12 Ind. 338 | Ind. | 1859
This was a suit for work and labor.
Answer—1. A general denial; 2. That defendant worked forty-three days on a special contract to work three months, which contract he abandoned, &c., whereby defendant suffered damage 30 dollars, &c.; 3. Set-off.
Trial by jury; verdict and judgment for plaintiff for 10 dollars, 70 cents.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff undertook to work for three months at 18 dollars per month; that he performed about forty-five days’ work, when he was compelled to cease work, for a short time, because of an accident by which he was injured; that he was to receive his pay as he needed it; that a few days after he was injured, he asked for a settlement with defendant, and demanded his pay. There was evidence that defendant refused to pay plaintiff unless he would complete his contract, and offered to take the work after he recovered. Plaintiff gave notice he would not work any more, and brought suit.
The witnesses for the defendant state that he did not refuse to pay until after.the plaintiff had stated that he would not work another day, and that he had, at times, offered to pay the plaintiff more than he took.
Contradicting this, is the statement of Eli Angher, who was introduced, and, in the language of 'the bill of exceptions, “by mistake, was not sworn, but stated and gave in
There is no evidence, other than the above, from which the jury could infer that the defendant refused to pay the plaintiff, when requested, until after the plaintiff announced he would not complete the contract.
The evidence of the defendant, if legitimate, shows that he was damaged, by the failure of the plaintiff, in a sum greater than the amount that would have remained due the plaintiff after deducting payments. The plaintiff offered no evidence upon that point. That evidence of defendant consisted of general statements of witnesses, based upon the farming operations of the defendant, the lateness of the season, &c., as to the amount of such damages, without specifying in what they consisted, except upon one point, and that was, that defendant had sold and was to deliver his old corn (eleven hundred bushels) at 70 cents per bushel, but by the failure of the plaintiff, was prevented from doing so until fall, when corn had declined to 50 cents. If this was the proper mode of measuring the damage, it will be seen it would amount to much more than the whole contract price of the labor for the three months. The evidence was not objected to.
In Peters v. Whitney, 23 Barb. 24, which was an action for breach of a contract for work to be done on a farm, evidence of damage to the plaintiff’s crop was deemed inadmissible, because of the defendant’s leaving, &c.; and it was held, in that case, that the legal measure of damages in such a ease is the difference between the contract price and the price the plaintiff was obliged to pay to supply his place.
To the same effect are the decisions of this Court upon the question of the measure of damages. Ricks v. Yates,
Ri the case at bar, there was no evidence as to the wages of labor at the time of the breach. There was evidence that hired help was scarce; and one witness testified, incidentally, that the defendant could not procure a laborer to supply the place of the plaintiff; but there was nothing upon the point of the amount of wages that was offered.
It, is insisted that upon the whole facts, the verdict should have been for the defendant.
Keeping out of view the statements of Eli Angher, there was ample evidence of the contract, its terms, and the amount of labor performed.
The payments proved left about the amount found by the jury.
It is manifest, then, that nothing was allowed for damages for a breach of the contract by the plaintiff.
If the evidence of Angher was legally before the jury, it was, then, a proper question for them to determine which party broke the contract. Without that there was no evidence for them to weigh and reconcile upon that point.
The statute (2 R. S. p. 80) requires witnesses to be sworn, which is but in accordance with the doctrines of the elementary writers. 1 Greenl. Ev. § 328. But in the case at bar, we are not informed when the mistake, as to the testimony having been given without the sanction of an oath, was discovered by the complaining party. The first we hear of it is in the reasons for a new trial. If it was known before the jury retired, the mistake could have been corrected by swearing the witness and rehearing the evidence; or if that course was not taken, by an instruction to the jury to disregard his statements. If no motion was made upon the discovery, by either party, it would amount to an acquiescence in the reception of his statements as evidence in the case.
As there is nothing shown, by affidavit or otherwise, in the record, we are bound to presume in favor of the ruling
Under these circumstances, there was testimony before the jury tending to show a breach of the contract by the defendant, and therefore to sustain the finding of the jury.
The judgment is affirmed with costs.