28 How. Pr. 493 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1864
By the court, The referee has found among other facts, in substance, that the plaintiff during all the time he worked for the defendants was hired by the month, at from $20 to $24 per month, and received the pay and signed the pay rolls ; that Gray was the general superintendent during all the time the plaintiff was in the defendants’ employment; that the authority of Day, Lee/ and Knight to employ workmen was subject to Gray’s approval, and that Gray never authorized them to pay the plaintiff any greater sum than he was receiving as his month’s wages; that the plaintiff was informed soon after he commenced watching Sunday nights that his compensation would not be increased, and that he might leave the defendants’ employment if dissatisfied, and that he continued watching Sunday nights after he' was so informed; that the employment of the plaintiff to watch Sunday nights, and to pay him an extra compensation therefor, was .without the consent or approbation of the general superintendent
While an ordinary receipt for money is the subject of explanation, and may not conclude a party, yet the explanation should be such as to leave no reasonable doubt that it was not intended to embrace the claim sought to be recovered. In this case the evidence is far from producing that effect—goes far to support the receipt, and renders it conclusive. The referee committed no error in striking out the evidence of Hurlburt in reference to Lee’s hiring the plaintiff, as it was a declaration to a third party, not made to or in the presence of the plaintiff, nor was his name mentioned, nor did the declaration accompany any authorized act, to explain or characterise which such declaration was necessary.
The referee properly excluded the evidence of Clarke that he took the place of the plaintiff a t the compensation of $30 per month, and that there was no increase in the wages of other laborers. This evidence was wholly immaterial so far as the plaintiff was concerned, as the company were at liberty to employ whoever they chose, and to pay whatever sum they were disposed to, and the evidence if admitted, could not have properly affected the liability of the defendants to the plaintiff. The objection was not well taken to the question put to the witness Gray, as to Lee's authority to employ plaintiff. The objection was too general—being aimed at form and not substance—the plaintiff should have specified the defect, so that the defendants could have changed the form of the question. (12 N. Y. 451; 5 Barb. 406 ; 17 Wend. 143.) If the plaintiff intended by the objection that the question was leading, that was matter of discretion with the referee.
The referee properly overruled the offer of the plaintiff to.prove that he was not paid the usual wages of men who
Having arrived at the conclusion that no error was committed by the referee, the judgment must be affirmed with costs.