft drinks at the fountain; that he was discharged from the defendant’s employment on August 16, 1939, at which time he requested a service letter, as required by law, and that it became the duty of the superintendent or manager of defendant corporation to issue to the plaintiff a service letter duly signed by said superintendent or manager, setting forth the nature and character of the services rendered, the duration therof, and truly stating for what cause the plaintiff’s service with the defendant corporation was terminated. The petition then sets out in full a purported service letter dated August 18, 1939, and signed by Ross B. Meyers, personnel director for the defendant, but alleges that such letter was not a proper and sufficient service letter in that it was not signed by the superintendent or manager of the corporation and did not give the true reason or cause for the termination of plaintiff’s employment; that he objected to such letter, and that on September. 8,1939, the defendant sent another letter which it is alleged is not suffi *957 cient for the same reasons. The petition further alleges that the failure of the defendant to furnish the plaintiff with a proper service letter was wrongful, willful and malicious, and that defendant’s conduct was actuated by malice, spite and ill-will toward the plaintiff.

The answer admitted the employment of the plaintiff at said place and time, as alleged in the petition, and that he was dismissed from defendant’s employ on the 16th day of August, 1939. This was followed by a general denial and a plea that the defendant had, on September 14, 1939, issued and sent to the plaintiff and that the plaintiff had received a proper service letter, which letter is set out in full in defendant’s answer and signed “Katz Drug Company by Boss B. Meyers, Personnel Director.” The plaintiff then filed a reply which admitted that the defendant’s letter of September 14 was the first letter the defendant furnished the plaintiff in which defendant purported to give the reason for the termination of plaintiff’s employment, and alleged that the reason assigned in said letter was not the true reason, but was a false reason; that the true reason for the termination of said employment was that on the morning of August 16, the date of his discharge, a customer came into defendant’s store about 7 a. m. and that the plaintiff was so busy with his other duties that he could not immediately wait upon this customer, that she became dissatisfied and left the store, and that it was no fault of the plaintiff.

With the issues thus made, the case proceeded to trial.

Plaintiff was his only witness and testified in substance as follows:

That he was first employed by the Katz Drug Company at its St. Joseph store about March, 1937, and voluntarily left the employment about September 1, 1937, and went to California; that after he returned, and at the request of the manager of the St. Joseph store, he again went to work for the company about November 1, 1937, and continued until December 31, 1937, at which time he was “laid off” because the rush season was over, he made no objection to that; that about March 1, 1938, he again went to work for the company and continued until his dismissal on August 16, 1939; that his general duties were to take orders for food and drinks at the fountain and at two or three tables which were near the fountain, and to serve food when it was sent him from the kitchen, but that he prepared the drinks and toast at the fountain and served them; that his salary had been increased during the last period of employment; that he had not had any particular trouble or disputes with the manager or other employees of the store except on one or two occasions when he was reprimanded for violating some rule of the store which he claimed he did not know about. His version of the matters which occurred on the date of the dismissal is in substance as follows: That he went to the store about 7 o’clock in the morning and that there were a number of customers on stools at the fountain for whom he had taken orders for food, soft *958 drinks or both; that while he was so occupied some lady came into the store and sat at one of the tables; that he was too busy to take 'her order and that another employee, Mr. Asbury, came to the fountain and asked the plaintiff to give him a glass of water for the lady at the table and the plaintiff told him to “come around and get it himself,” that he couldn’t take any lady’s order now. “I will have to wait until I get these other customers taken care of. I am busy.” Sometime during that day Mr. Moore, the assistant manager of the store, asked plaintiff what the trouble was during, the morning that he couldn’t wait on the lady at the-table, and he explained to Mr. Moore that he was “too busy;” that he had eight or nine other customers. That afternoon about 5 P. M., when his day’s work was completed, he was paid the amount of salary due him and was dismissed by the manager of that store, Mr. ’Wilkening; that Mr. Wilkening didn’t give him any reason for his dismissal, but said to him, “I don’t want to argue with you. I am letting you go and that is all.” He then asked Mr. Wilkening if he wouldn’t'give him “a personal recommendation for my services there, ’ ’ and that Mr. Wilkening said he could not do that but that he would write to Kansas City to the main office and get a service letter, and the plaintiff said “that would be O K, do that.” This occurred shortly after five P. M., on August 16. On August 18 the defendant wrote the plaintiff a letter which is conceded not to comply with the provisions of Sec. 5064, R. S. Mo., 1939, because it did not give the reason for the dismissal.

The plaintiff- was not satisfied with that letter and he consulted an attorney who advised him to write the company about the matter, which he did on' September 1, 1939.

On September 8, the defendant, acting through Ross B. Meyers, replied by letter.

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Bluebook (online)
151 S.W.2d 489, 235 Mo. App. 952, 1941 Mo. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-sickle-v-katz-drug-co-moctapp-1941.