Thе declaration is common counts in assumpsit. Plea, the general issue.
The plaintiff claimed and his evidence tended to show that on August 12, 1907, he made a contract with the defendant whereby he was to work for the defendant as clerk and salesman in his store at Highgate Center for the term of one year from that date for the sum of four hundred sixty-eight dollars, payable in installments of nine dollars per week, with the agreement that he should be given employment for the full term; that when the plaintiff had worked eight and one-half weeks the defendant sold his stock in the store to one Loukes, notified the plaintiff that he had no more work for him and paid him in full for the services he had performed; that the plaintiff remained at Highgate Center during the entire year, ready and willing to work for the defendant, but was not furnished with more work, and was paid nothing, by him, after the time of the dismissal; that during the remainder of the year the plaintiff did some work under other employment and, deducting what he recеived therefor, together with the sums received of the defendant for the services actually performed, seeks to recover here the “balance due on services” for the full term of the contract, this .suit being brought after the termination of that period.
It was claimed in defence and the defendant’s evidence tended to show, that he did not hire the plaintiff for the term of one year, but did hire him by the week and paid him up to the time he was discharged.
The defendant seasonably objected and excepted to the admission of any and all evidence in support of the plaintiff’s claim, on the ground that the declaration is general assumpsit, and not special for breach of the contract; and at the close of the evidence the defendant moved for a verdict, for that since the testimony on both sides shows that the plaintiff was paid his wages in full up to the time of his dismissal, no recovery can be had under the common cоunts in assumpsit. This motion was overruled and an exception saved.
The plaintiff contends for and relies upon the doctrine laid down in Gandell v. Pontigny, 4 Campb. 375, 1 Stark. 198. 2 E. C. L. 82. There the action was indebitatus assumpsit for work and labor, with the common money counts. The plaintiff, employed by the defendant at a yearly salary payable quarterly,
The exact question now presented does not seem to have been directly passed upon by this Court. Yet in several cases determined by it kindred questions have been involved, and the decisions rendered are consonant with the rule which finally obtained in England, and аre quite controlling in the case before us. In Derby v. Johnson,
Perhaps it cannot be said that the court’s statement of the law respecting the right of a party to terminate a contract of hiring, and the resulting liability, was essential to the disposition of that case; yet it was an expression of opinion upon a point argued by counsel and deliberаtely passed upon by the court; and if it is a dictum, it is “a judicial dictum as distinguished from a mere obiter dictum — i. e. an expression originating alone with' the judge who writes the opinion, as an argument or illustration.” Rhoads v. Chicago and Alton R. R. Co.,
In Chamberlin v. Scott, 33 Yt. 80, the declaration contained a general count for work and labor, and a special count upon the contract. By the contract the plaintiffs agreed to draw for. the defendant, from premises described, a lot of timber, and deliver such portion thereof as the defendants should direct on board of the cars at a certain depot, and deliver the rest at one of the saw mills named as the defendants should direct, the whole job to be finished by a day specified. The evidence showed that the plaintiffs completed the drawing of the timber before the expiration of the time limited, but as the defendant failed to furnish cars upon which to load the timber drawn to the depot until after that time had expired, they did not load it. The court rеiterated the principles of law enunciated in Derby v. Johnson, as having been recognized in this State, and held accordingly. In White v. Lumiere North American Co. Ltd.,
Four cases from this Court are cited and relied upon by the plaintiff in support of his position; but an examination shows them severalty to be in harmony with those to which we have made reference. Thus, Boardman, Admr. v. Keeler,
No case has been called to our attention, and we have found none, in which the doctrine of constructive service has been applied, or recognized as law, in this State. On the contrary, we think the decisions of this Court to which reference has been made, some of them precedential in ñature, show the law here to be, that a servant who was dismissed during his performance of an entire contract, by the master, without cause, cannot by waiting until the end of the term for which he was employed sue for and collect wages, as such, for the portion of the term after the time of his dismissal. As before seen, the law does not permit a servant to continue to work and claim pay for it after his discharge. To allow him to do so would be inconsistent with the right of the master to stop performance by the servant, by taking upon himself the liability for resulting damages. How much more inconsistent would it be to sаy that when no work is subsequently done by the servant, he may bring indebitatus assumpsit and recover for constructive service? The reason given by Mr. Justice Crampton why such a remedy cannot be maintained, that the allegation of the master’s being indebted for work done is untrue, is substantiated by the holding of this court in Curtis v. Smith,
It follows that the defendant’s motion for a verdict should have been granted.
The plaintiff says, however, that the parties were heard on their evidence the same as they would have been had the declaration been special for damages, and hence, on the authority of Chaffee v. Rutland Railroad Co.,
Judgment reversed and ¡judgment for the defendant to recover his costs.
