42 N.Y.S. 901 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1896
In the month of May, 1890, Lavens went into the employ of'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 $65 a week, and on the 1st day of January of each year a further sum, equal to 15 per cent, of the net profits of the business, less the sum of $15 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 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 $15 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
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 that value is to be ascertained by the application of those rules of law which have been laid down for the guidance of the courts. Wakeman v. Manufacturing Co., 101 N. Y. 205, 4 N. E. 264. If the contract is one by reason of which the plaintiff would have received the profits of a business in -which he was engaged, under his contract he is entitled to recover, as a portion of his damages, the profits which he would have received, if those profits can be ascertained. Dart v. Laimbeer, 107 N. Y. 664, 14 N. E. 291; Dickinson v. Hart, 142 N. Y. 183, 36 N. E. 801. This rule, of course, can only be applied, and profits can only be awarded by virtue of it, when the plaintiff has made it appear that such profits are reasonably certain to have been made; and, if he fails in making that proof, he will not be entitled to recover any damages upon such a basis. But his failure to recover in such case does not arise because he is not entitled to his profits, but simply because he has been unable to prove that profits would have accrued from the contract. His weakness is not in the law, but in his evidence. But while he will not be allowed to recover damages which are merely uncertain, speculative, and contingent, he is still not required to prove either that profits would have accrued, or the amount of them, by any other or higher evidence than one is compelled to produce in any other civil action. If he makes it appear, by a fair preponderance of the evidence, that profits would have resulted from a continuance of the business, and produces such evidence as would authorize the court, upon legitimate and proper inferences, to ascertain the amount of profits which would have been made, he will be entitled to recover them. Trust Co. v. O’Brien, 143 N. Y. 284, 38 N. E. 266. Applying to this case these rules of law, it will be seen at once that the difficulty, if there was one in the plaintiff’s case, was not in his right to recover the profits which were to be paid to. him pursuant to his contract, but in the evidence to which he was compelled to resort, and which he did produce, for the purpose of establishing the fact that profits would have resulted from a continuance of business, and the amount of those profits. It is well settled in such cases that one element—and an element of considerable importance in ascertaining the probable profits of business—is the course of the business before the breach of the contract. If it has been made to appear that, while the business continued, profits were made, and the amount of those profits is shown, and that evidence is followed up by such proof as would warrant the
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, and 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. All concur.