147 Minn. 403 | Minn. | 1920
Plaintiff had been in defendant’s employ for several years attending in various capacities to the upkeep of its tracks and roadbeds, when, in. 1911, he resigned. He got from defendant a certificate, in railroad parlance called a clearance, stating that his services had been satisfactory. He then worked for another railroad company until in September, 1913, when he again entered defendant’s employ, becoming assistant roadmaster of its Superior & Mesaba division, which position he held till discharged on April 12, 1916. Defendant has 'an employment bureau which keeps records of its employees, noting thereon among other matters, the cause of the dismissal of an employee if he is dismissed. On last named date this entry on the records of this bureau was made. concerning plaintiff: “Relieved, account unable to properly handle work assigned and men.” Other railroad companies maintain employment bureaus with records similar to defendant’s. As we understand it, on resignation or discharge, an employee may procure a copy of this record or clearance, either when he leaves the employ or at any time thereafter upon request. It also appears that the employment 'bureau of one railroad will furnish the like bureau of another railroad a copy or certificate of such record whenever asked to. On hiring men the railroads usually require such certificate or clearance. If the applicant for the position does not have it, he is asked to name the railroad where he has previously worked, and he may be permitted to go to work until a report is obtained from the employment bureau of his former employer. If the report is unsatisfactory he may or may not be let out. After plaintiff’s discharge he obtained from defendant a certificate or clearance containing the above quoted language from the record made by the employment bureau.
The action is to recover damages on the ground that defendant’s superintendent Sesser maliciously caused the entry above mentioned to be made by defendant’s employment bureau, that it was false, and. that be
It is very doubtful whether the evidence would sustain a finding that Sesser was not warranted in causing defendant’s employment bureau to make the record that was made as to plaintiff. But, assuming it would, plaintiff failed to adduce any proof to carry other essential issues to the jury. There was no testimony that any other railroad had received information in respect to the record mentioned from this defendant. It must be conceded that defendant had the right to discharge plaintiff, even if no cause therefor existed. It could also malee a record for its own use as to the reason for the discharge. So long as this record was not furnished to others or made use of to prevent plaintiff from securing work, it could not injure or damage plaintiff, though false. Plaintiff ■ testified that he got the certificate or clearance from defendant, but he did not claim that he exhibited it to any one. However, he did say that he wrote to many railroad companies asking for a position, and in his letters he stated what-sort of a clearance he held. No letter was produced. But, grant that plaintiff truly set forth his clearance in the letters, his case is not helped, for there is no evidence that any railroad to which he applied had a single vacant position of the kind plaintiff sought. There is an entire absence of proof that plaintiff was denied any work or place whatever, on account of the Tecord made by defendant’s employment bureau, or because of defendant’s interference or statements. It would be working inferences beyond reason to hold that, from the general knowledge of the scarcity of laboT at that time and the proof that plaintiff received no response to his letters for work, the jury could rightfully infer that the railroad companies addressed had at their disposal such a position as plaintiff applied for, which was not given hirá because of what he wrote concerning his clearance.
There was no violation of section 8890, G-. S. 1913, shown. Merely placing upon its own records the cause of such a discharge, as was here done, cannot come within any definition of blacklisting contemplated by that statute. And no testimony was offered tending to prove that defendant made any attempt whatever to prevent or hinder plaintiff
We find no case in the extensive annotation to Wabash R. Co. v. Young, in 4 L.R.A. (N.S.) 1091, to which we have been cited, that sustains plaintiff’s contention that upon the evidence introduced herein he was entitled to go to the jury. Hundley v. Louisville & N. R. Co. 105 Ky. 162, 48 S. W. 429, 63 L.R.A. 289, 88 Am. St. 298, is cited as supporting plaintiff, but this quotation from the opinion makes it a decisive authority against, him: “It should have been averred that he had sought, and been refused, employment by reason of the alleged wrongful act. An agreement made with other railroad companies not to employ defendant’s discharged employees does not injure the plaintiff unless carried out. An averment that the defendant conspired and combined with other railroad companies to do an act, if unlawful, would not obviate the necessity of making the averment that he had sought and been refused employment by reason of the alleged wrongful act.” In that case the averments in the complaint failed on precisely the same essential matter upon which evidence is here lacking. In Willis v. Muscogee Mnfg. Co. 120 Ga. 597, 48 S. E. 177, 1 Ann. Cas. 472, the evidence tended to prove that the defendant falsely reported to other employers that the plaintiff failed to live up to his contract with defendant and because of such report plaintiff could not obtain work. Blumenthal v. Shaw, 77 Fed. 954, 23 C. C. A. 590, was also a ease where the employer took active steps to prevent the discharged employee from obtaining other employment.
Bacon v. Michigan Cent. R. Co. 66 Mich. 166, 33 N. W. 181, was an action for libel for entering stealing as the cause of the plaintiff’s dis
No reversible error occurred in excluding a commendatory letter from plaintiffs superior as the latter was leaving defendant’s services. The letter was written in 1906. It added nothing to the certificate plaintiff got when he left defendant in 1911, and which was in evidence. Moreover it had no tendency to strengthen the fatally weak spots in plaintiff’s case.
The order is affirmed.