160 N.Y.S. 1085 | N.Y. App. Term. | 1916
The contract of employment provided that plaintiff’s services should be to the entire satisfaction of defendants. Plaintiff continued in defendants’ employment for a period of about three months when he was discharged. Plaintiff claimed that when he was discharged he was told that his work was satisfactory but that he was discharged because of business conditions. This was denied by the defendants, who claimed that they discharged the plaintiff because his work was unsatisfactory and so informed him. Respondents’ counsel states in his brief that “ The sole issue in the case at bar was as to what was said at the time of the discharge. ’ ’ This is a wholly erroneous conception of the issue in such a case. What is said at the time of the discharge may, of course, be considered and given due weight, but the issue generally is in such a case, and clearly was in this case, whether the dissatisfaction was genuine or assumed. The employer is the sole judge of whether he has reason to be dissatisfied and the jury have no right to speculate as to whether he ought to have been satisfied; but the question whether the employer was in fact dissatisfied and the dismissal was in good faith is- a question of fact for the jury. Diamond v. Mendelsohn, 156 App. Div. 636; Summers v. Colver, 38 App. Div. 553. The case of Waldt v. Goodwin Mfg. Co., 165 App. Div. 244, is not at all to the contrary, as is urged in behalf of the respondents. The refusal of the court in that case to charge: ‘' That if the jury find that the dissatisfaction of the defendant was assumed and not real and made for'the purpose of reducing expenses, or any other cause than that of dissatisfaction, that they may find for the plaintiff ” was because, as the opinion clearly indicates, “ uncontradicted evidence showed that plaintiff was discharged because defend
The judgment and order appealed from are reversed and a new trial is ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.
Guy and Bijur, JJ., concur.
Judgment and order reversed and new trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.