12 A.D. 487 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
In the month of May, 1890, Lavens went into the employ of the defendant in the shops of the Lieb Machine Company for five years from the date of the contract, upon an agreement that Lieb would pay him at the rate of sixty-five dollars a week, and on the first day ■of January of each year, a further sum, equal to fifteen per cent of the net profits of the business less the sum of fifteen dollars per week for each year or part of the year during which the profits were ■estimated. The contract, by its terms, was to continue until the 1st day of May, 1895. On the 7th day of March, 1893, Lavens was discharged, without any cause, so far as appears, and he brought this action to recover the damages which he sustained by reason of his unlawful discharge.
Upon the trial before a referee the facts relating to the discharge were not substantially disputed, and the referee, finding that the plaintiff:was entitled to damages, awarded him the amount of his salary per week for the term of the contract, and, in addition, the amount which the referee estimated that the plaintiff would have received as his share of the profits' of the business, pursuant to the contract, had the business been continued during the whole term for which the plaintiff was engaged. From this amount he deducted the earnings of the plaintiff in other employment after he had been discharged by the defendant, and the sum of fifteen dollars per week •during the time for which profits were estimated, and gave to the plaintiff, as damages, the sum of $5,160.68, which amount was reached ¡as above stated. The defendant excepted to the conclusion reached by the referee, and has brought this appeal for the purpose of sustaining his exception, if possible. He pwesents but one question upon his appeal, and that is as to the correctness of the referee’s decision by which he allows to the plaintiff, as a portion of his damages for the breach of the contract, his share of the profits which he finds would have been made by the defendant in the business had that business been carried on during the term for which the plaintiff was employed.
The rule of law is not disputed, that whenever a contract between two parties has been violated by one of them, the person injured is entitled to recover the value of the contract. If he has been deprived of it, he should have in lieu thereof its value, and
■ The plaintiff testified, and in this he was corroborated by the book
The work in which the defendant’s company was engaged was furnishing supplies for which there was a constant and increasing demand, and no reason was made to appear why that business, which had been profitable, would not continue to be equally so. To be sure, the defendant, testifying in his own. behalf, stated that between ninety and ninety-five per cent of his business Was for the Edison .Electric Company and afterwards for the General Electric Company from the time the contract was made until he sold out, and that he was compelled to stop because the General Electric Company had concluded to manufacture its own supplies and that would have practically thrown him out of business. But. this testimony was contradicted both by the plaintiff and by the bookkeeper, who was familiar with the work that was done, and it is evident that it was entirely unreliable. The testimony produced by the plaintiff was such as to warrant the referee in concluding that the business was likely to be as profitable in the future as. it was in the past, and he was at liberty, under the proofs which were adduced, to conclude, as he did, that the plaintiff, had he been permitted to continue his contract and had the defendant continued his. business, would have received as profits down to the 1st of May, 1895, substantially the same amounts yearly as he had received for the two years before he was discharged.
Upon a careful consideration of all the testimony, we are clear that, within the rules which have been laid down upon the subject, of the recovery of profits, the plaintiff made it reasonably certain that profits would have arisen from the continuance of the business; that he gave sufficient evidence to warrant the referee in fixing the probable amount which would have been received, and that the referee’s report was warranted by the evidence. For these reasons we conclude that the judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Barrett, Williams and Ingraham, JJ.,, concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.