Court Opinion

ID: 6571806
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 19:30:13.540182+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:56:55.442070
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Redfield., J.
The defendant having retained his full year’s pay, the plaintiffs claim to recover all or a portion of the sum retained, in consequence of the defendant not having performed the contract on his part.
The court below charged the jury, that the plaintiffs might recover of the defendant, for so much money as he had retained above his monthly stipend, for the time he was in plaintiffs’ employ, provided they found the fact that the hiring was by the month.— But they are instructed, that if the hiring was by the year, at a *56stated salary of $240, and defendant had retained bis full salary and been absent from plaintiffs’ employ any portion of the year, the plaintiffs cannot recover. This part of the charge we think not correct in the general terms in which it is expressed in the bill of exceptions. The plaintiffs’ right to recover depends, of course, upon the defendant’s right to retain full pay for a year. The defendant’s right to retain full pay does not depend upon the fact, whether the hiring was by the month or by the year. In either case, if the full term of one year’s service had been performed, the plaintiff could not recover; and if the full term of one year had not been performed, the plaintiffs must recover either for the deficiency or the entire sum retained, for an abandonment of the contract by the defendant.
The plaintiffs gave testimony tending to show that the defendant was, during the winter season, absent from their employ some three months. They are, of course, entitled to such a charge as that state of facts would require. If this was a voluntary abandonment of the contract and a wilful desertion of plaintiffs’ business, the defendant would not be entitled to any compensation for his former service and the plaintiffs should recover the entire sum retained. This results from one of the most obvious principles of the law of contracts. In all contracts for service, which are entire, full performance, on the part of the undertaker, is a condition precedent to any claim for compensation, and nothing short of such a provision in the contract, either express or implied, will enable him to recover for part performance. — 1 Swift’s Dig. 682, 683 — Cutter vs. Powell, 6. T. R. 321 — Faxon vs. Mansfield, 2 Mass. Rep. 147 — Jennings vs. Camp, 13 Johns. 94.
The testimony clearly tended to show such an abandonment of the contract on the part of the defendant, and the jury should have been instructed how far this would affect the verdict, and also how the defendant might obviate the effect of such testimony. He might show that according to the custom of the country, in such-contracts, he was entitled to the winter months, when of course, navigation is closed, to recreate and recruit. We know of no such custom, and have no doubt such is not the understanding in contracts of this class. The master of a steam boat of this character and class, is doubtless expected to collect the dues of the company and superintend the necessary repairs of the boat and machinery, during the winter season. And if he wilfully neglects to perform his duty here, it is an abandonment of the contrae!, as much as if he had deserted the boat in the season of navigation.
*57The defendant might show plaintiffs’ consent to his absence, or , , , what is most rational to presume, he might show that they consented to his continuing in their employ after his return from his temporary absence and thus avoid the forfeiture, which they were entitled to have insisted upon. But these facts should have been left to the jury. And unless the defendant could satisfy the jury either that he was not absent from plaintiffs’ reasonable and necessary employ, or that they consented to the absence, the plaintiffs should have recovered the entire sum retained. But if after such absence, they consented to waive the forfeiture, then plaintiffs should recover all monies retained by defendant, for the time he was absent, unless indeed defendant could show, that by the terms of his contract or the custom of the country in relation to such contracts, he was entitled to such absence, without affecting his wages.
For this error in the charge to the jury, judgment is reversed and a new trial granted.