45 A.2d 245 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued December 13, 1945. Plaintiff brought this action of assumpsit against defendants for breach of an oral contract of employment. The jury found for plaintiff and defendants have brought this appeal from the refusal of their motions for a new trial and for judgment n.o.v.
In passing upon the motion for judgment n.o.v., we shall, as we are required to do, read the testimony in the light most advantageous to plaintiff, resolving all conflicts in his favor and giving him the benefit of facts and inferences of fact pertaining to the issues involved, which may reasonably be deduced from the evidence. Muehlhof v. Reading Co.,
March 9, 1944, plaintiff received a letter from the defendant Max Kerson in which he sought to reopen negotiations for the services of plaintiff. As a result of this and other correspondence between the parties, a second meeting was arranged with Max Kerson. Plaintiff went to Philadelphia on March 21, 1944, and thence, in the company of Max Kerson, to Norristown to meet with the other defendant Isadore Kerson. At this meeting the parties finally reached an oral agreement. Plaintiff was to be permanently employed at a salary of $85 per week commencing April 10, 1944. In reliance upon and pursuant to the contract of employment, plaintiff gave his former employer two weeks' notice of his intention to terminate his then existing employment, and on April 10, 1944, reported for work at defendants' *440 office in Philadelphia. He was instructed to report for work the following day at the Norristown Store operated by the defendant Isadore Kerson and worked there for three days. On the fourth day, to-wit, Friday, April 14, 1944, he was summarily dismissed from his employment, paid $85, and told that his services were no longer desired. Although he made diligent effort, he was not able to secure any other employment until May 30, 1944. He then obtained employment for four days only and remained unemployed until June 13, 1944. As a condition of his employment he was required to live in Philadelphia and that necessitated removing his family to Philadelphia.
The case turns on what was intended by the term "permanent employment." Defendants rely on the general rule that a contract of hiring for an indefinite time is a contract terminable at the will of either party. But there are many exceptions to the general rule. As stated by the Supreme Court, speaking through Mr. Justice STERN, in Slonaker v. The P.G. Publishing Company,
While we have not been furnished with and have been unable to discover any Pennsylvania case directly in point, in most jurisdictions a contract for "permanent employment" will be upheld if there was consideration for the contract other than the services rendered in the employment. In Carnig v. Carr,
The only reason assigned in support of the new trial motion that merits discussion is that the court erred in its charge to the jury as to the measure of damages and plaintiff's alleged failure to mitigate his damages. Plaintiff did everything that reasonably could be expected of him to secure other employment and he certainly was under no obligation to seek employment with his former employer after he had given him notice of his intention to leave to take up other employment. Furthermore, "The principle is well established that in an action to recover damages for wrongful discharge from employment the defense that the claimant earned or could have earned a livelihood during the term of his discharge is an affirmative one, and the burden of proof rests upon the defendant. (citing cases)" Gordon etal. v. Tomei et al.,
The judgment is affirmed. *444