Zussman v. Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc.

469 S.W.2d 671, 63 Tenn. App. 113, 1970 Tenn. App. LEXIS 314
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 25, 1970
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 469 S.W.2d 671 (Zussman v. Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zussman v. Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc., 469 S.W.2d 671, 63 Tenn. App. 113, 1970 Tenn. App. LEXIS 314 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinions

CARNEY, Judge.

Complainant below, Mrs. Jane Zussman, was awarded a verdict of $71,000 by the jury in Chancery Court against the defendant, Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc. of Memphis, Tennessee, for damages arising out of the alleged breach of an employment contract. The defendant, Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc., has appealed and assigned error.

The defendant is an advertising agency whose principal client is Plough, Inc. Plough, Inc.’s annual advertising account with defendant approached IS million dollars. Of course, this amount included cost of television and radio talent, time and newspaper advertising, etc.

The complainant, Mrs. Jane Zussman, age 50, had worked for the defendant 26 years continuously prior to December 30, 1967, in the role of Copy Chief and Creative Director. Prior to December 30, 1967, the complainant had had no written contract of employment and had no security of tenure of employment other than on a year-to-year basis. For one year prior to December 30, 1967, the complainant had repeatedly asked her employer, Mr. Spiro, for a written contract of employment giving her some job security as well as tax benefits.

On December 30, 1967, the complainant, Mrs. Jane Zussman, and defendant final[673]*673ized a written contract of employment called “Deferred Compensation Plan.” The purposes and underlying reasons for the execution of the contract were set out in the preamble as follows:

“WHEREAS, Mrs. Zussman is and has been employed by The Company in excess of twenty-six years and has performed valuable services as an executive in recent years;
WHEREAS, she possesses great artistic ability in the advertising business and intimate knowledge of The Company, its operating methods, personnel, and client problems; and
WHEREAS, The Company desires to secure her future services, to secure her commitment to furnish advisory services to The Company following the termination of her employment with The Company, and to secure her agreement not to compete with The Company now or following her termination of employment with The Company.”

Under the contract complainant’s salary was set at $24,000 per year; one-half payable at the rate of $1,000 per month, the other one-half or $1,000 per month was to be used to buy mutual funds and not paid to the complainant until (1) she terminated her employment, (2) she became a part-time employee, or (3) she became partially or totally disabled.

Complainant was guaranteed employment for five years and could be fired only for good cause. Upon termination of her contract, complainant agreed not to go into competition with the defendant Company for five years after January 1, 1973, during which time the complainant was obligated to furnish consultation services to the defendant.

The contract was prepared by the defendant’s attorney or its tax counsel. Beginning January 1, 1968, the complainant was paid $1,000 per month less withholding deductions, etc. and the other $1,000 monthly payment was paid by the defendant to a broker for investment in a mutual fund for complainant. Complainant signed a written authorization to handle the deferred compensation by the purchase of mutual funds. This investment was in a fund called “1 Williams Street Fund.”

The contract contained a provision that it was contingent upon receiving a favorable ruling from the Internal Revenue Service to the effect that the deferred portion of the compensation would not be taxable to Mrs. Zussman until payments were actually received by her under the agreement and that the deferred portion of the compensation would not be deductible by the company until received by Mrs. Zussman. On February 2, 1968, accountants for defendant made application to the Internal Revenue Service for a ruling as to the legality of the deferred compensation plan.

In June, 1968, before a ruling had been received from the Internal Revenue Service, Mr. Lanigan, new president of the defendant Company, withdrew the request for a ruling.

Plough, Inc.’s business with defendant increased. In April, 1968, Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc. decided to beef up its personnel and hired Mr. Lanigan from New York to become the new president of Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc. in Memphis. Mr. Spiro became chairman of the board. Mr. Lanigan was authorized and expected to hire a number of new writers and advertising specialists for the defendant Company.

Mrs. Zussman was the only employee of Lake-Spiro-Shurman, Inc. who had a written contract of employment. When Mr. Lanigan first learned of the contract, he decided then and there that such contract could not continue because none of the other employees, including himself, had any written contract of employment but were simply employees at will. He set about immediately to cancel the contract.

Several conferences ensued between Mr. Lanigan and the complainant, Mrs. Zuss-man. During the course of one or more [674]*674conversations Mr. Lanigan told the complainant that her contract was unenforceable and that he would not follow it. Mrs. Zussman testified that on June 4, 1968, in a conversation with Mr. Lanigan she told him that she would never agree to withdrawing the contract hut that if he would come up with something better she would be willing to accept it provided she had equal benefits and that she kept the five-year employment provision of the contract.

Mr. Lanigan told her that he would raise her pay to $25,000 per year; guarantee her a bonus of $2,500 per year and make her vice president of the company and that this would be better than the contract which she had. Without the knowledge of the complainant, Mr. Lanigan ordered a withdrawal of the request for approval from the Internal Revenue Service of the December 30, 1967, contract. He also ordered the broker to sell the interests of Mrs. Zussman in 1 Williams Street Fund without her knowledge or consent.

On June 13, 1968, Mrs. Zussman received a check for $691.17 which represented one-half of her monthly salary on the $25,000 basis less deductions. Up until that time she had not received during the year 1968 a check in the middle of the month because the mid-month check had previously gone into the investment fund under the written contract of December 30, 1967. She received an additional check on July 15, 1968, and one on August 15, 1968. The checks on the first of each month were substantially in the same amount as she had been receiving under the December 30, 1967, agreement.

Mrs. Zussman cashed at least two of these mid-monthly checks and authorized the bookkeeping department to make additional withholding therefrom based on anticipated income of her husband who was an M.D. practicing in Memphis, Tennessee. The combined income of Mrs. Zussman and her husband for 1967 was approximately $50,000 and they were in the 50% tax bracket.

Mrs. Zussman continued to press Mr. Lanigan to reduce the new contract to writing. On July 26, 1968, President Lani-gan handed a written memorandum to Mrs. Zussman stating that the deferred compensation plan dated December 30, 1967, never materialized and it was not approved by the Internal Revenue Service and that he and Mrs. Zussman had agreed to cancel it and that in lieu thereof her salary had been increased to $25,000 a year with a 10% bonus and that she had been made vice president-creative.

On July 29, 1968, Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
469 S.W.2d 671, 63 Tenn. App. 113, 1970 Tenn. App. LEXIS 314, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zussman-v-lake-spiro-shurman-inc-tennctapp-1970.