99 S.W. 107 | Tex. App. | 1906
This is a suit by appellee to recover the sum of $1,110 actual and $2,000 exemplary damages alleged to have accrued by reason of the breach of a contract of employment on the part of appellant, who had employed appellee as a teacher for the year beginning June 1, 1904, and ending May 31, 1905. The breach was alleged to have consisted in the wrongful discharge of appellee on January 19, 1905. The salary that was alleged to have been contracted for was $1,200, which amount was sued for less a credit of $90 received by appellee for three months' service in another school. There was also an allegation in the petition as to an indebtedness to May Coltrane, the daughter of appellee, to which exceptions were sustained by the court. The said May Coltrane sought to have herself joined as a plaintiff in the suit, but the court sustained a plea in abatement to her pleadings. The cause was tried by a jury and on their verdict a judgment for $1,034.35 in favor of appellee was rendered by the court.
The court did not err in permitting appellee to testify that teachers are usually employed in May and June. It became the duty of appellee, when discharged, to use diligence in obtaining other employment. He was discharged in January and got only $90 for three months' work, and he had the right to produce any testimony tending to show the reason for his not being able to get more remunerative employment for the balance of the scholastic year remaining after his discharge. The evidence as to teachers being usually employed in May and June tended to give the explanation. The testimony might have been confined to that object if appellant had sought to so confine it. There is nothing in the contention that appellee had not qualified as an expert. Teaching had been his lifework and he had been teaching in Texas for fifteen years. He testified unqualifiedly that such a custom existed and what it was. The objections were without merit and were properly overruled.
Appellant sued for a salary of $1,200, alleged to be due on a verbal contract which was to be identical with a written contract theretofore made that had expired, except as to a certain lien mentioned in the fourth paragraph thereof. After setting up a renewal of the terms of the written contract it was alleged: "And it was further agreed according to said written contract, that this plaintiff was to teach in Peacock's School for Boys, for the year beginning on the first day of June, 1904, and running up to and including the first day of May, 1905, and that for said services he was to receive the sum of $1,200 per year." The evidence of appellee, which was not objected to by appellant, showed that the year began June 1, 1904, and ended May 31, 1905, as in the previous years under the terms of the written contract. The omission of the figure "3" before the "1" in the petition was clearly a clerical one and the case was treated by the court and both parties as though May 31 had *533 been used instead of May 1. The whole context of the pleadings shows that was the intention of the pleader. After remaining silent in the trial of the cause in the District Court appellant will not be permitted to raise the question here.
There is nothing in the contention that the charge permitted a verdict in favor of appellee for the whole of the salary regardless of any credit for amounts earned by him after his discharge. That the jury did not so construe the charge fully appears from a verdict allowing all that he earned as a credit on the salary. It was not controverted that appellee sought other employment after he was discharged. Appellant failed to make any issue on that point. That appellee could have lessened his damages by getting other work was a matter of defense to be shown by appellant. (Porter v. Burkett,
In his answer appellant alleged that appellee did not give the school loyal support and faithful service, that he had stirred up strife and discontent and had conspired to break down and injure appellee in his management of the school and to obtain possession of it. There was testimony that tended to sustain the charge of bad faith and disloyalty made by appellant. And such being the state of the case appellant had the right to have it presented to the jury by a correct charge appropriate to the facts. The court recognized that right and instructed as to the defense made by appellant as follows: "If you believe from the evidence, that the plaintiff did not give the defendant's school loyal support, as alleged by defendant, then you are instructed that the defendant had the right to discharge plaintiff, and for the "contract period, if any, after such discharge, if any, plaintiff would not be entitled to recover any salary."
There are cases which hold that if an agent is employed for a stipulated term and before the expiration of that term is discharged by reason of his own fault or misconduct, he can recover no wages or compensation for the services already rendered. (Libhart v. Wood (Pa.), 37 Am. Dec., 461; Posey v. Garth, 37 Am. Dec., 183; Clark Skyles Agency, sec. 365a.)
In other instances it has been held that the unfaithful agent may recover a proportionate part of the stipulated wages, or he may recover compensation for the services actually rendered during the term, and prior to his discharge, to the extent such services were reasonably valuable to the employer, not exceeding the rate of compensation stipulated by the express contract. (Hildebrand v. American Fine Art (60 Wis.), 85 N.W. Rep., 268; Page on Contracts, sec. 1487.)
The latter rule has been adopted by the Supreme Court of Texas, in the case of Cotton v. Rand,
The charge of the court though not as full as it might have been was correct to the extent to which it was extended, and it was the duty of appellant to cure any omission in the charge by requesting a correct charge on the question of appellee's disloyalty. The special charges one and two asked by appellant were not correct, under the rule adopted in the Cotton-Rand case, in that it provides for the service rendered only for the time that appellee was faithful and loyal to the school. Appellant accepted and received the benefits of that labor and should pay whatever it is worth as evidenced by the terms of the contract.
The fourteenth assignment of error raises the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. There is evidence tending to show that appellee was employed by appellant for the year beginning June 1, 1904, and ending May 31, 1905, at a salary of $1,200, and that he was discharged without just cause in January, 1905, and was unable to secure any employment except for three months at a salary of $30 a month. Whatever might have been our opinion of the evidence untrammelled by the finding of the jury, we must in deference to that verdict hold that the evidence sustains it. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.