216 Mass. 246 | Mass. | 1913
The defendant corporation having directed its general foreman to obtain a large number of additional workmen to enable it to complete a contract for the electrification of a railroad tunnel, he entered into negotiations with the plaintiff, to furnish a number of her countrymen capable of doing the work. By the form of agreement drafted by the defendant’s superintendent, with whom the contract was made, the plaintiff was to supply the laborers required, while the company was to “build the shanty and furnish the cots” for their accommodation at the place where the work was to be performed. It is plain, however, from the record, that the jury would have been warranted in finding that the entire contract never was reduced to writing but remained partly oral, and its terms were accurately stated by the plaintiff in her testimony.. Davis v. Cress, 214 Mass. 379. What were the terms of the contract for breach of which the action is brought? The plaintiff contracted for as many men as she could procure, upon condition, that she was to accompany them with “the privilege of having a camp and furnishing a shanty and- these men will be in the shanty . . . and that the men would trade with her.” The defendant thereupon undertook not only to provide and furnish a shanty with cots, bedding and fuel, but conferred on her the exclusive privilege of supplying
So ordered.
By Sanderson, J., before whom the case was tried.