105 Va. 96 | Va. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
The judgment to which this writ of error was awarded was obtained by the defendants 'in error against the plaintiff in error for damages alleged to have been sustained by the act of the latter in discharging the former from his employ.
Plaintiff in error .was, on the date of the discharge of defendants in error, and for some time prior, the president of Roanoke
“Danville, Va., July 29, 1904.
“This contract, entered into by and between B. E. Hatton, party of the first part, and G. Fryatt Mountford and wife, parties of second part; whereby parties of the second part agree to come to Boanoke College, of Danville, and unite in the building up of the college, and do what they can to that end, and to be perfectly loyal to management of school, and to do or say nothing to the detriment of the college or of the teachers. Prof. Mountford agrees to teach in the college, in the music department piano especially, and such other studies as necessary in the music department; to teach for a period of thirty hours per week; to put forth his best efforts for the advancement of the department; to try to work in harmony with the assistant music teacher; ’ and to assist in maintaining discipline in the college and home. Mrs. Mountford agrees to supervise or assist in supervising and superintending the piano practice if necessary. For such the parties of the second part are to receive the sum •of $550, for the session work, from B. E. Hatton. This is*100 to be paid by said B. E. Hatton, in eight equal payments if desired by said parties of the second part. It is further agreed that three months’ notice is to be given before this contract is nullified, or teachers employed for next year, by either party.
Signed. B. E. Hatton,
Party of the first part.
Signed.
Signed”
Mountford, instead of signing this contract as he received it, made a certain change therein, viz.: by inserting the words “payable monthly” after “in eight equal payments,” and striking ’ out the words “if desired by said parties of the second part”; and having made this change Mountford copied the contract and he and his wife signed it and returned it at once to plaintiff in error.
There is no evidence tending to prove any other contract than that signed by defendants in error and returned to plaintiff in error, except that no mention is made therein, or in the contract as prepared by plaintiff in error, of room and board to be furnished to defendants in error in addition to the salary 'they were to receive; but no question arises in this suit as to room and board, as that matter was agreed upon by correspondence,, and they were in fact furnished room and board by plaintiff in error up to the time of their discharge on December 8, 1904, and about two weeks thereafter.
Their contract having been completed, defendants in error came to Boanoke College on or about September 18, 1904, and began the performance of their respective duties—Mountford as director of the department of music, and Mrs. Mountford supervising the piano practice. Eor about two weeks they performed their duties fairly satisfactorily, as is admitted, but from
On the 8th of December, 1904-, a paper signed by nineteen of the twenty-three or twenty-four pupils of the college, then in Mountford’s department, was presented to plaintiff in error, and, after inquiry of some of the signers as to the causes for their presenting the paper, he called Mountford into his office, explained the purport of the paper, which was that Mountford had been so negligent and inefficient in the discharge of his duties, the signers refused to study under him after the beginning of the second term of the school (the second half of the session), and told Mountford that under the circumstances he could no longer retain him and his wife, and must dismiss them,
The foregoing are the facts, many of which are not controverted, relied on by plaintiff in error to justify him in discharging defendants in error, except as applied to Mrs. Mount-ford, she having been, as is claimed, negligent in two respects which we do not deem it necessary to consider.
The verdict and judgment on plaintiff in error’s special plea of not guilty, and a plea of tender of the true amount due to defendants in error for services to date of their discharge, was in favor of the latter, as damages, for $628.00, subject lo a credit of $98.44, paid into court by plaintiff in error.
There were no instructions asked or given for defendants in error, and the first assignment of error is the refusal of the court to give three of the five instructions asked by plaintiff in error.
Ho. 5 deals solely with the amount of damages recoverable by defendants in error, and need not again he referred to.
