191 Ind. 133 | Ind. | 1921
Appellee recovered a judgment against appellant for $3,975.52, as being the amount of a commission, in addition to a weekly salary, of two per cent, of the aggregate of all sales made in appellant’s store during a period of more than two years of the time that appellee was employed there. Her complaint alleged that appellant employed her to work in his store in October, 1912, at a straight weekly salary, and that in November, 1913, after appellant had remodeled and enlarged his store, they entered into a new contract and mutually agreed that beginning with December 1, 1913, appellant would pay her-for her services in the store the sum of $25 at the end of each week, and a commission of two per cent, on the gross sales of all goods sold in said store, the commission to be paid at the end of each period of six months; that she worked under this agreement from December 1, 1913, until February 12, 1916, and received $25 each week, but that no part of the.agreed commission was paid. The complaint was filed August 21, 1916. The appellant answered by- a denial and by general and special pleas that he had paid appellee all that he owed her, and by a further plea that the alleged contract sued on was made on Sunday and was never ratified on any secular day, and “that at the time óf entering into said contract, and ever since then, neither the plaintiff nor the defendant have been persons who conscientiously observed the seventh day of the week, or any other day
It is urged that the undisputed evidence proves that, if entered into, the contract to pay a commission was made on Sunday by persons who did not conscientiously observe another day as the Sabbath. The only witnesses who testified that such a contract was made, or that it was ever mentioned by appellant after it was agreed upon, were appellee and her mother. Appellee testified positively that it was made in the course of
Appellee’s mother also • testified to having heard the original conversation, when the alleged contract was made, and two or three subsequent conversations, and that all of them which she heard were at her home and all were on Sunday, until one which occurred at the store after appellee had ceased working for appellant. But neither appellee nor her mother, nor any other witness, testified that the terms of the contract to pay
As to the other questions to which appellant’s excepr tions were overruled, it does not appear that the answers given in response to them could have harmed him.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with directions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.