96 S.E. 135 | S.C. | 1918
Lead Opinion
March 20, 1918. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for damages for the breach of a contract for hiring. The case was tried before Judge Spain and a jury at September term of Court, 1917, for Greenville county, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $305. After entry of judgment, defendants appeal.
Exception 1 complains of error in admitting in evidence the copy of telegram received by the plaintiff at Sweetwater, Tenn. This telegram bears date of October 31, 1916, and was filed at defendants' office at Calhoun, S.C. by J.S. Stone, as foreman, and was in answer to a telegram of inquiry asked for by plaintiff. The telegram admitted was received by plaintiff at Sweetwater, Tenn. The defendants answered plaintiff's inquiry by filing at Calhoun, S.C. with the Western Union Telegraph Company a message to be transmitted by it to the plaintiff. By engaging the telegraph company to transmit the message it became the agent of the defendants and the message received by the plaintiff was the original and best evidence against the defendants. Plaintiff had the right to act on the telegram received by him in response to his inquiry. He could not in Tennessee call for and inspect the original message filed at Calhoun, S.C. Neither is there any contention that the message delivered to plaintiff was in any way different from the one filed at Calhoun, S.C. The contention asked for by the defendants is unreasonable and cannot be sustained. This exception is overruled.
Exception 2 complains of error in allowing plaintiff, over objection, to testify that he brought his family from Tennessee *367 to South Carolina at trouble and expense. This objection is overruled. If defendants contracted with plaintiff and breached that contract, any damages that would naturally flow therefrom were competent evidence in estimating damages, but the admission of the evidence in no view of the case was prejudicial to the defendants, as the Judge charged the jury that the measure of damages was solely the damage for loss of time and the defendants have not excepted to this part of his Honor's charge. This exception is overruled.
Exception 3 complains of error in not granting nonsuit asked for by defendants at the close of plaintiff's testimony. The evidence in the case warranted his Honor in refusing the motion and submitting case to jury. This exception is overruled.
Exceptions 4, 5, 6 and 7 are based on the ground that his Honor erred in leaving to the jury the construction of the contract between plaintiff and defendants, which contract was in writing. His Honor stated the issues involved clearly, and charged the law of the case properly, and submitted to the jury the question for them to decide whether the contract was one contended for by the plaintiff or one contended for by the defendants; each party had been allowed to show what was their interpretation of the telegram, and the defendants cannot be heard to complain of the evidence they brought out and was passed upon by the jury. His Honor submitted to the jury the question of the duration of the contract; when it commenced and when it ended. This, under the evidence, he clearly had the right to do. He submitted the issuable facts of the case to the jury. This charge as a whole is free from error, and the defendants were in no manner prejudiced thereby. The jury found against the defendants that there was no release or discharge as to future services. Part of the contract was in writing and part oral, and his Honor correctly submitted it to the jury. *368
Exceptions overruled. Judgment affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MESSRS. JUSTICES HYDRICK and GAGE concur.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot concur in the opinion of the majority in this case. The defendants were engaged in "certain railroad construction work," and wanted a trestle foreman. They received an inquiry from the plaintiff, as plaintiff states as follows:
"I understand you are in need of a trestle man. What will you pay? How long will the job last?"
To this inquiry the defendant's foreman replied:
"Come at once. Five dollars per day. Work will last until spring."
The plaintiff worked a little over eight days and was then discharged because the defendants were not satisfied with his work. Neither the defendants nor their foreman knew the plaintiff. The plaintiff testified:
"I knew that they knew nothing about me or the work that I could do. I don't know whether a contractor would employ a man that he knew nothing about for any definite period of time. I expected my job to last so long as I gave satisfaction. I regarded my agreement as fixed to the 20th of March, because the 20th of March is always considered the first day of spring. * * * I have not worked very much at this kind of business. I know that if a man does not give satisfaction he is discharged."
Again the plaintiff said:
"I was not accustomed to putting up this kind of work."
It seems to me that those who build railroads should put the most skillful and experienced men to build the trestle over which expensive machinery and men must pass. Valuable *369 property and human lives depend upon the skill and experience of those who build trestles. I cannot hold that the contract was absolute and required the defendants to furnish trestle work to the plaintiff without regard to his efficiency from October 31st to March 20th. The plaintiff admits that the defendants did not know his want of experience. The plaintiff did know it, and his application for the job carried with it a guaranty of his skill and experience. It seems to me that the plaintiff admits himself out of Court when he admits his want of experience and his knowledge that he was required to give satisfaction in order to hold his job.
Besides this, I do not see that there was a contract until spring. The defendants paid the plaintiff $5 per day for the time he worked, and, so far as the case shows to the contrary, the work lasted until spring. Respondent says plaintiff gave his understanding of the contract and the defendants gave their version, and that raised a question of fact for the jury. If this be true, the minds of the parties did not meet, and there was no contract.