59 P. 103 | Ariz. | 1899
The appellee, C. T. Hirst, brought suit in the court below against the appellant, the Glendale Fruit Company, a corporation, to recover the sum of $1,661.14, upon three several causes of action, on the fourth day of January, 1898, the first of which charged the defendant company with an indebtedness of $375, due for salary as manager and superintendent of the defendant company’s fruit ranch, situate in the county of Maricopá, at the agreed and stipulated sum of $125 per month for the months of October, November, and December of the year 1897. The second cause of action charged an indebtedness in the sum of $1,199.75, due from the defendant in the action on account of various sums paid out and expended by the plaintiff in the action to various and divers persons at different times and dates, at the request of the defendant, between the first day of March, 1897, and the first day of January, 1898. The third and last cause of action charged an indebtedness of $116.39, due the plaintiff from the defendant for and on account of an assigned claim of Hatcher & Hurley, due for meats delivered to the said defendant company by said Hatcher & Hurley prior to the first day of January, 1898. At the time of the commencement of the action, the plaintiff, Hirst, made affidavit setting up the foregoing items of indebtedness due from the defendant, and
It is also contended that the court erred in receiving evidence as to the services rendered by the plaintiff under his contract with the defendant company after the fourth day of January, 1898, when the original complaint was filed in the action, for the reason that the plaintiff in the action by thus bringing suit had put himself in. an antagonistic relation to the defendant company, and had thereby terminated his agency and severed his connection with the company as its manager and superintendent. The testimony, however, tends to show that, notwithstanding the suit, plaintiff remained in charge of the ranch of the defendant company, and transacted the affairs of the company, with full knowledge on the part of the company, and received and carried out the instructions of the officers of the company with reference to the management and control of the fruit ranch and business of the defendant company, in the same manner and to the same extent as he had .previous to the commencement of the action. Whatever otherwise, therefore, might have been the effect of the plaintiff’s action in bringing suit, in terminating his relations -to the company as its agent and superintendent, the action of the company and its officers in recognizing plaintiff as manager and superintendent of the ranch after his action, and his performance of the duties required by his contract as such manager and superintendent, operated to continue in force and effect his contract, and entitled him to recover salary at the agreed price.
It is also contended that the court erred in decreeing a lien by virtue of the attachment against the property of the company for the full amount- of the judgment recovered, for the reason that this amount was in excess of that set up in the affidavit of attachment, and for which suit was originally
Doan, J., and Davis, J., concur.