L.T. Huddon, Inc. v. Swarovski America Ltd., 84-192-A
Decision Date | 05 June 1986 |
Docket Number | No. 84-192-A,84-192-A |
Citation | 510 A.2d 158 |
Court | Rhode Island Supreme Court |
Parties | 106 Lab.Cas. P 55,712, 1 IER Cases 842 L.T. HUDDON, INC., d/b/a L.T. Huddon & Associates et al. v. SWAROVSKI AMERICA LIMITED et al. ppeal. |
This case comes before us on the plaintiffs' appeal from a judgment entered in the Superior Court in favor of the defendants in a civil action for breach of contract of employment. The judgment was entered after a jury verdict based upon the jury's answer to a written interrogatory. We vacate the judgment and remand for a new trial. The facts of the case insofar as pertinent to the appeal are as follows.
Laurence T. Huddon (Huddon) was engaged as a jewelry designer by defendant Swarovski America Limited (Swarovski) through its president, Lawrence E. Metcalfe (Metcalfe), at a salary of $75,000 per year. Under this agreement Huddon was to work full time for Swarovski and was to forego all of his freelance jewelry-designing work. Huddon began working in early June 1979. About two months later, a disagreement arose concerning whether Huddon was working for Avenir Corporation on Swarovski's products or whether he was working as a freelance designer for Avenir. As a result of this disagreement, Huddon was either terminated by Metcalfe or decided to leave voluntarily. This issue was never specifically decided by the jury.
Crucial to our determination of this case is the question of whether Huddon was engaged for a definite period of one year, as he contends, or whether he was engaged for an indefinite period of time, as defendants claim. In his complaint Huddon made the following allegation concerning his employment:
"On or about June 13, 1979, Plaintiffs contracted with Defendants for the full-time services of Plaintiff, Laurence T. Huddon at a rate of seventy-five thousand ($75,000.00) dollars for a one-year period payable in weekly installments."
To this allegation, defendants filed an answer that stated, "[A]dmitted." Huddon contended at the trial that this answer conclusively established a contract of employment for one year. The trial justice, however, ruled that this pleading was ambiguous and submitted the issue of the period of employment to the jury for determination in interrogatory number 1, which read as follows:
By the terms of this interrogatory, the jury was allowed to determine as a question of fact whether Huddon had been hired for a definite period. In the event that the jury was to find that Huddon's employment was for an indefinite period of time, presumably it was unnecessary...
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...Police. Thus, under the rule that facts admitted in the pleadings are held as true against the pleader, L.T. Huddon, Inc. v. Swarovski America Ltd., 510 A.2d 158, 159 (R.I. 1986); State of Rhode Island v. Piedmont Funding Corp., 119 R.I. 695, 699, 382 A.2d 819, 822 (1978), Salisbury effecti......
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Sweredoski v. Alfa Laval, Inc.
...It is true that admitted allegations averred in a complaint may constitute judicially binding facts. See L.T. Huddon, Inc. v. Swarovski Am. Ltd., 510 A.2d 158, 159 (R.I. 1986). Further, "pleadings in a pending case which are still active claims are . . . appropriate as evidence of inconsist......
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Sweredoski v. Alfa Laval, Inc.
... ... See L.T. Huddon, ... Inc. v. Swarovski Am. Ltd., 510 A.2d ... ...