45 Wash. 446 | Wash. | 1907
On or about the 19th day of May, 1905, the defendant company employed the plaintiff to take charge
If a servant employed for a stated term is wrongfully discharged from his master’s employment before the expiration of his term of service, may he thereafter maintain sue
In discussing the doctrine of constructive service in Howard v. Daly, supra, the court said:
“This doctrine is, however, so opposed to principle, so clearly hostile to the great mass of the authorities, and so wholly irreconcilable to that great and beneficent rule of law, that a person discharged from service must not remain idle, but must accept employment elsewhere if offered, that we cannot accept it. If a person discharged from service may recover wages, or treat the contract as still subsisting,*449 then he must remain idle in order to be always ready to perform the service. How absurd it would be that one rule of law should call upon him to accept other employment, while another rule required him to remain idle in order that he may recover full wages. The doctrine of ‘constructive service’ is not only at war with principle, but with the rules of political economy, as it encourages idleness and gives compensation to men who fold their arms and decline service, equal to those who perform with willing hands their stipulated amount of labor. Though the master has committed a wrong, the servant is not for one moment released from the rule that he should labor; and no rule can be sound which gives him full wages while living in voluntary idleness. For these reasons, if the plaintiff was discharged after the time of service commenced, she had an immediate cause of action for damages, which were prima facie a sum equal to the stipulated amount, unless the defendant should give evidence in mitigation of damages.”
In Olmstead v. Bach, supra, the court said:
“Salary as salary, definitely fixed and agreed to, and not a sum of money as unliquidated damages for a broken contract of hiring, is what is sued for under the declaration in the case at bar. It is a suit to recover wages, though no services have been rendered at all, and, if maintainable in that form, would preclude the defendants from showing by evidence that the plaintiff could have secured other similar employment during the time covered by the contract; because, if wages, distinctively as wages, can be recovered under such conditions instead of damages for a wrongful discharge or dismissal, they must be recovered as specific, ascertained debts, the amount of which is fixed by the contract, and is in no way subject to abatement by circumstances which would reduce the damages in a suit founded on a refusal by the defendant to allbw the plaintiff to perform his part of an indivisible contract of hiring. In other words, if under such a contract the plaintiff is entitled to recover wages as wages upon the mere offer to perform, he must be entitled' to recover just precisely the wages named in the contract, even though he might have obtained other work of the same kind at the same- price during the period for which he claims*450 his wages under the contract. This would be recovering for constructive services. That doctrine has been altogether repudiated both in England and in this country.”
We deem it unnecessary, to review at length the authorities cited by the appellant. The cases cited from Alabama, Georgia, and Wisconsin sustain him. McEvoy v. Bock, 37 Minn. 402, 34 N. W. 740, was an action to recover an installment due under a contract of employment, but the contract itself had never been abrogated. However, in the later case of McMullan v. Dickenson Co., 60 Minn. 156, 62 N. W. 120, 51 Am. St. 511, 27 L. R. A. 409, while rejecting the doctrine of constructive service as false and illogical, the court yet held that successive actions might be maintained by the discharged employee, so that the decisions of that state probably sustain the appellant. Badger v. Titcomb, 15 Pick. 409; Stifel v. Lynch, 7 Mo. App. 326; Kerr v. Simmons, 9 Mo. App. 376; and Crouse v. Holman, 19 Ind. 30, were not actions for breach of contracts of employment, and, as we have shown, the decisions in these states are adverse to the appellant. Cutter v. Gillette; Booge v. Pacific Railroad and Richardson v. Eagle Machine Works, supra.
In Cutter v. Gillette, the court said:
“The plaintiff’s cause of action accrued when he was wrongfully discharged. His suit is not for wages, but for damages for the breach of his contract by the defendant. For this breach he can have but one action.”
The cases cited from the New York and English courts have been overruled. See Howard v. Daly, supra. The only point decided in Howay v. Going-Northrup Co., 24 Wash. 88, 64 Pac. 135, 85 Am. St. 942, was that where an action is commenced during the term of service and the trial does .not take place until after the expiration of the term of service, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the same damages that he would have been entitled to had the action been commenced after the expiration of the term. Indeed that was an
The judgment of the court below is affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Fullerton, Mount, Root, and Crow, JJ., concur.