9 Ga. App. 650 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1911
As the plaintiff in error (defendant in the original suit) sought certiorari directly from the decision of the magistrate without appealing to a jury, he is in the position where he must assume the burden of showing that there was nothing to submit to a jury, i. e., that the .evidence demanded as a matter of law a finding in his favor. Every issuable fact is to be taken against him. That the plaintiff fought on the show-grounds is undisputed; the circumstances of the fight do not appear; it is not shown whether the plaintiff was the aggressor in the fight or whether the fight was thrust upon him as a matter of self-defense or by other reasons of
The contract provided for wages at the rate of $10 per month, which were paid or tendered, but stipulated for an additional $8 per month to be paid if the plaintiff remained in the employment until the end of the season. Only this additional $8 per month A involved; and the defendant’s contention is that, as the plaintiff did not remain until the end of the season, but was sooner discharged, the language of the contract itself forbids a recovery. It is pointed out that there is an express provision in the contract that it was to continue only “so long as mutually agreeable to both parties,” and that, therefore, the defendant had the right to terminate the employment at his will, either with or without cause. “The law will not construe a contract so as to give the debtor the right to destroy it by a simple refusal to comply with it, unless the terms of the contract are so clear and unambiguous as to make irresistible the conclusion that no other result could possibly be reached, and that such was the intention of the parties. Civil Code, § 3675, par. 4 [Civil Code (1910), § 4268], Nor will a contract bo so construed as to authorize one of the parties to take advantage of his own wrong, unless it be plain and manifest that such was the intention of the parties.” Finlay v. Ludden, 105 Ga. 264 (31 S. E. 180); Milledgeville Cotton Co. v. Cary, ante, 391 (71 S. E. 503).
Judgment affirmed.