51 A. 1072 | N.H. | 1902
If the "value in controversy" exceeded $100 the exception must be sustained, as in that case the plaintiffs had a right to a trial by jury. Bill of Rights, art. 20. The "value in controversy" was the damage to the plaintiffs arising from the defendant's breach of the contract in discharging the plaintiffs from his service before the expiration of the term. The court ruled that the damage was limited to the sum due the plaintiffs for wages at the date of the writ, which was $55, or thereabouts. This ruling cannot be sustained. The contract was entire and *327 indivisible. There was an absolute and unjustifiable breach of it by the defendant. The plaintiffs were authorized to treat the breach as ending the contract, and they have done so. The moment the breach occurred an action accrued to them to recover a just recompense for the injury they sustained by reason of it. Payment of the wages already earned would not be full recompense. The contract was valuable to the plaintiffs. It assured them of an opportunity to earn $50 a month during the unexpired part of the term. The defendant's act deprived them of the opportunity, and injured them.
The extent of the plaintiffs' injury would not necessarily be measured by the amount of the wages that would be earned if the contract continued in force. They would be obliged to perform the service stipulated in the contract, to be entitled to the wages. Although the defendant prevented them from performing the service, they could not claim the wages in full without making an effort to employ their time elsewhere to some advantage. It was their duty to make reasonable efforts to curtail their injury. The value of their contract, so far as the future was concerned, was the difference between the wages which it assured them and the amount of money that they earned, or by reasonable efforts might earn, during the unexpired part of the term. This they were entitled to recover of the defendant, in addition to the wages due at the date of the breach of the contract.
When the trial of the action occurs before the expiration of the term, there is more or less difficulty in determining what will be, or reasonably ought to be, earned between the trial and the end of the term. Various contingencies — the death of one or the other of the parties, the health of the employee, the uncertainty as to the demand for labor, etc. — render the question difficult to be determined satisfactorily; and in some jurisdictions it is held, for this reason, that the employee shall not have recompense for this part of his injury. The difficulty of determining the sum which will recompense a person for the wrongful act or omission another is not ordinarily regarded as a sufficient reason for allowing the injured party any damages. In most actions for personal injuries the damages cannot be determined with complete satisfaction to the tribunal charged with the duty of assessing them. A party is not deprived of his right altogether simply because the measure of it in dollars and cents can be made only imperfectly. The justice administered by human tribunals is imperfect at best, but this fact does not excuse them from deciding the questions that come before them. There is not sufficient reason for excepting a case like the present one from the general rule *328 with absolute satisfaction as to the justice of their amount. On the other hand, there is a very good reason why the exception should not be made. The employee cannot maintain another action for the breach, but must recover in one action all that he is ever to receive.
It is held in several jurisdictions that the discharged employee may recover of his employer, in an action begun and tried before the expiration of the contract, recompense for the wages already earned under the contract and for the deprivation of the opportunity to earn wages during the remainder of the term, — the latter to be the difference between the wages stipulated and the sum which, by the exercise of reasonable efforts, may be earned during that time. Sutherland v. Wyer,
The cases cited by the defendant are widely distinguishable from this case. In Hartwell v. Jewett,
The plaintiffs are entitled to a trial by jury.
Exception sustained.
All concurred.