58 Minn. 242 | Minn. | 1894
These were actions on a bond executed by defendant Johnson as principal and the other defendants as sureties, pursuant to the provisions of Larvs 1885, cli. 205, entitled “An act to regulate employment bureaus or offices.” The bond was conditioned for the payment of any damage which any person secured or engaged to labor for others by the principal obligor, Johnson, might sustain by reason of any unauthorized act, fraud, or misrepresentation for such hiring on his part.
The allegations of the complaints are: That, at,Minneapolis, Johnson falsely and fraudulently represented to the plaintiffs that he was authorized by one Dalrymple to procure laborers for him for threshing grain on his farm at Halstad, Minn., distant 270 miles from Minneapolis, and hired and employed them to work for Dalrymple for ñve consecutive weeks at $1.75 per day, with board and lodging, in consideration of the payment to him (Johnson) by each of the plaintiffs of $6; they to start the same night from Minneapolis to Halstad. That, relying on these representations, each of the plaintiffs accepted the offer, paid the six dollars and started for Halstad. That all of these representations were false, as Johnson well knew. That he was not authorized to employ men for Dalrymple. That, as a consequence, when they arrived at Halstad, and tendered their services to Dalrymple, he declined to give them work, and ordered them off his farm. Then follow allegations as to damages. Upon the trial of the North case the court permitted the plaintiffs, over defendants’ objection and exception, to prove that they had no money to buy food or pay their fare back to Minneapolis; that consequently they had to walk back part of the way, and beg for food, and gather-wild fruit and green, corn to eat, and to sleep in haystacks, thereby causing them suffering and discomfort. • We are of opinion that these damages were remote, and not proximate, and therefore the
In the Skoglund case, on the first day of the trial the court admitted the same class of evidence as that considered above in the North case. On the second day of the trial the court, on the objection of defendants, refused the offer of plaintiff to prove “that when he was refused work by Dalrymple he had no money, a fact which must have come within the knowledge and must have been in the contemplation of the defendant at the time the employment was made; that he was unable to get food or transportation home without money, and in consequence was obliged to walk, beg, and suffer.” The objection to this offer was sustained on the ground that it was too remote, which must mean that the damages offered to be proved were too remote. But when the court charged the jury he instructed them that the fact that plaintiff was obliged to walk back and suffer personal hardship, etc., was too remote, and could not be considered as an element of damages, “unless they found that at the time of the employment this was in the contemplation of the parties themselves.” We do not understand how the court came to give this instruction after he had ruled on the trial that all such damages were too remote, in reliance on which presumably the defendants offered nothing in rebuttal of the evidence previously, admitted on that point.
In each case the order denying a new trial, and also the judgment in the case of North v. Johnson et al., is reversed.
(Opinion published 59 N. W. 1012.)