87 A.D. 417 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The complaint avers that the plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract on or about the 5th day of January, 1900, wherein the defendant agreed to employ the plaintiff to work for him until the 1st day of January, 1901; that the plaintiff entered upon the employment under the contract, and continued to work thereunder until the 5th day of May, 1900, when he was discharged without cause. He asks to recover damages in the sum of $500. The answer avers that the plaintiff entered into defendant’s employ under a written contract,'which expressly provided that he was to be employed from week to week only and. was liable to be discharged at the close, of any week. Upon the trial the plaintiff testified that on the 30th day of December, 1900, he entered into a. verbal contract to work for the defendant at the rate of $18 per week from the 8th day of January, 1901, to the first of the following July, and from July to January following, at the rate of $20 per week; that after-he had commenced to work for the defendant the latter requested him to sign his name to a paper and that he signed his name thereto. The paper which he signed was the written contract above referred to, which expressly stated that the plaintiff was employed from week to week and" liable to be discharged at the close of" any week. The plaintiff further testified that he could neither read nor write, except to write his own name,, and that he'did not know the contents of the paper which he signed. The defendant testified that he never made any oral agreement for hiring the plaintiff, and that the written agreement of employment was the only one ever entered into between the parties. Hpon this
By the terms of the oral contract it was not to be performed within one year from the making'thereof; consequently, it was void under the Statute of Frauds. (Billington v. Cahill, 51 Hun, 132; Wahl v. Barnum, 116 N. Y. 87.) When it appeared from the testimony of the plaintiff that the contract upon which he sought to recover infringed the provisions of the Statute of Frauds, the defendant’s counsel immediately objected upon that ground and moved to strike out all of the testimony which had been given upon that subject upon the ground that the testimony established, if anything, an agreement void by the Statute of Frauds, and, therefore, unenforcible.
The court overruled the objection, to which an exception was taken. At the close of plaintiff’s case the defendant moved to dismiss the complaint upon the ground, among others, that the contract proven by the plaintiff was not the contract sued upon as averred in the complaint. The motion was denied and the defendant excepted. This motion was renewed at the close of the case and denied by the court, and the plaintiff excepted. The question, therefore, was clearly raised at the earliest moment and was insisted upon throughout the trial. It is. evident that the motion should have been granted, unless other matters intervened to prevent such a result. It is the contention of the plaintiff that this objection is not good, for the reason that the Statute of Frauds is .an affirmative defense, and in order to be available must be presented by demurrer or answer. This question is no longer an open one, to be argued upon principle, as it has become conclusively settled by authority. The result of the adjudicated cases seems to be that
It follows from these views that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
' Van Brunt, P. J., Patterson, Ingraham and Laughlin, JJ., concurred.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial granted, with costs to appellant to abide event.