128 F. 886 | 9th Cir. | 1904
The parties to this action entered into a written contract on the 14th day of February, 1902, by which the defendant in error (plaintiff below) agreed to work for the plaintiff in error (defendant below) “as a superintendent or foreman, or in such other capacity as both parties hereto consent to, for the term of one year, beginning March 1, 1902, in the territory of Alaska, or elsewhere in the United States, as said party of the first part (the plaintiff in error) shall desire, and to well and faithfully devote his entire time, ef
“Is of such a nature that it is customary and necessary to secure employment therein by the year, or for the whole season of fishing and canning, and plaintiff, although he has endeavored so to do, has not been able, apd will not be able, prior to the beginning of the next season of fishing, to wit, about March 1, 1903, to secure any employment, and will during the whole period from June 24, 1902, to March 1, 1903, be left without employment and compelled to support himself at his own expense; that defendant has only paid plaintiff the sum of $766.66 on his wages due and to become due under said contract, and refuses to pay plaintiff’s expenses to Seattle, or to pay his board and lodging from and after said 24th day of June, 1902; that by reason*260 of the breach of contract by defendant as aforesaid plaintiff has been damaged in the following sums, to wit:
For loss of wages..................... $1,633.33
Expenses for board and lodging......... 410.00
Expenses return trip to Seattle........... 25.00
Making an aggregate of.......... $2,068.33
“Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment against defendant for the sum of two thousand sixty-eight and 3%oo dollars ($2,068.33), together with costs herein incurred.”
The answer of the defendant contained, among other things, the following: “For further, separate, and affirmative defense, defendant alleges that plaintiff failed and neglected to in any wise perform the conditions- of the contract of employment on his part, and that the plaintiff is .unskilled, negligent, and incompetent, and. in all respects failed to perform the duties for which he was employed, and the defendant was compelled 4o and did employ other persons to perform the duties for which the said plaintiff was employed; that plaintiff in no respect complied with the terms of his contract, and his representations as to his knowledge, skill, and ability were false; that by reason of the unskillfulness, want of knowledge, and lack of experience on the part of said plaintiff, defendant was compelled to dispense with his services by mutual agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant on or about the 24th day of June, 1902, at which time plaintiff and defendant had a mutual, full, complete, and absolute settlement of all differences between them. Defendant then and there paid to the plaintiff all sums of money due the plaintiff for his services theretofore rendered, which settlement was in all respects satisfactory to the plaintiff in all particulars; and plaintiff then and there made, executed, and delivered his receipt in writing in full of all demands, which receipt defendant now holds, and which settlement was a complete and absolute one,. and satisfactory to all parties at the time. Defendant denies that it at this time is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $2088.33, or any other sum whatsoever.”
On the trial the plaintiff introduced "the contract in evidence, and testified on his own behalf to the effect that he
The instruction thus given and excepted to is the concluding clause of the instructions of the court in respect to the measure of damages, the whole of which- is as follows: “Now, as to the measure of damages: That is what the defendant agreed to pay this man, if he has a right to recover at all, viz., two hundred dollars per month and his board. If there were proof upon the question, he would be entitled to the expense of a return trip to Seattle, because that, as I understand it, is a part of the contract. Now, for what time may he recover? The allegation of
The instruction, as well as the theory upon which the complaint proceeds, is erroneous. The plaintiff’s cause of action was not for wages, but for damages for breach of the contract. The complaint nowhere alleges that there is anything due the plaintiff from the defendant for services actually rendered; and, while it alleges that the plaintiff has been damaged by the defendant, the specific allegations of damage hereinbefore quoted clearly show that what he asked as damages, and all that he asked, is pay for his constructive services at the rate specified in the contract. In Saxonia Mining & Reduction Co. v. Cook (Colo.) 4 P. 1111, it is said: “When a servant is discharged, without a sufficient legal excuse, before the expiration of his term, he has his choice of two remedies: He may treat the contract as rescinded, and at once bring an action for the value of the services rendered; or he may treat the contract as continuing, and sue for a breach thereof, and recover his probable damages occasioned by the breach; or, in some cases, he may defer suit until the end of the term, and sue for the actual damage he has sustained, which, however, can in no case exceed the wages for the entire term. Wood, Master & Servant, § 125, and authorities cited; Smith, Master & Servant, 91; Suth. Dam. 471. Under the remedy in the latter class of cases, the measure of damages is, not the amount of wages stipulated in the contract for the entire term, but the actual loss, to be established by proof, although the amount of the agreed wages may be taken as the measure of damages prima facie, or in the absence of any other showing. He cannot recover the wages accruing for the balance of the term as a matter of course. He is bound to use reasonable efforts to secure labor elsewhere. If he has secured labor elsewhere, or by reasonable diligence might have done so, the amount received, or that might have been received, for such labor is to be deducted from the amount of the damages occasioned by the breach of the contract sued upon. Wood, Master & Servant, § 125, and cases cited; 1 Suth. Dam. 473.”
The plaintiff’s duty (if he was improperly discharged) was to use prompt and reasonable diligence to procure other employment of a similar character, and thus reduce the damages; and, if he did not conform to that duty, the damages should be mitigated to the extent of the compensation which he might .have received by proper effort in seeking employment. Park Bros. & Co. v. Bushnell, 60 F. 583, 9 C.C.A. 138; Howard v. Daly, 61 N.Y. 362, 19 Am. Rep. 285; Costigan v. R. R. Co., 2 Denio, 609, 43 Am. Dec. 758. This phase of the case was eliminated from consideration by the jury under the instructions of the court below, which were to the effect that the plaintiff was entitled to recover (if at all) the amount that would be due under the contract in question from the 1st day of March, 1902, to the time of the rendition of the verdict, less the amount • actually paid. The jury might have been satisfied, from the plaintiff’s own testimony, from his manner of testifying, for instance, that he did not make any reasonable or bona fide effort to obtain other employment, and yet by the instructions of the court they were precluded from giving effect to such a conclusion.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded to the court below for further proceedings.