27 N.Y.S. 341 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1894
The language of the contract is equivalent to a stipulation that the employer might dismiss the plaintiff at pleasure. It provides that he may do so when he deems the service not satisfactory; the tenure of the employment, therefore, depending solely upon his opinion or judgment, for which the opinion or judgment of the court or jury cannot be substituted, as the question involved is not one of performance, but of the employer’s appreciation or estimate of the manner of performance. The relations of master and servant are private, confidential, intimate, and personal.