Wolf Cigar Stores Company v. Kramer

109 S.W. 990, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 411, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 603
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 25, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 109 S.W. 990 (Wolf Cigar Stores Company v. Kramer) 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
Wolf Cigar Stores Company v. Kramer, 109 S.W. 990, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 411, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 603 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinions

On September 9, 1902, appellant, then operating under the name of Union Cigar Stores Company, and appellee entered into a written contract by which appellee agreed to act as general manager of all of appellant's Dallas stores, performing such duties as are usually entailed upon a general manager under like circumstances, for the term of one year at a monthly salary of $250. At the expiration of the one year the contract was extended for an additional year. Appellee continued in the services of appellant under said contract from September 9, 1902, until February 14, 1904, when he alleges he was wrongfully discharged. At some time during his employment under said contract, and before his unlawful discharge, his official title was changed to chief clerk, which change was one in name only, his duties remaining absolutely the same. At the time appellee was employed the only store appellant operated or owned was store No. 4, which was its headquarters and conveniently equipped and located for use as a basis of operations. At the time of appellee's *Page 414 alleged unlawful discharge, appellant was operating and conducting in the city of Dallas, all under the general management of appellee, three stores, known respectively as store No. 4, store No. 5, and store No. 9. Store No. 4 was the largest of all the stores. Store No. 9 was the second largest; store No. 5 was the smallest of the stores. It was situated in the lobby of the St. George Hotel, and was in size about 8 x 20 feet, (the size of an ordinary hotel cigar stand). There was no provision there for the keeping of surplus stock; there was no vault, no desk, and no safe. Each store was under the direct supervision of a chief clerk, and in turn was under the direct control of appellee as general manager. The duties of chief clerk at store No. 5 were those of an ordinary salesman, standing behind the counter, handing out cigars, papers, magazines, chewing gum, etc., taking care of the show-cases and counters, cleaning them and keeping them in order, as also cleaning and washing show-cases and wall cases, thus performing the combined duties of salesman and porter. His hours for work were from 6:30 a. m. to 10:30 p. m. Store No. 5 was the only store at which magazines, periodicals and books were kept for sale. The salary paid to chief clerk at store No. 5 varied from $10 to $15 per week.

On or about February 14, 1904, at which time appellee claims to have been unlawfully discharged, he received from appellant written notice to become "Chief Clerk" at store No. 5, at the same salary he was then receiving and until the expiration of his contract, or other arrangements would be made. He also received a letter demanding the same change, and saying further that it would regard and construe his failure "to deliver over to us store No. 4 both as an act of insubordination as well as a refusal to accept our proposition to place you in charge of store No. 5, as above indicated." Appellee refused to accede to the proposed change or to accept the new position, because it necessitated the performance of duties which were subordinate, inferior and materially different from those which he had contracted to perform, and tended to injure his business standing. Thereupon, possession of the store in which appellee had his headquarters was peremptorily demanded, and a suit therefor threatened. Upon agreement between appellant's and appellee's attorneys, possession was surrendered on February 14, 1904, without prejudice to appellee's rights.

At the time of appellee's unlawful discharge there was no opening in the city of Dallas for his employment in a like or similar capacity to that in which he was employed by appellant. Appellee had had considerable experience as a bookkeeper and after his unlawful discharge could have secured employment as a bookkeeper at $75 per month. He preferred not to accept such employment, and consequently immediately set about preparing to embark in business on his own account, which he did on April 30, 1904. Up to September 8, 1904, the date on which appellee's contract employment should have expired, appellee's business showed no profit; to the contrary, during that period it was operated at a loss. The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee in the sum of $1,076.50, upon which verdict judgment was duly entered and defendant appealed.

Opinion. — Error is assigned to the court's refusal of special charge *Page 415 No. 1, requested by defendant. By this charge appellant sought to have the jury instructed that plaintiff was only entitled to recover one hundred and thirty eight dollars and to return a verdict in his favor for that sum only. The plaintiff plead, in substance, that "on or about February 14, 1904, the defendant, without cause or fault on the part of this plaintiff, breached its contract with this plaintiff and with an unjust and malicious desire to injure this plaintiff and disabling him from discharging efficiently the duties of his then existing contract, did discharge plaintiff from its employ, and did seek to humiliate plaintiff. That among other wrongful acts so done by defendant, it sought to withdraw plaintiff from the place of business in which he had theretofore served the defendant, and from which he could efficiently discharge his duties under said contract, and to reduce him from his rank as general manager of its Dallas stores, and place him as clerk merely in a small cigar and news stand, which defendant operated in the St. George Hotel in the city of Dallas, and over which, with other stores, plaintiff had theretofore been general manager." He then plead in detail the specific facts wherein he would have been required to perform duties not contracted for and incompatible with his rank and duties as general manager of defendant's stores, had he been compelled to move from store No. 4 to store No. 5; that defendant notified him in writing of its requirement that "he transfer himself to said new and inferior employment, and informed him that it would treat his refusal as a violation of his contract and an act of insubordination, and would and did demand of plaintiff an abdication of his duties under the aforesaid contract, and his surrender of the keys to the store in which he had theretofore made his headquarters. That plaintiff refusing to comply with the requirements aforesaid, was dismissed and discharged from defendant's employ."

On the former appeal of this case we held that the undisputed evidence showed that appellant had tendered appellee the same employment, in the same city, for the same length of time, at the same salary and the same duties which he had been performing, and this being so he was only entitled to recover $138, the amount due him at the time his services for appellant terminated, and reversed a judgment in favor of plaintiff for a larger sum, and rendered judgment in his favor for that amount. 89 S.W. 995.

A writ of error was granted by the Supreme Court and that Court held that the evidence was sufficient to raise "the issue whether or not the appellant broke the contract by requiring of plaintiff the performance of duties substantially different from those which he had agreed to perform," and held that we properly reversed the judgment, but that the facts were such that it was not proper for this court to render judgment.99 Tex. 597. The facts on the present appeal are substantially the same as those on the former appeal, and in deference to the opinion of the Supreme Court we hold that appellant's requested charge No. 1 was properly refused.

Nor was there error in refusing special charges Nos. 16 and 7, the refusal of which is made the basis of the second and third assignments.

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Bluebook (online)
109 S.W. 990, 50 Tex. Civ. App. 411, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wolf-cigar-stores-company-v-kramer-texapp-1908.