Anna Sacks Feinberg, (Plaintiff) Respondent, vs. The Pfeiffer Company, a
Corporation, Formerly Known as S. Pfeiffer Manufacturing Co., a Corporation, (Defendant)
Appellant
Nos. 30183 and 30204
COURT OF APPEALS OF MISSOURI, ST. LOUIS DISTRICT
322 S.W.2d 163; 1959 Mo. App. LEXIS 568
03/17/59
PRIOR HISTORY:
From the Circuit Court of City of St. Louis
Civil Appeal From Action for Damages (Monetary Recovery)
Judge John C. Casey
Affirmed
OPINION BY: Doerner, C.
OPINION: This is a suit brought in the Circuit Court of the City of St. Louis by
plaintiff, a former employee of the defendant corporation, on an alleged contract whereby
defendant agreed to pay plaintiff the sum of $200 per month for life upon her retirement.
A jury being waived, the case was tried by the court alone. Judgment below was for
plaintiff for $5100, the amount of the pension claimed to be due as of the date of the
trial, together with interest thereon, and defendant duly appealed.
The parties are in substantial agreement on the essential facts. Plaintiff began working
for the defendant, a manufacturer of pharmaceuticals, in 1910, when she was but 17 years
of age. By 1947 she had attained the position of bookkeeper, office manager, and assistant
treasurer of the defendant, and owned 70 shares of its stock out of a total of 6503 shares
issued and outstanding. Twenty shares had been given to her by the defendant or its then
president, she had purchased 20, and the remaining 30 she had acquired by a stock
split or stock dividend. Over the years she received substantial dividends on the stock
she owned, as did all of the other stockholders. Also, in addition to her salary,
plaintiff from 1937 to 1949, inclusive, received each year a bonus varying in amount from
$300 in the beginning to $2000 in the later years.
On December 27, 1947, the annual meeting of the defendant's Board of Directors was held at
the Company's offices in St. Louis, presided over by Max Lippman, its then president and
largest individual stockholder. The other directors present were George L. Marcus, Sidney
Harris, Sol Flammer, and Walter Weinstock, who, with Max Lippman, owned 5007 of the 6503
shares then issued and outstanding. At that meeting the Board of Directors adopted the
following resolution, which, because it is the crux of the case, we quote in full:
"The Chairman thereupon pointed out that the Assistant Treasurer, Mrs. Anna Sacks
Feinberg, has given the corporation many years of long and faithful service. Not only has
she served the corporation devotedly, but with exceptional ability and skill. The
President pointed out that although all of the officers and directors sincerely hoped
and desired that Mrs. Feinberg would continue in her present position for as long as she
felt able, nevertheless, in view of the length of service which she has contributed
provision should be made to afford her retirement privileges and benefits which should
become a firm obligation of the corporation to be available to her whenever she should see
fit to retire from active duty, however many years in the future such retirement may
become effective. It was, accordingly, proposed that Mrs. Feinberg's salary which is
presently $350.00 per month, be increased to $400.00 per month, and that Mrs. Feinberg
would be given the privilege of retiring from active duty at any time she may elect to see
fit so to do upon a retirement pay of $200.00 per month for life, with the distinct
understanding that the retirement plan is merely being adopted at the present time in
order to afford Mrs. Feinberg security for the future and in the hope that her active
services will continue with the corporation for many years to come. After due discussion
and consideration, and upon motion duly made and seconded, it was -
"RESOLVED, that the salary of Anna Sacks Feinberg be increased from $350.00 to
$400.00 per month and that she be afforded the privilege of retiring from active duty in
the corporation at any time she may elect to see fit so to do upon retirement pay of
$200.00 per month, for the remainder of her life."
At the request of Mr. Lippman his sons-in-law, Messrs. Harris and Flammer, called upon the
plaintiff at her apartment on the same day to advise her of the passage of the resolution.
