46 Minn. 468 | Minn. | 1891
The allegations of the complaint are that the plaintiff performed labor and work for defendant for seven anda fraction months
While the whole services were not performed under one entire contract, yet, as to each and every month by itself, the contract was an entire one, viz., to work an entire month for an entire price. A. contract to pay a certain sum for a month’s service is as entire in its consideration as is a contract to pay a certain sum for a single chattel. Beach v. Mullin, 34 N. J. Law, 343. Therefore, to entitle plaintiff to recover the specified wages for any one month, he must have substantially performed the contract of service for that month. According to the settled doctrine of this court, had plaintiff, before the expiration of the month, abandoned the service without excuse, and by his own wilful fault, he could have recovered nothing for the portion of the month he worked, because he would not in such case have performed his contract. Nelichka v. Esterly, 29 Minn. 146, (12 N. W. Rep. 457;) Kohn v. Fandel, 29 Minn. 470, (13 N. W. Rep. 904.) The same result would have followed, and on the same ground, had the defendant during the month, for good and sufficient cause, discharged the plaintiff from his service. But it was an implied condition of the contract that plaintiff should serve the defendant faithfully and honestly. Although only implied, this was as much a part of the contract as was the express condi
Of course, substantial, and not exact, performance, accompanied with good faith, is all the law requires in the case of any contract to entitle a party to recover on it. Although a plaintiff be not absolutely free from fault or omission in every particular, the court will not turn him away if he has in good faith made substantial performance, but will enforce his rights on the one hand, and preserve-the rights of the defendant on the other, by permitting a recoupment. Leeds v. Little, 42 Minn. 414, (44 N. W. Rep. 309;) Elliott v. Caldwell, 43 Minn. 357, (45 N. W. Rep. 845.) Neither is the-rule which we have applied to the present case to be extended so-far as to forfeit wages already earned on a contract already fully performed and at an end. For example, in this case, had the plaintiff faithfully and honestly served the defendant during all of the-first seven months, his wages for which were fully earned, they would not be forfeited by a breach of the contract for the eighth month. But in the present case, according to the answer, the plaintiff, whose-duties included the constant and daily receipt of defendant’s moneys, failed to perform his contract for any month, -having wilfully and dishonestly violated it in a most substantial and essential matter. Hence he never earned his wages for any of the months he was-in defendant’s service.
Judgment reversed.