204 Ky. 474 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
¡Opinion of the Court by
-Reversing.
Tbe appellants, George Ross and J. B. Rayner, as plaintiffs in a joint petition, sought to recover damages from the appellee, Columbus Mining Company, for its breach of an oral contract which they claim it entered into with them.
They allege in their petition “that on the 16th day of August, 1916, they entered into an oral contract with this defendant company ... to take up and continue to drive a certain entry in the defendant’s mine, and pursuant- to that (sic) terms of said oral contract the plaintiffs agreed to drive said entry and air courses, and to turn off cross entries; side rooms and dog entries, and to fix up all places, curtain up the air, and repair the track and to do any and . . . work necessarily incident to place said mine in condition so successful mining could be done in said first part of said mine, and to do all the work
“Now plaintiffs say pursuant to aforesaid contract they entered into the discharge of their duties on the — day of August, 1916, and by the terms of said contract they were to work and labor in said mine for a period of twelve months therefrom.” They "further allege “that they did and performed each and every stipulation, condition and agreement of said oral contract enjoined upon them by its terms thereof from the date of said contract” for a period of five months, at which time defendant refused to permit them to continue their work, thereby breaking the contract to their damage in the sum of $2,940.00, for which amount they prayed judgment.
Upon the trial at the conclusion of all the evidence the lower court sustained appellee’s motion for a directed verdict and entered a judgment dismissing the petition, and from that judgment appellants prosecute this appeal.
The record fails to disclose upon what grounds the court sustained appellee’s motion for a directed verdict, but it is apparent the court’s ruling is based upon one or more of the grounds argued i±L brief of appellee’s counsel. It is therein contended that the action of the court was correct and the peremptory instruction proper, because, first, the petition failed to state a cause of action and, second, the evidence showed appellee’s superintendent who contracted with the appellants had no authority to make such a contract.
The sufficiency of the petition is attacked upon numerous grounds. It is insisted that the contract as alleged falls within the inhibition of section 470 of the Ken
"We find no merit in either of these contentions. While it is true we have universally held that a pleading must be most strongly construed against the pleader, we have also held that it must be considered as a whole, and when the petition in this action is so construed it is not susceptible of the strained construction placed upon it by appellee’s counsel. It is unnecessarily prolix and therefore confusing, but though unartfully drawn it definitely alleges “that on the 16th day of August, 1916, they entered into an oral contract,” that they were to perform certain work and that “they were to have complete control of said entry . . . for a period of one year from the 16th day of August, 1916, until the 16th day of August, 1917;” that “they entered into the discharge of their duties on the — day of August, 1916, and by the terms of said contract they were to work and labor in said mine for a period of twelve months therefrom; ’ ’ and that “they did and performed each and every stipulation, condition and agreement of said oral contract enjoined upon them by its terms thereof from the date of said contract” until its breach by appellee.
It will be noted that in the next to the concluding phrase just quoted the petition charges that appellants started work on, and the contract was to run twelve months from, “the — day of August, 1916.” Counsel contend that when this is construed most strongly against the pleader the blank day of August must be held to mean
“’If the contract period commences running immediately on the making of the contract and is to extend for a year and no longer, it is not within the statute.”
The same principle is thus stated in 27 C. J. 186:
“An oral contract of employment for a year to begin on the day the contract is made ... is not within the statute. So if the contract is made orally for one year to begin in praesenti, although no services are to be performed by the employee until a future day, the contract is operative from the day of the making and is not within the statute.”
Appellee further alleges that no recovery could be had under the petition because it failed to allege that appellants had made reasonable but unsuccessful efforts to secure other work after the breach of the contract. This argument is based upon the erroneous assumption that the contract was one for personal service under which it may be conceded no recovery can be had in the absence of such an allegation. However, we have held in numerous decisions that contracts similar to the one involved in the present action are not for personal service but for a definite undertaking and that the measure of damages is not the loss of wages but the reasonable profit the aggrieved party might have made had the contract not been breached. R. Burleigh & Sons v. Overton, 173 Ky. 70, 190 S. W. 472; Stearns Lumber Co. v. Inman, 154 Ky. 251, 157 S. W. 23; Harness, et al. v. Ky. Fluor Spar Co., 149
Appellee earnestly insists that the court properly sustained its motion for a peremptory instruction because the evidence not only failed to show but conclusively disproved that its superintendent, with whom appellant contracted, bad authority to mak a contract for a fixed or definite period of time. The only material dispute between the parties as to the terms of the contract is as to whether it was for a definite period, to-wit, a year, as appellants contend, or for an indefinite period, terminable at the will of either party, as appellee contends. That issue should have been submitted to the jury unless the contract, as claimed by appellee, was such as appellee’s superintendent had neither express nor implied authority to make: That he did not have express authority is undisputed; whether he had implied or apparent authority must be determined from the facts, circumstances and conditions as shown by the evidence.
Appellee is an Illinois corporation, with its headquarters and chief office in the city of Chicago. It operates coal mines at four different places in Kentucky and each mine is in charge of a superintendent. Walter Stevens was the superintendent in charge of its mine at Christopher, Kentucky, and it was with him that appellants contracted. It was shown that he was the chief officer and general manager at the mine, that he had charge of its affairs and control of its operations and had full authority to, and did, employ all miners and other employees. Testifying for appellee, Stevens himself stated: “My duties were to supervise the operation of the mines, and I had authority to hire the men necessary to successfully work the mine, but I had no authority to make any special agreement or contracts with the men.” “I had no authority to employ men to load coal at other than the fixed rate per ton. I, of course, had authority to hire men to do work other than loading coal.” It was further shown that he was authorized or at least accustomed to enter into contracts similar to the one in question, but there was no evidence that he had ever entered into any for a fixed or definite period. However, as superintendent on the ground and in active and full charge of the mine he was, in fact, the company itself and clearly had implied authority to do all things reasonably necessary and customary to accomplish the purpose for which he was placed in charge of the mine by his absent superiors, that is, to get out the coal.
Judgment' reversed.