72 Md. 283 | Md. | 1890
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The evidence for the plaintiff (now appellee) tended to prove that under a verbal contract with the defendant, he was to cut, trim and set all the stonework on seventeen houses for the sum of $3225, which the defendant promised to pay in weekly instalments as the work progressed, and that the defendant wrongfully
In considering the prayers offered at the trial, we cannot look to the pleadings in the case, inasmuch as the prayers make no reference to them. Leopard vs. Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Co., 1 Gill, 222, and many other cases, some of which are cited in Baltimore Building Association, No. 2 vs. Grant, 41 Md., 569. If the plaintiff agreed that the defendant might discharge him in case of drunkenness and neglect of his work, and he was discharged because guilty of these offences, he did not thereby forfeit what he had earned up to the time of discharge. He was still entitled to be paid for his work, and the jury ought to have been instructed that upon this hypothesis he was entitled to recover the value of his work according to the contract price. In the absence of good cause for discharge, he was entitled to recover the difference between the contract price for the whole work and the cost of performing it. In either event, the plaintiff would, of course, be charged with the money already paid him by the defendant on account of
For error in the first exception the judgment must be reversed.
Judgment reversed, and new trial awarded.