251 Mass. 540 | Mass. | 1925
This is an action of contract to recover damages for breach of a written contract of personal employment. The plaintiff obtained a verdict, and the defendants bring the case here on exceptions to the denial of their motion for a directed verdict, and to the refusal of the judge to give their requests for rulings.
The defendants, who were manufacturers of sweaters, cloth and knit goods under the firm name of the Suffolk Knitting Company, purchased of the plaintiff, also a manufacturer of sweaters, his machinery and stock in trade. But before the plaintiff began business for himself he had been employed for many years by the defendants as an expert machinist, and by reason of experience he had become familiar with the making of goods in which they dealt.
The defendant Barron as a witness admitted that he had general supervision of the entire plant, and gave directions to the plaintiff concerning work required of him. And the auditor, whose reports were properly before .the jury, finds, that the plaintiff faithfully performed all the duties of a machinist, boss knitter, and assistant supervisor of manufacture as well as attending to the efficient operation of the knitting machines, and that he was ready and willing to continue to perform his contract except for the acts of the defendants in terminating his employment. The evidence exclusive of the auditor’s reports also warranted a finding that no valid objection or complaint was made by the defendants concerning the extent of the duties the plaintiff actually performed, and that, acting under their control and direction, obedience to their demands required all of his time, and he was under no contractual obligation to do more. The affirmative answer of the jury to the inquiry of the judge, “I take it . . . that you found that the plaintiff had fully performed his contract with respect to services as
It follows from what has been said that the jury could find the defence of justification had not been sustained. Sipley v. Stickney, 190 Mass. 43. Mountford v. Cunard Steamship Co. Ltd. 202 Mass. 345. Frati v. Jannini, 226 Mass. 430.
We discover no fatal variance, as the defendants urge, between the evidence, and the allegations of the declaration as finally amended.
The motion for a directed verdict, and the defendants’ second, fourth, sixth and seventh requests were rightly denied. Ransom v. Boston, 192 Mass. 299, 307; S. C. .196 Mass. 248.
The defence in mitigation of damages is, that the plaintiff after his discharge could have obtained employment but voluntarily preferred to remain idle. Therefore the question is, whether it could be found that he either obtained, or could have procured, employment to which he was adapted. In the absence of such proof the plaintiff is entitled to recover the compensation named in the contract. See Maynard v. Royal Worcester Corset Co. 200 Mass. 1,6, 7, and cases there collected. The plaintiff testified, that after his discharge he sought reemployment by the defendants, but, the application being unsuccessful, he went to one Wallace, a manufacturer of sweaters, and “asked Wallace if he could get something for him to do.” The interview resulted in an
The eighth and ninth requests could not have been given. The tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteenth and fourteenth requests relating to alleged rulings and findings by the auditor, and the effect to be given to his reports by the jury, were, in so far as pertinent, fully and appropriately covered by the instructions to which the defendants did not except. Fair v. Manhattan Ins. Co. 112 Mass. 320, 328. Tripp v. Macomber, 187 Mass. 109. Jaquith v. Morrill, 204 Mass. 181. Zembler v. Fitzgerald, 234 Mass. 236. Title Guaranty & Surety Co. v. Fred T, Ley & Co. Inc. 238 Mass. 113. King v. Freedman, 239 Mass. 560.
Exceptions overruled.