50 Mich. 349 | Mich. | 1883
Plaintiff sued defendant for the balance of a year’s salary after his discharge during the term of his alleged employment. In the court below he recovered the full amount claimed, and defendant brings error on two principal grounds: First, because he proved no such contract as set up; and second, because testimony in defense was shut out.
The contract sued on was set out as an agreement to
It appeared from letters in the case that defendant engaged plaintiff on a two-months’ trial, to begin May 17, and that if then found satisfactory the employment should be for a year on the basis of former letters- — which were substantially as declared on. Before this trial time ran out, plaintiff wrote desiring an immediate employment. This was accepted by a letter from a clerk, whieh seems to have been without authority. But defendant subsequently, by various letters, recognized and dealt with plaintiff as in his employ on the terms stated, and we have no doubt the contract was sufficiently made out. It is equally certain that there was testimony tending to show that the defendant practically terminated the engagement and did not agree to new terms proposed by plaintiff.
If, therefore, plaintiff had fully performed to date and was ready to perform in the future, he was entitled to such damages as would make him good. But how this amount should be got at is an important consideration.
The construction put upon the contract by the parties was that $800 a year was merely the assumed ratio, and not the actual salary of plaintiff, and he was paid from time to time on sales actually made, which fell very much below $15,000 a year. We think this is what the contract meant, and it is evidently what the parties siipposed it meant. We think,. therefore, that the instruction which assumed that $15,000 would be the expected annual sales, and $800 the salary for the whole year, was unauthorized. The contract was in substance, as acted on by the parties, the same as if $800 had been entirely omitted except in case sales were made
We think it was also erroneous to exclude testimony of plaintiff’s lack of diligence. The court below held that he was, by the contract itself, sufficiently-mulcted for any such failure by the loss of commissions which he would have gained by larger sales, as practically stipulated damages.
Plaintiff was to receive $140 a month absolutely for traveling expenses. This was to pay him on the basis of continuous active service on defendant’s behalf, and failure to perform such service would be a distinct breach of contract which would prevent his suing upon the contract at all, and would leave him to his suit for services actually rendered, and for which there- was no considerable sum due. Evidence of his lack of diligence or of his neglect of duty was therefore admissible in reduction or bar of his action. And expressions of confidence in him, based on his own communications, while admissible for, what they are worth, would constitute no estoppel against showing his default, or in any way explaining what he did or neglected to do.
Some other questions of minor consequence appear in the record, but not in such a form, that we can readily dispose of them.
Judgment must be reversed with costs and new trial granted.