146 N.Y.S. 188 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1914
The action herein was brought by the plaintiff upon a contract which he alleges he entered into with the defendants, whereby they agreed to furnish him with a certain number of shirts to be laundered by him for a period of one year from the making of the contract at prices agreed upon by the parties, and whereby they further agreed that, in the event the plaintiff’s profits for the year were less than forty dollars weekly, they would pay him the difference between that sum and the amount actually earned by him.
The answer denies the making of the contract and there is evidence on the part of the defendants supporting the denial. The jury, therefore, on the conflicting testimony found on this point for the plaintiff. The testimony of the plaintiff was that the defendants assured him in the event of the amount of work not being sufficient to pay him an average of $40 a week that they would at the end of the year make up the difference and the amount sued for was for such a sum. The breach of the contract occurred in August, 1911, and thereafter plaintiff was unable to earn anything in reduction of damages. For the thirteen weeks before the breach plaintiff made but $5 per week or a total of $65, so that his damages, the jury having found in his favor, should have been $40 a week for fifty-two weeks
Seabuby and Guy, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellants to abide event.