55 Mo. App. 236 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1893
This was an action for damages for an alleged violation of the following contract:
“St. Louis, August 17, 1892.
“This is to certify that I hereby engage Mr. Sol. Y. Rich, for the term of three months from this day up to the seventeenth day of November, 1892, at a salary of $20 per week, provided he is competent to fill the position he is engaged for, — that is, as foreman in the manufacturing department.
“(Signed)
L. Eendlek.”
On the trial the plaintiff read the contract in evidence, and he introduced other evidence tending to prove his alleged cause of action. The evidence of the defendant tended to prove that the plaintiff was careless and negligent in the discharge of the duties assigned to him, and that, when his attention was called to his failure to properly do the work assigned to him, he declared his willingness and intention to quit work, to which the defendant assented. The defendant offered to prove by other witnesses, who were acquainted with the plaintiff, that he did not possess the necessary skill to discharge the duties of foreman of such a business as the defendant conducted, by showing his general reputation as a workman, and that he had undertaken similar work for other parties and had failed to give satisfaction. The court excluded this evidence, and the defendant assigns that for error.
We are of the opinion that the court did right in excluding the evidence which the defendant offered. The plaintiff worked for the defendant for more than a month, and we think that his competency or ineom
The other assignment is that the trial court abused its discretionary powers in allowing the verdict to stand, as the- preponderance of the evidence for the defendant is such as to indicate bias in the verdict. The substance of such an assignment is that under all the evidence the unavoidable inference is that the verdict was the result of passion, prejudice or mistake, and that, therefore, the trial court, in overruling the motion for a new trial, abused its judicial discretion. We have held that the verdict of a jury must be regarded as the result of a mistake or prejudice, when it is against all reasonable probabilities in the case. In the present action the testimony of the defendant on the main question was opposed by the testimony of the plaintiff, that is, as to the manner in which the
the judgment will be affirmed.