Where a party contracts to work for a definite term and is wrongfully discharged
after
rendering a portion of the services contracted for (compare
Putney v. Swift, Murphy & Co.,
However, the rule as stated in the
Cox
case does not affect the running of the statute of limitation on the right of action for accrued wages. If the contract is severable and provides for wages payable in periodic instalments, then the employee need not wait until the expiration of the contract term but may sue, under the legal fiction assuming a rendition of “constructive service,” for the instalments of his wages as they accrue.
Blun & Sterne v. Holitzer,
If the employee elects to treat the contract as continuing after *445 wrongful discharge, the right of action as to the last instalment of his salary does not accrue until expiration of the stipulated term of employment. And if the employment contract is in writing, the employee has six years after the expiration within which to bring suit. Code § 3-705.
Here, the failure to show affirmatively in the petition that the contract sued on was in writing raises no presumption that it existed only in parol.
Grant v. Hart,
The contract sued on is not fully set forth in the petition. However, we surmise that the contract was a severable one and that plaintiff’s salary was to be paid in periodic instalments. If so, then plaintiff’s claim as to most of the instalments would be barred even under the six-year period of limitation. However, the contract term expired on October 31, 1961, and this suit was filed on August 31, 1967. Thus, applying the six-year period for the immediate purpose, it appears that at least a part of plaintiff’s claim falls within the period of the statute of limitation. It follows that the trial court erred in sustaining defendant’s demurrer contending that the petition show on its face the action was barred.
Judgment reversed.
