152 N.W. 281 | N.D. | 1915
(after stating the facts as above). It is conceded that the plaintiff was a nonresident. The statute in relation to the filing of security for costs is mandatory in form. It provides that “in cases in which the plaintiff is a nonresident of the state or a foreign corporation, the plaintiff must, before commencing such action, furnish a sufficient surety for costs,” etc. See § 5597, Rev. Codes 1899, §§ 7196 and 7197, Rov. Codes 1905, and §§ 7812, 7813, Compiled Laws of 1913. The motion for the dismissal for the failure to furnish such security was, it is true, not made until the trial, but the duty to furnish the security was fundamental and obligatory, and if any time was desired or required by the plaintiff in which to furnish the same, he should have applied to the court therefor. The extension in such cases is a matter of favor to the plaintiff and something which he should ask for. He has no right to proceed in the case, and the court has no right to allow him to proceed, without the furnishing of the security. If, therefore, the defendant had moved for a dismissal of the action unless the security should be furnished within a reasonable time, and for a continuance of the action until such time, a denial of such motion would have been palpable error. Cranmer v. Dinsmore, 15 N. D. 604, 109 N. W. 317; Stewart v. Dwyer, 22 N. D. 356, 133 N. W. 990.
Section 7814, Compiled Laws of 1913, being § 7198 Rev. Codes 1905, § 5599, Rev. Codes 1899, however, provides that “an action in which security for costs is required by the last section, and has not been given, shall be dismissed on motion and notice by the defendant at any proper time before judgment, unless, in a reasonable time to be allowed by the court, such security for costs is given,” and it is one thing to dismiss an action and another to insist upon its continuance for a reasonable time until such security is given. Our conclusion, therefore, is that the court did not err in refusing to dismiss the action for the failure to furnish the security, as no notice had been given prior
There seems to be no merit in appellant’s second contention, that the contract was made on January 6, 1911, and was to cover a period of employment up to April 1st, 1912, that is to say, of fifteen months, and therefore should have been in writing, under the provisions of subdivision 1 of § 5332, Rev. Codes 1905, Comp. Laws 1913, § 5888. The only testimony in relation to the subject is that furnished by the plaintiff and by John Wyman, the president of the defendant land company. Wyman testifies as follows: “He, Bergh, met me on the street and asked me for a job. I told him there might be a vacancy soon and I might decide to give him a job. This was in December, 1910, or the first of January, 1911. I later employed him. At that time there was no agreement made as to what wages were to be paid plaintiff. The understanding was to the effect that it was to be left to me. He was willing to accept whatever I saw fit to pay him. Later I met some people in the neighborhood of Hendrum and wrote him a letter and he went to work for me pursuant to that letter. No further agreement as to wages was made until some time in Hay or the last of April. There was an agreement that he was to get $75 a month from the 1st of April, during the summer season. That employment was to continue as long as he suited me at $75 per month. There was no definite time. He had already worked for me for quite a while. He was paid at the rate of $30 per month for the time he worked up to the 1st of April, and $75 per month after that. I said nothing to him about employing him for a year. The first talk I had with Hr. Bergh I think was in Fargo in January, 1911. The conversation took place before the letters which are in evidence. The letters were written afterwards when I hired him. January 6th he came in response to these letters. The understanding was that he was to receive $50 a month and as much more if he could do the work. After he had been on the farm three months the question was taken up again. I went out there to talk the matter over with him. I did not at that time state to him that I would be criticized by the stockholders of my company if I allowed him $75 during the winter months. I told him I wanted to keep him. If he was a good man I wanted to keep him by the year. When I got out there he wanted $900 a year, and I could. not
Q. You accepted $30 from January to April?
A. Yes, I was hired to the 1st of April, 1912.
We can come to no' other conclusion than that the learned trial judge was correct in concluding the agreement which was sued upon and made the basis for the complaint was made somewhere about the 20th day of May, 1911, or at any rate after the 1st of April, 1911, and that at no time was there any agreement that the employment should last longer than to the 1st of April, 1912, and that part of the consideration for the defendant allowing the plaintiff the sum of $75 per month was that the plaintiff should accept $30 per month from the time at which he had gone to work up to April 1st, 1911, and that the prior agreement was entirely indefinite as to time. Such being the case the provisions of the statute of frauds do not apply.
It is not necessary for us to decide whether the court erred in allowing
The judgment of the County Court is affirmed.