43 Ga. 331 | Ga. | 1871
The plaintiffs brought an action against the defendants to recover damages for persuading, enticing and procuring one William Powell to leave their employment. The plaintiffs allege, in their declaration, that on the 5th day of January, 1871, they entered into a contract, for a valid and legal consideration, with Powell, to work for them on their farm in
It said by Blackstone “ that the retaining another person’s servant during the time he has agreed to serve his present master, as it is ungentlemanlike, so it is also an illegal act. For every master has, by his contract, purchased for a valuable consideration the service of his domestics, for a limited time, the inveigling or hiring his servant, which indorses a breach of this contract, is, therefore, an injury to the master ; and for that injury the law has given him a remedy by a special action on the case3dBlackstone’s Commentaries, 142. The same principle is applicable where one man employs a laborer to work on his farm, and another man, knowing of such contract of employment, entices, hires, or persuades the laborer to leave the service of his first employer during the time for which he was so employed. It was error in the Court below to sustain the demurrer to the plaintiffs’ declaration, and dismissing the same.
Judgment reversed.