Wood v. Alpaugh

43 N.J. Eq. 455
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 43 N.J. Eq. 455 (Wood v. Alpaugh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Alpaugh, 43 N.J. Eq. 455 (N.J. Ct. App. 1887).

Opinion

Bird, V. C.

The complainants ask that the defendants may be ordered to account to them for services rendered under an agreement. On the 7th day of May, 1883, the complainants and defendants entered into a written agreement, in and by which it was recited that the said defendants owned and operated a pottery manufactory in the city of Trenton, and that they had agreed to employ the said complainants to superintend and manage the manufactur[456]*456ing part of the business, including the decorating department, and taking the entire charge of the works, the employment of hands and the selection of materials, after which recital it was agreed between the said parties that the said defendants should employ the complainants to take such entire charge and management of the manufacturing department of their pottery, including the decorating department, for the term of three years and two months from the date of said agreement; and the complainants agreed to enter into the employment of the said defendants, and to take the entire charge of the manufacturing department of said pottery, and to give their whole time, labor and skill towards the proper management of the said business during said term; and the said defendants further agreed that they would pay for said services during the said period a salary of $3,0u0 a year to each of the complainants, in weekly payments, and also ten per cent, of the profits of the business, which profits they guaranteed should produce to the said complainants at least the sum of $2,000 a year each. Under this agreement the complainants took charge of the works of the defendants. They say in their bill that they were practical operators in pottery work. They continued in the employ of the defendants until they were discharged in the month of March, 1885. Their salary of $3,000 a year was all paid, except a very small amount, but nothing additional — no part of the profits which, it is alleged, were made, has been paid. They say they are ignorant of the accounts of the business, and pray that an accounting may be ordered.

The defendants admit the agreement and that the complainants entered into their employ thereunder, and continued therein until they were discharged in March, 1885, just prior to the time when the agreement would have expired by its own limitation. They insist that there is nothing due the complainants, because of their unskillful management of the business which was committed to their charge under and by virtue of the agreement. They say that they had no practical knowledge themselves of the manufacture of pottery, and relied upon the complainants, but that they so unfaithfully performed their duties that great loss resulted to the defendants.

[457]*457Ought there be an accounting, and whether an accounting or not, ought the defendants to be charged with the $2,000 profits which they guaranteed to the complainants ? The accounting is resisted by the defendants on the ground of unskillful management of their pottery by the complainants. It is alleged that, because of such unskillful management, they suffered great loss, and that no profits were made. It is undoubtedly true that certain portions of the work undertaken by the complainants Avere failures. They undertook to manufacture AA'hat was called bone china, imperial china, vitrified china, and underglazed decorated ware, and all proved failures except perhaps the imperial china, of which more hereafter. The responsibility for these undertakings and for the failures is all charged by the defendants upon the complainants. It is insisted that the complainants represented themselves as able to make the manufacture of these various wares a complete success, and that they, in so many words, guaranteed the defendants that such should be the result of the undertaking. Upon such representations, the defendants, permitted the complainants to proceed to make the necessary purchases of the materials and to construct the proper works, and they also advertised such Avares, upon the belief that the effort would be successful, and received large orders from Boston, from Chicago and from Pittsburgh and other places, amounting in all to many thousands of dollars; and that a short time after the orders were filled, complaints were made and the goods returned, either to the entire loss of the defendants, or nearly so. In some instances they were permitted to supply the orders with other goods. It is proper to state that the goods enumerated were not all the goods that were manufactured; they also manufactured,.at the same establishment, a very large amount of plain white ware, amounting in all to about $200,000 worth each year, yet in fact the insistment is, upon the part of ■the defendants, that no profits resulted to them from the manufacture of wares as a whole.

Taking these statements, and giving the defendants the full benefit of it, the question still arises, Under the circumstances of this case, are the complainants entitled to an accounting in order [458]*458to ascertain whether any profits accrued in this business during the continuance of their services, of which they are entitled to a share? Now, it is to be observed, that one of the defendants, Mr. Magowan, was not entirely ignorant of the manufacture of pottery ware. He was inquired of whether he could say of his-own knowledge what the quality of certain wares was. He said that he could, and that he was well acquainted with several recipes for manufacturing pottery, and that he had given a great deal of time and attention to it. Answering further upon the subject, he said that he was thoroughly acquainted with it, so-much so that, in speaking of the result of the experiment of manufacturing imperial china, he said that it was very bad indeed. It is important to bear this fact in mind. It is entitled,, together with other circumstances, to great weight in the further-consideration of the question now before me. Mr. Magowandescribes the imperfections of the wares that were produced; specifically characterizes the different defects and the consequences of those defects to the firm. He also tells what produced the defects. He says that they were caused by bad management in and about the kilns, and by a lack of attention t-o the-placing of saggers and keeping the saggers in proper condition, so that when the ware was being fired, the dirt would fall upon the ware and become mixed with it. It appears, from Mr, Magowan’s testimony, that he knew of this unskillful management and of these imperfect wares from the first, and that during the first six months of their employment he frequently called the attention of the complainants to them and to the great loss which they, Alpaugh & Magowan, were sustaining by such-management. According to Mr. Magowan’s testimony, so seriously was he impressed with the failure of these complainants to accomplish what the defendants expected of them, that they early contemplated discharging them, and would have done so-had it not been for the difficulty of getting any one else to take-hold of the work and to carry it on for them. It should be-noted, in this connection, that the defendants had every opportunity to know that this peculiar kind of wares, which were called specialties, was not manufactured so as to be acceptable [459]*459to their customers, and that the experiments which they rely on as a bar to an accounting were failures.

This view of the case is enforced by the consideration that every one of these undertakings to manufacture the specialties above named, was an experiment. The testimony makes it perfectly clear that the defendants so understood it.

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Bluebook (online)
43 N.J. Eq. 455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-alpaugh-njch-1887.