45 Colo. 163 | Colo. | 1909
delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiff, Lilliaú M. Goldman, sued Louis Bauer for an alleged breach of contract for services. The contract is evidenced by a telegram and letters that passed between them, plaintiff then being- in Chicago and defendant in Denver. Plaintiff says that before the employment was consummated she had a conversation with defendant in Denver in which the terms of the contract were discussed, but this conversation, as testified to by her, in no wise changes the force and effect of the engagement as they appear in the letters and telegram in evidence, on the strength of which she left Chicago' and came to Denver to begin work. Defendant sent plaintiff a telegram offering her a position as a saleswoman in his millinery store in Denver and stated “Salary same as offered.Miss Fieldman.” To this letter plaintiff answered:' “Now in regard to salary, .you say same as was offered Miss Fieldman. We do not know what salary was offered her * * * So please let us know whether you or we stand transportation charges. In reply to this letter of plaintiff the defendant wrote her a letter in which, after stating
The foregoing is all the evidence as to the contract. At the trial defendant justified his dischargé of plaintiff at the end of a given week upon the ground that she was disobedient to his directions and indifferent in her work. The court declined, at defendant’s request, to determine from the foregoing evidence, as to which there was no controversy, the duration of the contract but, on the contrary; instructed the jury to determine the same from the written and oral evidence. In this the court was manifestly wrong. The entire contract is shown by the writings, and the oral evidence, as we have said, in no wise changes, contradicts or qualifies it, but is merely a repetition, in substantially the same words, of the language of the letter. Hence it was for the court, not the jury, to say what the contract was. Plaintiff contends on this evidence that she was hired by defendant for a period of one year from the time she began work in April, 1905, at a salary of $15.00 per week, payable weekly, with the further agreement that if she stayed in the service for one season and held her position the amount of her railroad fare would be repaid; while defendant contends that the employment was a weekly employment which might be terminated by either party at the end of any week.
Some of the cases in line with our conclusion are: Jones v. Vestry, etc., 19 Fed. 59; Martin v. Ins. Co., 148 N. Y. 117; 12 Fed. Cas., p. 805, case No. 6, 831, The Hudson; Boogher v. Life Ins. Co., 8 Mo. App. 533; Stanford v. Fisher Varnish Co., 43 N. J. L. 151; Granger v. American Brewing Co., 55 N. Y. Supp. 695; Edwards v. Railroad Co., 121 N. C. 490; Pinckney v. Talmage, 32 S. C. 364; Fuller v. White Lead Works, 111 Mich. 221; Kellogg v. Ins. Co., 94 Wis. 554.
The court also committed error in receiving'in evidence over defendant’s objection a letter written to plaintiff by a former employer certifying that she was a good saleslady and attentive to business and honest and reliable. The issue submitted to the jury, to which this evidence was supposed to be responsive, was not as to plaintiff’s competency, because defendant admitted that. The dispute tried and submitted was whether she was disobedient and properly attended to her duties. This letter of recommendation was inadmissible upon such issue.
If, however, competency was in issue, the letter was not legitimate evidence. The writer was not under oath and defendant had no opportunity to cross-examine.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment must be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.