125 N.W. 885 | N.D. | 1910
Action for an alleged balance of wages. The plaintiff was employed by the defendants as bartender in East Grand Forks, Minn., and worked as such from April 23 to August 26, 1907, for the agreed wages of $25 per week. On August 26th a new contract was entered into, under which defendants were to pay the plaintiff $20 per week, and, if he worked one year and kept sober, he was to receive $5 per week in addition. According to the” record, there is no substantial controversy as to the terms of the contract. A careful reading of the plaintiff’s evidence clearly shows the above to have been the substance of the contract. In respect to this contract, one of the defendants testifies as follows: “At that time we made a new arrangement with him to pay him $20 a week salary, and, if he remained sober in our employ one year, we agreed to give him $250 at the end of the year. I cut him from $25 to $20 per week in order to keep him sober.” In reference to the contract, the plaintiff testifies as follows :. “At that time Mr. Oeschger told me he wanted to put me back to work, and he told me he would pay me the same wages he had been paying me. That was $25. He says, 'We will pay you $20 every week,’ and at the end of the year they would pay me this holdback, and L told them this was satisfactory to me. That is, at the end of the year, if I stayed one year, I was to get an amount equal to $5 per week through the year,-and if I kept sober.” The plaintiff worked to the satisfaction of the defendants under the new contract from its date to March 30, 1908. On that day the plaintiff refused to work for ah hour after his quitting hour that day at the' request of one of the defendants. On the next morning the defendants discharged him, and this action was brought to recover the sum of $163.95 as the balance claimed to
Some of them are based on the action of the court in reference to additional compensation for working outside or in addition to the regular hours. There was no showing whatever that the contract provided for pay for such extra work, if it may be called extra work, in view of the character of the employment, and that the working hours were not regular. In the absence of such showing, we deem it well settled as a proposition of law that no extra compensation is allowable. There was no error, therefore, in refusing to submit the question of compensation for working on some days more than the regular time during which the plaintiff was generally asked to work.
It is claimed that the plaintiff was discharged without cause, and is therefore entitled to pay for the $5 per week during each week from August 26th. The facts in reference to the discharge are not in dispute. The trial court held from such undisputed evidence that the discharge was for cause. We affirm that conclusion after a careful examination of the evidence. One of the defendants requested the plaintiff to remain at work on March 30th while said defendant went to supper, which would be about an hour’s extra time. The plaintiff refused to do so. No fixed hours of work for each day, nor the hours during which the plaintiff should work during the day were specified in the contract. There were at times three bartenders, and at others two, and the hours during which each should work were fixed by the defendants, and these varied at times. During a part of the time the hours during which the plaintiff should work were fixed, and were at times varied at the request of the defendant. March 30th, when this request was. made of the plaintiff, was an election day in said city, and plaintiff had only been on duty from 9 a. m. to 5 p. m., excepting an absence for dinner. During his employment plaintiff had occasionally worked 12 hours, and on several occasions had worked more than the allotted hours at the request of the defendants.
Considerable is said in the briefs as to whether the contract in question is an entire one or severable. In view of the fact that we find that the plaintiff refused to perform the contract with out just cause, it is immaterial as to the nature of the contract. If the plaintiff had been discharged without cause, a different question would have been presented. We think it clear, however, that this was not a contract for a year at $20 per week. It was a contract for $20 per week, and, if the plaintiff worked a year, he would be entitled to an additional $5 per week if he remained sober. Under this contract, the plaintiff could have quit at any time without affecting the obligation of the parties at all, except as to paying the extra money. There is a dispute as to whether the plaintiff had been paid for one day, being the first Monday he worked under the new contract. The trial court expressly submitted this question to the jury, and it found for the defendants. The first check which plaintiff received under the new contract was for $24.25, and it is defendant’s contention that this was a payment in full under the old contract and up to the first Monday, at 7 o’clock p. m. under the new contract. Plaintiff has been paid $20 each week since said day by checks which show that they are in full for all services up to date. The plaintiff is uncertain as to whether the $24.25 check does or does not include pay for this
We do not think that there is any question of quantum meruit compensation in this case. The discharge from service was for an adequate cause, and no claim for the $5 per week extra arises, as plaintiff has not performed the contract so as to entitle him to any more than the pyment of the $20 per week, and this is admitted to have been paid.
It is also claimed that the trial court erred in refusing to direct a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of 39 cents claimed to be due the plaintiff. It is claimed that,the check for $24.25 should have been given for $24.64. The weekly checks from August 26th were given and accepted for full payment for all services up to date. The checks show this fact, and the witness Thompson so testifies. The plaintiff does not testify what the items composing the check for $24.25 were, and is unable to state what this sum was made up of. From April 26th to March 30th the parties dealt with each other in'a manner showing unequivocally that there had been full payment of all sums due on the old contract, and on the new contract as well. This check was made up of eight days’ work under the new contract and one-half day’s work under the old contract, and was undoubtedly intended to include all sums due the plaintiff on account of all services at its date. We do not therefore think that it was error to refuse to submit this question to the jury in view of the conduct of the plaintiff in accepting these weekly checks as full payment. If, however, it clearly appeared that there was due to the plaintiff the sum of 39 cents, we should not deem ourselves called upon to reverse the judgment for that reason, as the only question is whether the sum of 39 cents has been paid. It is a question where the doctrine or principle, “De minimis non curat lex,” should be applied. No question of costs is involved. Hass v. Prescott, 38 Wis. 146; Sutherland on Damages (2d Ed.) section 11; Kenyon v. N. W. Union Tel. Co., 100 Cal. 454, 35 Pac. 75.
It is claimed that it was error not to grant plaintiff’s motion to strike out certain portions of the testimony of the witness Thompson, who was the bookkeeper of the defendants during the time that the plaintiff worked for them. Thompson drew the check for $24.25, and testified that it was delivered and accepted as pay
The judgment is therefore affirmed.