134 Wis. 248 | Wis. | 1908
The appellant rightly claims that, where wages are payable by the month, such circumstance is evidence of a hiring for that period, which will be sufficient, in the absence of any evidence impairing its weight, to sustain a finding that there was a hiring for that period. Kellogg v. Citizens' Ins. Co. 94 Wis. 554, 69 N. W. 362. The difficulty in the present case is that the plaintiff, after testifying that he was hired at $75 a month, freely admitted that Scott’s testimony was true, to the effect that he was employed upon the same conditions as upon his previous employment. It appeared without dispute that under the terms of his previous employment he might quit or be discharged at any time, and that both he and Scott understood that such was the case. Thus it appeared that the fact that his wages were to be payable by the month did not stand alone, but was to be considered in connection with the fact that he was hired under the same conditions as before, both parties understanding that those conditions included the right of either party to terminate the service at any time. It seems certain, therefore, that the minds of the parties met on the proposition that, although the wages were to be payable by the month, the service might be terminated by either party at will.
But the contract was for some service. The defendant might doubtless discharge the plaintiff at the end of the first day and perhaps earlier, without liability except for the payment of his ratable wages, but it had contracted to employ the plaintiff for some time, and a refusal to let him go to work at all was a plain breach of its contract, for which
The general rules governing the subject may he stated, therefore, as follows: (1) Where plaintiff only shows himself
The present action was properly commenced in justice’s court, and came to the circuit court for trial de novo by appeal of the defendant. A judgment for nominal damages would have entitled the plaintiff to costs, because he would have been the successful party though recovering less than he did in justice’s court. Sec. 2925, Stats. (1898) ; Smithbeck v. Larson, 18 Wis. 183.
The judgment-must therefore be reversed, and the action remanded with directions to enter judgment for the plaintiff for nominal damages and costs.
By the Gourt. — It is so ordered.