3 Ga. App. 242 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1907
Plaintiff in error brought a suit on a contract in the city court of Washington, alleging that on the 23d of November, 1906, the defendants in error employed him to work as a clerk in their store during the balance of 1906 and the year 1907, át $50 per month. The suit was for the unpaid balance claimed for the month of January, 1907. At the conclusion of the plaintiff's evidence, the court granted a nonsuit and dismissed the case; and ’exception is taken to this judgment. According to the plaintiff's ■evidence, he received a telegram from the defendants on the 16tlp of November, and in response to the telegram went to Washington und on the 23 d of November entered into an agreement to clerk for them. The telegram was as follows: “Frank Bentley, Woodville, ■Ga. Dry Goods position open. $50 per month until January. Permanent position. Can you accept at once? O. & H. Smith.” According to plaintiff's own testimony, all that was agreed between the parties was that the defendants would give $50 per month until January 1, 1907, and that they would then increase his wages. He testified that the defendants did not say how much his wages would be increased, nor did he ask. According to the plaintiff’s testimony he left it with the defendant, Ollie Smith, as to any raise in his salary. In addition to this, the plaintiff testified, that the •defendant, Ollie Smith, said that he wished to employ the plaintiff in a permanent job; that he replied that he could not move his family to Washington for anything less than a year and would’not do so; that he moved from Woodville to Washington and that it ■cost him $40 to move. The plaintiff did not testify that it was
1. The plaintiff alleged in his petition that he had a definite contract for $50 per month. His evidence did not confirm or support that allegation. It failed to show that there, had been any definite agreement as to the sum to be paid him after January 1, and the suit was brought for the remainder of that month. The proof, so far from sustaining the allegations, failed to establish any contract at all for any stipulated sum per month. The amount to be paid, so far from being actually agreed upon, was to be determined thereafter by Ollie Smith, one of the partners. The only testimony,in the case (that of the plaintiff himself) clearly established that no price was fixed for his services after January 1, and that there was no agreement, either expressed or tacit, on the part of the defendants that he should be paid that sum. The court could well have sustained the motion to nonsuit upon this ground. The plaintiff failed to prove his cas.e as laid.
2. But even if the evidence for the plaintiff, in spite of the telegram which he introduced, can be construed as speaking a definite contract of employment, it was not error to grant the nonsuit, because the evidence showed that the contract of employment, upon which the plaintiff’s right of action depended, was not to be performed within one year from the making thereof, and no evidence was adduced which would take it out of the statute of frauds. Civil Code, §2693.
3. It is insisted, however, by counsel for the plaintiff in error, that there was such part performance as will except it from the operation of the statute of frauds. What is the part performance relied upon? It is found in' the testimony of the plaintiff, that he moved his family from Woodville to Washington in order to carry out his contract. We do not think that there was such part performance of the contract as would take the case out of the statute of frauds, — such part performance as would render it a fraud on the part of the party refusing to comply. In Wood on
Counsel for the plaintiff in error cited the cases of McLeod v. Hendry, 126 Ga. 169 (54 S. E. 940), Fontaine v. Baxley, 90 Ga. 416 (17 S. E. 1015), and Barnett Steamers v. Blackmar, 53 Ga. 98, to sustain their contention that there was such part performance of the contract as would take the case out of the statute of frauds. In accord with our holding that the part performance must be such an act as is essential to the contract, it appears in
So we conclude that neither the service of the plaintiff in error until January 5, nor. the expense of the removal of his family, is such part performance of the contract as would take it out of the statute of frauds. We somewhat sympathize personally with the argument of counsel for the plaintiff in error, who follows his-argument with this question: “Can it be said that under all the facts of this case, upon the facts showing bad faith and fraud, upon the part performance of the contract, upon the fact that the defendants used the services of petitioner for seven days of the month, for the salary of which this suit is brought, that all these facts and circumstances count for naught, and that, despite the justice of our cause, the law turns away her face?” And he concludes with the exclamation: “If so, then from our code should come the statement that for every wrong there is a remedy, for in this'ease there is none.” We have no power over the practical
4. The telegram introduced in the case confirms our opinion of the correctness of the ruling of the trial judge. When it is considered in connection with the plaintiff’s testimony that there was no definite, agreement as to the value of his services after January 1, it appears that the defendants in error had the right to discharge the plaintiff, as they did. The language used in the telegram was “permanent employment,” and a contract for permanent employment has been held to be a contract to continue indefinitely, and terminable at any time by either of the parties.. 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d ed.), 16. Judgment affirmed.