70 Wash. 187 | Wash. | 1912
This is an action to recover damages, claimed by the plaintiff to have resulted to him from the defendant’s breach of a contract entered into between them. In September, 1910, the defendant was engaged in street contracting work on a somewhat extensive scale in Spokane. At that time the plaintiff was engaged in ranching in Whitman
The defendant denies that he agreed to furnish work for the plaintiff’s teams for any stated period, and also claims that the plaintiff, with due diligence, could have procured work for and earned with his teams during the seven months claimed by him as the duration of the contract, an equal or greater amount than he would have earned had his teams been continuously employed by the plaintiff. A trial before the court and a jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $919.50, from which the defendant has appealed.
The contention of counsel for appellant that respondent did not use due diligence in his efforts to earn money with his teams during the time they were not employed by appellant at the agreed per diem compensation is rested almost
“It is clear that one who has been prevented from performing a contract of service should not be required to accept a new employment under circumstances which permit the claim that he consents to a modification of the contract, and an abandonment of his right of action; and, ordinarily, acceptance of service in silence would at least give color to a claim that the contract was modified by consent, tacit if not express. See Brighton v. Railway Co., 103 Mich. 426, 51 N. W. 550, and cases cited. It is, of course, possible that an offer of employment might be couched in such terms as to save the rights of a discharged servant, and, when it is, it may be that the evidence should go to the jury, with a view to mitigation of damages; but we discover no evidence in this case tending to show that such employment was offered under circumstances inconsistent with the condition that such ero*190 ployment should be a modification of the contract, and the plaintiff could not safely accept the offer.”
It seems clear to us that this new contract was offered by appellant to respondent with a view to substituting it for the per diem contract, and that the evidence warrants the conclusion that by accepting it respondent would have waived all his rights under his per diem contract. Whether or not the evidence warrants such a conclusion as a matter of law we need not decide, since the evidence of the offer of the new contract and its nature, as compared with the per diem contract, went to the jury for their consideration in determining respondent’s duty as to his acceptance of such offered contract under all the circumstances, and the jury found in his favor upon that question.
In Birdsong v. Ellis, 62 Miss. 418, where there was involved an unqualified discharge of an employee and a subsequent offer to the employee to resume work under the contract of employment, the court said:
“The offer made by Birdsong must be construed as a proposition to Ellis to resume and continue business under the terms of the original contract. If it had varied the terms of the first engagement, or if anything had occurred to render further intercourse or association between the parties offensive or degrading, or if Ellis had engaged in other employment incompatible with his returning, he might have rejected the offer with safety.”
The following lend support to this view: Jackson v. Independent School Dist. of Steamboat Rock (Iowa), 77 N. W. 860; People’s Co-Operative Ass’n v. Lloyd, 77 Ala. 387. In the case last cited, it was held that the employee was not required to resume his work at a less wage in order to mitigate his damage, since “this would have operated a modification of the contract and an abandonment of all claims to higher wages.”
Counsel for appellant contends that the trial court erred in not permitting them to prove and submit to the jury the
The other questions involved are only questions of fact going to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment. We deem it sufficient to say that a reading of the evidence convinces us that no cause for interference with the judgment is thereby disclosed.
The judgment is affirmed.
Mount, Ceow, Gose, and Chadwick, JJ., concur.