Plaintiff testified on cross-examination that she had no prior information that such a
pension plan was contemplated, that it came as a surprise to her, and that she would have
continued in her employment whether or not such a resolution had been adopted. It is clear
from the evidence that there was no contract, oral or written, as to plaintiff's length of
employment, and that she was free to quit, and the defendant to discharge her, at any
time.
Plaintiff did continue to work for the defendant through June 30, 1949, on which date she
retired. In accordance with the foregoing resolution, the defendant began paying her the
sum of $200 on the first of each month. Mr. Lippman died on November 18, 1949, and was
succeeded as president of the company by his widow. Because of an illness, she
retired from that office and was succeeded in October, 1953, by her son-in-law, Sidney M.
Harris. Mr. Harris testified that while Mrs. Lippman had been president she signed the
monthly pension check paid plaintiff, but fussed about doing so, and considered the
payments as gifts. After his election, he stated, a new accounting firm employed by the
defendant questioned the validity of the payments to plaintiff on several occasions, and
in the Spring of 1956, upon its recommendation, he consulted the Company's then attorney,
Mr. Ralph Kalish. Harris testified that both Ernst and Ernst, the accounting firm, and
Kalish told him there was no need of giving plaintiff the money. He also stated that he
had concurred in the view that the payments to plaintiff were mere gratuities rather than
amounts due under a contractual obligation, and that following his discussion with the
Company's attorney plaintiff was sent a check for $100 on April 1, 1956. Plaintiff
declined to accept the reduced amount, and this action followed. Additional facts will be
referred to later in this opinion....
Appellant's ... complaint is that there was insufficient evidence to support the court's
findings that plaintiff would not have quit defendant's employ had she not known and
relied upon the promise of defendant to pay her $200 a month for life, and the finding
that, from her voluntary retirement until April 1, 1956, plaintiff relied upon the
continued receipt of the pension installments. The trial court so found, and, in our
opinion, justifiably so. Plaintiff testified, and was corroborated by Harris, defendant's
witness, that knowledge of the passage of the resolution was communicated to her on
December 27, 1947, the very day it was adopted. She was told at that time by Harris and
Flammer, she stated, that she could take the pension as of that day, if she wished. She
testified further that she continued to work for another year and a half, through June 30,
1949; that at that time her health was good and she could have continued to work, but that
after working for almost forty years she thought she would take a rest. Her testimony
continued:
"Q. Now, what was the reason - I'm sorry. Did you then quit the employment of the
company after you - after this year and a half?
"A. Yes.
"Q. What was the reason that you left?
"A. Well, I thought almost forty years, it was a long time and I thought I would take
a little rest.
"Q. Yes.
"A. And with the pension and what earnings my husband had, we figured we could get
along.
"Q. Did you rely upon this pension?
"A. We certainly did.
"Q. Being paid?
"A. Very much so. We relied upon it because I was positive that I was going to get it
as long as I lived.
"Q. Would you have left the employment of the company at that time had it not been
for this pension?
"A. No.
"MR. ALLEN: Just a minute, I object to that as calling for a conclusion and
conjecture on the part of this witness.
"THE COURT: It will be overruled.
"Q. (Mr. Agatstein continuing): Go ahead, now. The question is whether you would have
quit the employment of the company at that time had you not relied upon this pension plan?
"A. No, I wouldn't.
"Q. You would not have. Did you ever seek employment while this pension was being
paid to you -
"A. (interrupting): No.
"Q. Wait a minute, at any time prior - at any other place?
"A. No, sir.
"Q. Were you able to hold any other employment during that time?
"A. Yes, I think so.
"Q. Was your health good?
"A. My health was good."
It is obvious from the foregoing that there was ample evidence to support the findings of
fact made by the court below.
We come, then, to the basic issue in the case...: "* * * whether plaintiff has proved
that she has a right to recover from defendant based upon a legally binding
contractual obligation to pay her $200 per month for life."
