238 N.W. 195 | Mich. | 1931
Plaintiff Joseph Nyman was engaged for one year by defendant B.S. Chapin, Inc., as manager of the basement department of a retail store in Grand Rapids, Michigan. The contract of *444 employment was not reduced to writing. Both parties agree that plaintiff's salary was to be $75 per week, but they are in total disagreement as to the bonus plaintiff was to receive at the end of the year of employment. Plaintiff claims that it was to amount to 10 per cent. of the increase in the gross receipts of the basement department over those of the previous year. Defendant denies this, and claims that if at the end of the year the basement department showed a profit, plaintiff's bonus was to be the sum of $900. The testimony is in direct conflict. The credibility of every witness is attacked. Plaintiff was discharged five weeks before the end of the year. He claims salary for five weeks, together with the bonus based on the increase of the business. The jury believed him and rendered a judgment in his favor of $4,205.86, the exact amount due under the contract as claimed by him.
While we are in accord with the trial judge in not being convinced of the correctness of plaintiff's version of the contract, we also agree with him that the verdict, except in some minor respects, is supported by ample testimony and is not against the great weight of the evidence. Irrespective of whether the contract claimed by plaintiff was an unprofitable one for the defendant, or plaintiff's witnesses were disinterested, or not, it became a question for the jury to determine whose version of the contract was correct. It is not within our province to disturb the verdict under the circumstances, except where it is against the great preponderance of the testimony.
Defendant claims that the trial court erred in charging the jury that if it did not find the contract as claimed by either party, it might return a verdict on the quantum meruit count of the declaration. In a case where an employee is prevented from completing *445
a contract he has begun, there are two remedies open to him. He may sue upon the contract, and on a special count for services, labor, and expense incurred from which he has derived no benefit. Where he makes no election, a verdict may be rendered on either count. Corman Co. v. L.A. Young Industries,
WIEST, CLARK, McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, and FEAD, JJ., concurred. *446