175 A.D. 905 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1916
"Under the charge of the court the jury could and apparently did find the plaintiff’s recollection of the conversation between himself and defendant’s president in which the contract for plaintiff’s employment to send contributions to defendant’s newspaper was made was more correct and accurate than the recollection of defendant’s president, and, hence, that the agreement was that plaintiff was to receive seven dollars and fifty cents per column for such of his communications as were accepted and printed; also that when defendant’s check for seventy-one dollars was sent to plaintiff as payment in full for contributions to March 18, 1916, there had been no dispute or controversy between the parties in reference to the rate per column which plaintiff was to receive, and at the time plaintiff cashed the cheek he was not aware that its amount was at the rate of four dollars per column instead of seven dollars and fifty cents; that from the time of plaintiff’s employment until some time after plaintiff cashed the cheek there was no communication whatever between plaintiff and any one representing defendant on the subject of the rate per column plaintiff was entitled to receive for contributions; that at the time plaintiff cashed the check he had no knowledge or information as to how many of plaintiff’s contributions had been accepted by defendant and printed in its newspaper, and, hence, had no reason to suppose that the amount of the check was based upon a rate of four dollars per column instead of seven dollars and fifty cents per