Case Name: CONDON v. CALLAHAN
Court: City Court of Brooklyn
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1880-01
Citations: 9 Abb. N. Cas. 407
Docket Number: 
Parties: CONDON v. CALLAHAN.
Judges: 
Reporter: Abbott's New Cases
Volume: 9
Pages: 407–411

Head Matter:
CONDON v. CALLAHAN.
City Court of Brooklyn ; General Term,
January, 1880.
Parties.—Master and Servant.—Monthly Hiring.—Husband and Wife.—Services of Servant to Wife after Separation.
An action by a household servant is brought properly against the husband alone, although it is alleged in the complaint that the employment was by him and his wife.
A household servant, employed by the month, may be discharged at the expiration of any month.
Where a husband, having separated from his wifq, employs a household servant to attend his wife, he may discharge her in the same way; and to charge the husband for the wages of the servant thereafter, on the ground that they were necessaries for the wife, a request and refusal must be alleged and proved.
Appeal from a judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff upon the verdict of a jury, and from an order refusing a new trial.
Annie Condon sued Stephen D. Callahan for services rendered to his wife as a household servant. ■
The material portion of the complaint is as follows : “ Second. That on or about the 12th day of January, 1878, at the said city of Brooklyn, plaintiff was employed by defendant and his wife, as a house servant, at the rate . of ten dollars per month, and that such employment continues up to the present time.
“Third. That there is now due and owing to the plaintiff from the defendant, for such work, labor and services rendered to the defendant’s wife and family between the 12th of Septembei, 1879, and the 12th of April, 1880, the sum of seventy dollars, which sum has been demanded, but no part thereof has been paid.”
The defense was a general denial, and that it appeared on the face of the complaint that the contract was made jointly with the defendant and his wife.
It appeared from the evidence that the defendant and his wife did not live together, and that on the 12th of September, 1879, the defendant discharged the plaintiff, but that his wife told her to stay and that he would pay her. She did stay, and continued to work for the defendant’s wife. No other servant was iirovided for the wife.
The trial judge charged the jury as follow's:
“ This case arises out of an unfortunate family quarrel which brings up the question of the liability .of the husband for services performed by the plaintiff in the family after he had separated from his wife. We know nothing about the merits of the’controversy between husband and wife ; it.is not necessary. They were living apart, but it was his legal duty to provide for-his family, unless something appears more than is sworn to here ; but if you find that the family living as they did needed a servant, and if the husband neglected to provide a servant, the wife had the right to employ one. It seems the plaintiff was employed, and he gave her notice to leave, but as lie did not furnish his wife with another servant, I leave it to you to say whether she was not authorized by the circumstances of the case to employ one herself, or to continue this one in her em ploy until some one else was furnished. She was there, as I understand, seven months, for which this suit is brought. If you find this was one of the necessaries of the family, the plaintiff would be entitled to recover, if you find the defendant also neglected to furnish such service himself;”
The jury found for the plaintiff, and judgment was thereupon rendered for her, and the defendant appealed.
James Troy, for defendant, appellant.
P. Keady, for plaintiff, respondent.

Opinion:
Neilson, Ch. J.
This action was brought to recover wages, the earnings of the defendant, under an agreement made on or about January 12, 1878. It is stated in the complaint that the plaintiff was employed by the defendant and his wife, and that the services had been continued until the time when the action was brought.
It is obvious that the agreement • must be treated as having been made by the defendant, and that the words "and his wife" are to be regarded as superfluous. The action was therefore properly brought against the defendant alone.
The real question is whether the defendant, thus employing the plaintiff, was liable for the wages which accrued after September 12, 1879, on which day her wages were paid in full by the defendant, who then and there dismissed her from his service. She had been hired by the nionth—could have retired from the service at the end of any month ; in other words, as she could not have been compelled to stay she could not, at her own election, claim that the defendant was obliged to have her remain; and there is no fiction by which an arbitrary right to continue the arrangement could now be imputed or implied.
The character of the action and the grounds on which a recovery is sought are to be found in the complaint. It is clear that the plaintiff is to recover by virtue of the contract of January 12, 1878,—no other agreementis setup or suggested,—and because the employment continued under it as alleged, or not at all. We have nothing to do with the defendant's ability or disposition to employ a servant, nor are we at liberty to distinguish this case from any other where a servant has been employed and dismissed, where a contract has been once made and in due time determined ; nor can we continue, as if in full force, an agreement which has been legally put an end to.
The ingenious and learned counsel for the plaintiff made some appeal, on the trial, to equitable principles. Thus, as the defendant could and should pay a servant, and as one was needed, it seemed to him that he should not have dismissed a servant without employing another. But why should he put another girl in place, while, as he may have seen, the plaintiff remained, when, for aught, he may have known, his wife might have concluded to economize, and, for a time, dispense with a servant ?
But'a question put by the court to the defendant's wife, as to his refusal to supply a servant, went to the merits : " Did you make any request of him to do it?" Answer : "No sir." Nor did she talk with him on the subject. Could she not write to him ? It seems to me, as it may have seemed to the learned judge, that such a request should have been made before the defendant could be considered in fault, and before, on the mere conjecture of his refusal, the plaintiff could assume to right the wrongs of the family by acting as if her contract had not been annulled. It is a familiar principle that where a husband is charged with necessaries for his family, supplied by another, a previous notice or request and a neglect or refusal on his part is necessary. It may well be that if, after the plaintiff's discharge, the defendant had refused to employ or send in another servant, though necessary, his wife may have employed one, and in a special action on the case setting up that refusal and the necessity of the aid and service thus procured, the defendant might have been liable. But that action would be very unlike the present action.
The amount involved in the action is small, but I think the principle is important, and that the jury erred in their finding.
I am therefore of opinion that the judgment and order should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to the appellant to abide the event.
McCue, J.-, concurred.