It is defendant's contention, in essence, that the resolution adopted by its Board of
Directors was a mere promise to make a gift, and that no contract resulted either thereby,
or when plaintiff retired, because there was no consideration given or paid by the
plaintiff. It urges that a promise to make a gift is not binding unless supported
by a legal consideration; that the only apparent consideration for the adoption of
the foregoing resolution was the "many years of long and faithful service"
expressed therein; and that past services are not a valid consideration for a promise.
Defendant argues further that there is nothing in the resolution which made its
effectiveness conditional upon plaintiff's continued employment, that she was not under
contract to work for any length of time but was free to quit whenever she wished, and that
she had no contractual right to her position and could have been discharged at any time.
Plaintiff concedes that a promise based upon past services would be without consideration,
but contends that there were two other elements which supplied the required element:
First, the continuation by plaintiff in the employ of the defendant for the period from
December 27, 1947, the date when the resolution was adopted, until the date of her
retirement on June 30, 1949. And, second, her change of position, i.e., her retirement,
and the abandonment by her of her opportunity to continue in gainful employment, made in
reliance on defendant's promise to pay her $200 per month for life.
We must agree with the defendant that the evidence does not support the first of
these contentions. There is no language in the resolution predicating plaintiff's right to
a pension upon her continued employment. She was not required to work for the defendant
for any period of time as a condition to gaining such retirement benefits. She was told
that she could quit the day upon which the resolution was adopted, as she herself
testified, and it is clear from her own testimony that she made no promise or agreement to
continue in the employ of the defendant in return for its promise to pay her a pension.
Hence there was lacking that mutuality of obligation which is essential to the validity of
a contract.
But as to the second of these contentions we must agree with plaintiff. By the terms of
the resolution defendant promised to pay plaintiff the sum of $200 a month upon her
retirement. Consideration for a promise has been defined in the Restatement of the Law of
Contracts, Section 75, as:
"(1) Consideration for a promise is
(a) an act other than a promise, or
(b) a forbearance, or
(c) the creation, modification or destruction of a legal relation, or
(d) a return promise, bargained for and given in exchange for the promise."
As the parties agree, the consideration sufficient to support a contract may be either a
benefit to the promisor or a loss or detriment to the promisee.
Section 90 of the Restatement of the Law of Contracts states that: "A promise which
the promisor should reasonably expect to induce action or forbearance of a definite and
substantial character on the part of the promisee and which does induce such action or
forbearance is binding if injustice can be avoided only by enforcement of the
promise." ...
Was there ... an act on the part of plaintiff, in reliance upon the promise contained in
the resolution, as will ... create an enforceable contract? ... We think there was. One of
the illustrations cited under Section 90 of the Restatement is: "2. A promises B to
pay him an annuity during B's life. B thereupon resigns a profitable employment, as A
expected that he might. B receives the annuity for some years, in the meantime becoming
disqualified from again obtaining good employment. A's promise is binding." ...
As the trial court correctly decided, such action on plaintiff's part was her
retirement from a lucrative position in reliance upon defendant's promise to pay her an
annuity or pension. In a very similar case, Ricketts v. Scothorn, 57 Nebr. 51, 77 N.W.
365, 367, the Supreme Court of Nebraska said:
"* * * According to the undisputed proof, as shown by the record before us, the
plaintiff was a working girl, holding a position in which she earned a salary of $10 per
week. Her grandfather, desiring to put her in a position of independence, gave her the
note, accompanying it with the remark that his other grandchildren did not work, and that
she would not be obliged to work any longer. In effect, he suggested that she might
abandon her employment, and rely in the future upon the bounty which he promised. He
doubtless desired that she should give up her occupation, but, whether he did or not, it
is entirely certain that he contemplated such action on her part as a reasonable and
probable consequence of his gift. Having intentionally influenced the plaintiff to alter
her position for the worse on the faith of the note being paid when due, it would be
grossly inequitable to permit the maker, or his executor, to resist payment on the ground
that the promise was given without consideration."
The Commissioner therefore recommends, for the reasons stated, that the judgment be
affirmed.
PER CURIAM: The foregoing opinion by Doerner, C., is adopted as the opinion of the court.
The judgment is, accordingly, affirmed.