Cleveland v. Towle

106 So. 58 | Ala. Ct. App. | 1924

The plaintiff's action is stated in four counts. The first seeks a recovery for the breach of an agreement to employ plaintiff as a bookkeeper at $100 per month, and the other counts are the common counts claiming for an account, account stated, and for work and labor done.

Demurrer was interposed to the first count on the grounds that the complaint showed no mutuality and no consideration on the part of the plaintiff and other grounds not here necessary to mention.

The contract declared on in the first count is one for personal service, and in such a contract, like other contracts, a valuable consideration is necessary for its support. 13 Corpus Juris, 341 (192) 14. In order for the count to meet the requirements in stating a cause of action, there must be allegations showing mutuality on the part of plaintiff and defendant. So far as this complaint goes, there was no obligation on the part of plaintiff to have entered into the employment of defendant, without which there was a lack of that mutuality which the law requires. The demurrer should have been sustained. McGowin Lbr. Export Co. v. Camp Lbr. Co., 192 Ala. 35,68 So. 263.

It is insisted, however, on the part of appellee, that this error cannot avail the appellant anything because the common counts were sufficient upon which to base the verdict and to which it will be referred. The general rule is that where nothing remains to be done under an express contract but the payment of money, a creditor may sue on the common counts; but if recovery is sought for damages on account of defendant's breach of the contract, the plaintiff must declare specifically on the contract, stating the contract and the breach under proper allegations. 13 Michie's Dig. 512, p. 226. In this case there was no evidence that plaintiff had performed the labor called for by the agreement, but there was evidence of a tender and readiness to perform on the part of plaintiff which if believed by the jury entitled him to a recovery of the contract price on the common counts; hence, we must hold that the error in overruling the demurrer was without injury.

The court did not err in refusing to charge the jury, at the request of defendant, that plaintiff, being a minor, was not entitled to recover for loss of earnings on account of defendant's breach of the contract of employment. If the contract was made and the defendant breached the contract and damage was thereby sustained, the plaintiff, though an infant, could maintain the action. 31 Corpus Juris, 1087 (198) 7. Contracts of infants for the performance of service are voidable merely at the election of the infant and not the other party. Langham v. State, 55 Ala. 114; Waugh v. Emerson, 79 Ala. 295; Pritchett v. Fife, 8 Ala. App. 462, *163 62 So. 1001; Sims v. Gunter, 201 Ala. 286, 78 So. 62.

The court properly charged the jury:

"Under the law, where the term of employment is by the month, then the person employed, or employee, is entitled to a full month's salary for that month, unless he is notified before the beginning of the month that he enters upon, that his services will not be needed for the following month."

Of course, this is subject to the proper defenses as to which the court had already charged.

There being no prejudicial error, the judgment is affirmed.

Affirmed.

Hearing on Remandment.
On the authority of Ex parte Towle (1 Div. 351)106 So. 60,1 we must hold that in this case there can be a recovery on the common counts, and therefore the overruling of the defendant's demurrers to the first count of the complaint was error without injury.

The cause being remanded for further consideration, and this court not having in the original opinion passed upon assignments 7 and 8, it now becomes necessary to do so. These assignments are based upon the refusal of the court to give as requested by defendant's written charges 6 and 7. To say the least of it, these charges were so framed as to be calculated to mislead the jury into the mistaken belief that, as a basis of recovery, the contract of employment between the parties must have had a time definite at which it was to terminate. A contract for employment fixing the amount to be paid at stated intervals, but with no time limit for its ending, is a contract terminable at the end of any month by either party at his pleasure. Clark v. Ryan, 95 Ala. 406, 11 So. 22. Charges 6 and 7, being confusing or misleading, were properly refused. Johnson v. Colvin, 186 Ala. 538, 65 So. 328.

The former opinion of this court is amended to meet the views of the Supreme Court in Ex parte Towle (1 Div. 351) 213 Ala. 129,106 So. 60, and the judgment is affirmed.

1 213 Ala. 129.

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