25 Conn. 188 | Conn. | 1856
We do not deem it necessary in this case to determine the question which has been made, whether the agreement between these parties is within the provisions of the statute of frauds. If it is, the law would give it no effect while it remained executory, and no action could afterwards be maintained on it, nor could it be used as a defence to an action brought for services rendered under it. It would be treated for these purposes, as though it never existed. But where the services, as in the present case, were not intended to be rendered gratuitously, the law would in such absence of any valid special contract between the parties, imply a promise on the part of a person who employed another to labor, to pay the latter what he reasonably deserved to have for his services, and he would be entitled to recover that sum. But, in determining what that amount should be, we are by no means prepared to adopt the principle which has been claimed to follow from the case of Comes v. Lamson, (16 Conn. R., 246,) that the price actually agreed upon for the
The question then is, whether the omission of the plaintiff to labor during his sickness, was a sufficient reason, when he recovered and offered to continue to labor, for his dismission by the defendant, and this must depend on the true nature of the duty or obligation imposed on the plaintiff by the agreement between them. If such omission to labor constituted a wilful breach of such agreement, or is to be considered as standing on the same ground as a voluntary abandonment of the service of the defendant, it justified him in refusing to receive the plaintiff back into his service. If
It is difficult to reconcile the reported cases on the subject of the liability of an employer of a person who is hired to labor for a specified time, on wages to be paid at the expiration of that time, where such person has, without his fault, failed to labor for the whole of such time; or to extract from them any well defined rule. There is much confusion in them which seems to have arisen from the different views entertained by the courts, on the question whether such a contract of hiring is to be governed by the principle which prevails in regard to a contract to do a specific piece of work as to build a house, or a machine, for a particular sum; in which case the contract is held to be entire, and the performance of it a condition precedent to any right of action against 'the employer, and the non-fulfillment of it is not excused by inevitable necessity. We do not propose to examine those f cases in detail. In the earliest of them it was established, J that the same principle applied to both of these species of l contracts, and that therefore where the service of a person ! hired to labor for a specified time,-ceased within that time, there could be no apportionment of wages for the actual; time of service, and consequently no recovery for the services\ rendered during such time. But this rigid and unreasonable rule has recently been relaxed, and it is now.generally, if not j! universally held, that wages may in particular eases be ap- t portioned; which, in our judgment, is much more in accord- ¶ anee with the true character of such a contract, the presumed t intention of the parties, and the demands of justice. A eon-tract of this sort is for the personal services of the individual who is hired, and can not be performed by the agency of another person, and in this important respect is peculiar and different from a contract by which one agrees to do a particular piece of work, as for instance, to build a house, which may be performed through another person. It is unreasonable to suppose that the parties to such an agreement as the former, knowing that the person hired is liable to be interrupted in his labor by the act of God or inevitable necessity,
We place our opinion on the distinction between a contract for personal services, and one in which they might be lawfully performed by the contractor either personally or by the agency of another, and it will be perceived that our views are, for the most part, in accordance with those of the supreme Court of Vermont,, in Fenton v. Clark, (11 Verm., 557,) which was a case in all substantial respects like the present.
Advice accordingly.
In this opinion, the other judges, Ellsworth and Hinman, concurred.