185 A.D. 131 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1918
The action was brought to recover damages for a breach of a contract of employment; the contract contained this clause: “If after thirty days from date we are dissatisfied with yoür services we will have the option of cancelling this agreement.” In the City Court the trial judge submitted to the jury the issue whether the defendant was in good faith dissatisfied with the plaintiff’s services and discharged him on that account, charging the jury that if such were the case, the plaintiff could not recover. The jury found for the plaintiff, in effect holding that the discharge was not by reason of any dissatisfaction with the plaintiff’s services. This has been reversed by the Appellate Term upon the ground that no evidence was introduced to question the genuineness of the defendant’s dissatisfaction. An examination of the record, however, discloses abundant evidence upon which the jury was authorized to find that the defendant was not dissatisfied with the manner of the plaintiff’s services and did not discharge him for that cause, but discharged him for the reason that the carburetor of which the defendant was the sales manager in Brooklyn was defective and unmarketable. Reference is made in the opinion to the case of Crawford v. Mail & Express Publishing Company (163 N. Y. 404), but that case has been construed in several cases in this court and we have uniformly held that under such a provision in the contract the dissatisfaction must be real and must be the cause of the discharge in order to justify the same. (Beck v. Only Skirt Co., 176 App. Div. 867.)
The determination should, therefore, be reversed and the judgment of the City Court affirmed, with costs in this court *and the Appellate Term.
Clarke, P. J., Dowling, Shearn and Merrell, JJ., concurred.
Determination reversed, with costs, and judgment and order of the City Court affirmed, with costs.