178 Iowa 168 | Iowa | 1916
I. Plaintiff was employed by defendant, as assistant manager of what was known as the Jones Cement AYorks, for the term of one year, from and after April 1, 1913, at the rate of $100 per month, for the first nine months, and $33.331/§, for the remainder of the year, payable at the end of each month.
Plaintiff entered upon his employment, and, on July 18, 1913, defendant discharged him. Plaintiff claims that the discharge was without cause, and he seeks, in this action, to recover the agreed compensation for the full term, less what he was able to earn during, the period for which he was employed.
Defendant had purchased the cement plant at a receiver’s
“Perry, Iowa, June 19, 1913.
“Mr. C. Durant Jones, Perry, Iowa. • Dear Sir: I hereby order that you are not to pay any more money to PI. M. Shively, receiver, or to the superior court for the purchase of the cement plant of Miller & Van Patten, unless you are willing to lose all you pay for said property, -as we will be there to object to said sale, as said sale was made through fraud. (Signed) E. W. Miller, member of said firm.”
Plaintiff, without the knowledge or consent of the defendant, also stopped some other employees from hauling sand to the plant. These things, testified to by defendant, and corroborated, to some extent, by others, were the reasons for plaintiff’s discharge.
Plaintiff denied being absent from the plant, save with defendant’s knowledge and consent; said he knew nothing of Van Patten’s taking the cedar posts, although he affirmed that these posts had been sold to one Fife, before defendant Jones bought the plant; and, while admitting that he wrote the letter to Jones, before quoted, said that he did it to protect his (Jones’) interests, because Van Patten told him he was going to try to have the sale to him (Jones) set aside for fraud, and to save him (Jones) from paying the balance of the purchase price. Pie also testified that the reason Jones gave him for discharging him, was that he (plaintiff) gave
One Riddle was produced as a witness for defendant, and was asked this question, to which he made the response as shown:
Master and servant : wrongful discharge : misconduct as defense: evidence. “Did Mr. Miller ever make any statement to the effect that he would knock out the sale of the plant to Mr. Jones,— that he could get more money? A. I had a conversation with him one evening, and he said that Van Patten had gone into it and they were going to get it back; he thought there was some fraud in it.”
On plaintiff’s objections, the last clause of the answer was stricken out. This was clearly error. It was a statement by Miller as to an attempt by him and Van Patten to set aside the receiver’s sale.
“A. lie said he wanted to give me a little tip. líe says ‘I think you are going to get discharged in a little while,’, and he says, ‘Keep this to yourself, but I think Jones is going to get his brother here as manager.’ ”
“You are instructed that,* if you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that plaintiff, without excuse, conducted himself toward the defendant as alleged by the defendant in one or more of the particulars thereof, and his conduct was such as to be injurious to the interests of the defendant to retain him in his service, then the defendant had the right to discharge him, and he is not entitled to recover. ’ ’
We are disposed to think this instruction erroneous. It was not necessary that plaintiff’s misconduct should have, in fact, injured the defendant. It was enough that it had that tendency, or might reasonably have led to his injury. Defendant did not have to wait until injury was done, before discharging the plaintiff. If plaintiff’s conduct was such as to indicate that his interests were hostile to those of his master, it was the right of the master to discharge him, before any injury was, in fact, done. The instruction was properly excepted to, and should not have been given in this form. It is well settled that a servant must do nothing in hostility to his master’s interests. If he defrauds his master, or attempts to do so, or lends himself to aid others in defrauding him, or exposes the master to danger of loss, even though none is in fact sustained, the master may discharge him, for violation of an implied condition of his contract; and so the master may discharge him if he places himself in relations with others that are inconsistent with his duties to the master, o.r such as to jeopardize his interests. Adams Express Co. v. Trego, 35 Md. 47; Deane v. Cutter, 20 N. Y. Supp. 617.
For the errors pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, — Reversed.