185 A.D. 4 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
Lead Opinion
The record contains no complaint, either in writing or oral; but it contains a bill of particulars showing that plaintiff claimed to have been employed by defendant at seventy-five dollars per month, and that the action was brought to recover seventy-nine dollars and twenty-five cents for wages. The defendant pleaded that the contract of employment was in writing and was for a hiring from month to month terminable by plaintiff only at the end of any month by eight days’ previous notice in writing, and that he agreed, among other things, that he would not participate, either directly or indirectly, in a strike against the defendant, and that in the event of his failure to comply with the contract he would forfeit as liquidated damages all wages due; that on the 2d of May, 1917, without the consent of the defendant or just cause, plaintiff aided and participated in and joined a strike against the defendant and voluntarily left its employ without having given said notice. Defendant also pleaded a counterclaim for one hundred and thirty-two dollars and fifty cents for damages sustained through plaintiff’s said breaches of the contract.
The plaintiff entered the defendant’s employ on the 12th of November, 1915, under a contract in writing and continued in its employ thereunder until November 1, 1916, when another contract in writing was made between them under which the employment was continued until the 1st of January, 1917, when a third contract in writing was made under which he continued in the employ of the defendant as sauce cook until about six-thirty p. M. on the 2d day of May, 1917, when he joined in a strike against his employer called by a union to which he belonged known as the Enterprise Federation of the Culinary and Alimentary Syndicates. No fixed period
If the plaintiff has a cause of action, I am of opinion that the counterclaim was erroneously dismissed. The defendant showed that the strike occurred at the dinner hour when between 1,000 and 1,500 guests were waiting to be served; that it was obliged to hire a sauce cook at ten dollars per day for eleven days and at five dollars for four days thereafter to take plaintiff’s place, and it thereby expended the sum of ninety-two dollars and fifty cents over and above the amount it would have been obliged to pay plaintiff as salary for the fifteen days.
But a more serious error was committed, for the complaint . should have been dismissed. We are not now concerned with
There is, however, another theory on which I think the complaint should have been dismissed. At the time the plaintiff joined in the strike and left defendant’s employ, no wages were due him under the contract. He could not recover wages without showing performance of the contract on his part (Seaburn v. Zachmann, 99 App. Div. 218; Milligan v. Sligh Furniture Co., 111 Mich. 629); but whether due performance to entitle him to recover wages required him to show that he gave the notice and did not participate in a strike, need not be decided, for assuming that those were matters of defense, which they probably were, they have been pleaded and shown by uncontroverted evidence. Undoubtedly the contract required the payment of the wages in monthly installments, and if the action involved a monthly installment which became due and payable before any breach of the contract on the part of the plaintiff his right to recover for the installment due and payable before such breach could not be defeated by proof of a subsequent breach by him, and the employer’s remedy in such case would be to counterclaim or recoup for its damages for the subsequent breach. (Crotty v. Erie R. R. Co., 149 App. Div. 262, 265; Walsh v. New York & Kentucky Co., 88 .id. 477; Oliver v. McArthur, 158 id. 241; Mernagh v. Nichols, 132 id. 509; Delmar v. Kinder-hook Knitting Co., 134 id. 558; Clark v. West, 137 id. 23; affd., in part, 201 N. Y. 569. See, also, Tipton v. Feitner, 20 N. Y. 423; Seibert v. Dunn, 216 id. 237.) There is no particular hardship to the plaintiff in the construction of the contract have indicated. We are not now concerned with an inexcusable violation of the contract by the employee, such as sickness, accident or otherwise, but with a willful violation calculated to result in damage to his employer. The courts of this State have never allowed a recovery by an employee for services rendered under a contract where he has abandoned performance during the entire period, performance during which was a prerequisite to a recovery, and I am of opinion that if the provisions of the contract could not be sustained on the theory of a forfeiture of the wages as liquidated damages, they should in any event be construed as an agree
The determination of the Appellate Term and the judgment of the Municipal Court should, therefore, be reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term, and the complaint dismissed, with costs. Order reversing implied finding of performance of contract of employment by plaintiff, and that any sum was due him for salary or wages, and containing findings and legal conclusions in accordance with opinion, to be presented for settlement.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling and Merrell, JJ., concurred; Page, J., dissented.
Dissenting Opinion
In my opinion the provision in the contract for the forfeiture of all wages due provides a penalty for the breach and not liquidated damages. When we are called upon to determine whether a forfeiture of an amount for the breach of a contract is to be considered a penalty or liquidated damages, it is not to be determined in the light of subsequent events. (Dunn v. Morgenthau, 73 App. Div. 147, 149; affd., on opinion below, 175 N. Y. 518.)
The wages due at the time the plaintiff left the defendant’s employment would not have been an unreasonable amount to pay as damages for this breach of the contract. The contract, however, did not limit the sum to one month’s wages nor to any definite amount, but provided for a forfeiture of all wages due at the time, regardless of amount. The
While it is true that the plaintiff cannot recover wages for the month of May, nor any part thereof, because he left the employment during that month, the evidence shows that payments were made monthly on the tenth day of the month, but the period of service for which compensation was made was not measured from the tenth of one month to the tenth of the next. But the evidence is that on April tenth the wages for the month of March were paid. On the tenth of May the wages for the month of April would have been paid. Those wages were earned and the right to payment would not be defeated by his abandonment of the contract during the succeeding month.
In my opinion the judgment should be reduced to seventy-five dollars, with appropriate costs, and as so modified affirmed, with costs.
Determination and judgment reversed, with costs in this court and in the Appellate Term, and complaint dismissed, with costs. Order reversing implied findings and containing findings and legal conclusions in accordance with opinion to be settled on notice.