Ho. 4 is as follows: “The court instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence in this case, that the plaintiffs, Professor and Mrs. Mountford, or either of them, so conducted themselves that, by their carelessness, negligence or inattention to their duties, or by their neglect and failure to perform the same, or that the plaintiff, G. P. Mountford, by his rudeness and discourtesy to the students and -pupils in his department, so conducted himself as to prejudice, injure, or damage the defendant, Hatton, in his business as principal of Roanoke College, or that such carelessness, inattention and negligence in
The questions in the case were, first: What was the contract between the parties ? and, second, Had defendants in error, or either of them, been guilty of such misconduct or neglect in the discharge of their duties, as, under their contract, justified plaintiff in error in discharging them from his employ %
Where there is no express contract between an employer and an employee, imposing upon the latter a higher degree of skill, care, diligence, and attention in the discharge of the duties of the position he contracts to fill, only the ordinary and reasonable skill, care, diligence, and attention implied by law can be required of him. But if an employee contracts for a higher degree of skill, &e., than the law implies, he cannot excuse himself from a failure to live up to his contract by merely showing that he performed the duties of his position with the ordinary and reasonable degree of skill, &c., required of him by law. He must perform his duties with the degree and grade of service for which he contracts. Crescent Horse Shoe Co. v. Eynon, 95
As we have already observed, there was, so far as this record discloses, no evidence tending to prove a contract between these parties other than that set forth in the paper set out above, as copied by Mountford, signed by himself and wife and returned to plaintiff in error, except as to board and room to be furnished by the latter to the former omitted from the contract as originally drawn by plaintiff in error and as changed and copied by Mountford, about which there is no controversy. By that contract the duties to be performed by defendants in error were set out, and they contracted “to be perfectly loyal to management of school, and to do or say nothing to the detriment of the college or of the teachers,” and Mountford, as teacher “in the college in the music department, piano especially, and such other studies as necessary in the music department,” agreed “to teach for a period of thirty hours per week; to put forth his best efforts for the advancement of the department; to try to work in harmony with the assistant music teachers, and to assist in maintaining discipline in the college and home.” If in fact this was the contract between the parties, .it called for, not the ordinary and reasonable, efforts implied by law, but a higher degree and grade of service.
As to whether or not Mountford performed his duties with reasonable and ordinary skill, diligence and attention, there is a sharp conflict in the testimony, and there is also conflict as to whether he put forth his best efforts for the advancement of the music department. But upon the point made as a justification. of the discharge of Mountford, that by his acts, omissions, misconduct, discourtesy to other teachers, and the use of vulgar and repulsive language in the presence of his pupils and friends of the school, he had about broken up the department of instrumental music at the college, there is little or no conflict. It is
The purpose of instructions Hos. 1 and 2, refused, was to' direct the attention of the jury to the higher degree and grade of capacity, skill, etc., that the evidence tended to show their contract required of them than is implied by law in ordinary-contracts between master and servant, and to instruct the jury that if they believed that Mountford had not put forth, his best efforts, etc., or that defendants in error had by their lack of capacity and skill, inattention to their duties, or misconduct, violated their contract, plaintiff in error had a right to discharge them from his employment, without liability in damages for-doing so.
Instruction Ho. 4, given, purported to cover the entire case, yet omitted to bring to the attention of the jury the point contended for by plaintiff in error, viz: that defendants in error-had contracted for a higher degree and grade of skill, etc., in the discharge of the duties of the positions they undertook to-fill, than the law implies, and as indicated in the instruction Ho. 4. „
It may be conceded that instructions Hos. 1 and 2, refused,, were equivocal in submitting that phase of the case to the jury; or were otherwise objectionable, yet as it was a material point’ in the case, to which much of the evidence -was directed, it should have been covered by the instruction No. 4, which was-given as covering the entire case. Bertha Zinc Co. v. Martin, 93 Va. 791, 22 S. E. 869; Crescent Horse Shoe Co. v. Eynon, supra.
Instruction Ho. 4 was one of a series of instructions intended to cover the whole case, and when left standing alone, wasclearlv misleading, for the reason that under it the jury might have found their verdict in favor of the defendants in error
Reversed.