MacDonald v. Davis
MacDonald v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
The plaintiff’s claim against the defendant is founded upon
In order to fix the liability of the defendants, the plaintiff alleged in his pleadings that the defendants in this action succeeded to the interests of Benjamin, Zimmerman & Gerdwood, by a contract which was not offered in evidence, and the terms of which are unknown, except that it was to take effect about January 1, 1907. On the trial the plaintiff testified that prior to January 1, 1907, he had had conversations with both of the members of this defendant firm, in which he explained to them the possibilities of the business, drew up a statement of the assets and liabilities from the books of the old firm, the extent of the business, the outstanding contracts for which the outgoing firm was liable, the unpaid bills that were due for office partitions and furnishings, his salary under his contract with them and the general office expenses. His duties were that of cashier and auditor, but his relation to the new firm is not made clear in the testimony; whether he was the individual employee of the general agents,. or whether in addition to being in their employment he was under the direction and control of the parent company, is left in doubt.
While his salary for November and December, at the rate of. $125 per month, is stated to have been paid by Davis & Focht, there is coupled with it a statement that it was paid through John J. Coyle, who was the executive representative of the life insurance company. The employment was continued until March 22, 1907, when plaintiff was dismissed from service by a writing signed by the president of the company, John J. Coyle.
He testified further that when the business was turned over to Davis & Focht, there was an oral contract of employment, that he was to continue his relation to the general business upon the same fixed terms as were set out in the contract between him and Benjamin, Zimmerman & Gerdwood. The difficulty lies in the fact that there was no testimony to connect Davis & Focht with any promise to pay to the plaintiff any wages for any specific time. While the contract with Benjamin, Zimmerman & Gerdwood is clear and specific, the testimony of the plaintiff does not fix any liability on Davis & Focht to carry out its provisions, further than it was a contract of hire at the will of the new employer. Without further evidence on this branch of his case, he is not entitled to recover from these defendants.
He was dismissed from employment by Mr. Coyle, the president of the insurance company, and he testified that he was not discharged by the defendants, that all they stated was that they were sorry he had been'discharged and were powerless to change the situation. He accepted his dismissal from the president of the insurance company, and surrendered all books, papers, cash, etc., pursuant thereto. The court below was fully justified in directing a nonsuit to be entered.
The judgment is affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.