Court Opinion

ID: 5415768
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 16:17:23.596739+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:00.348257
License: Public Domain

Guy, J.
The action is for breach of contract of employment. A cross appeal by plaintiff from the same judgment on the ground of inadequacy is also on the calendar at this term. The employment of plaintiff and his unjustifiable discharge by the defendant *553is clearly proven. The employment was at a salary of forty dollars per week. At the time of the wrongful discharge, plaintiff became entitled to recover as damages for the breach of the contract such sum as it is reasonably certain actually might follow such breach determinable approximately by a jury upon reasonable conjecture and probable estimate. Davis v. Dodge, 126 App. Div. 469, 471; Wakeman v. Wheeler & Wilson Mfg. Co., 101 N. Y. 205. Ordinarily such damages would presumptively be the amount of the employee’s wages or salary due at the time of the trial, less his actual earnings up to that time, and those that would have become due after the trial being reduced by the amount of his future earnings.. American China Development Co. v. Boyd, 148 Fed. Rep. 258.
In Davis v. Dodge, supra (Gaynor, J., writing the opinion), the court says: “ The rule is settled in England and here that the employee has an immediate right of action on the breach for his entire damage. * * * The question must therefore come down to one of proof, i. e., the plaintiff may recover all the damages he can prove, whether up to the time of the trial, or not up to that time, or up to the end of the contract period, whether it be before or after the trial. * * * The plaintiff in such an action, the same as in other actions, should be able to recover such damages as may be fairly or reasonably estimated from his proofs, taking all the facts, probabilities, certainties and uncertainties into consideration.”
In Cutter v. Gillette, 163 Mass. 95, the court held: “ For this breach he (the plaintiff) can have but one action. In estimating his damages the jury have the right to consider the wages which he would have earned under the contract, the probability whether his life and that of the defendant would continue to the end of the contract period, whether the plaintiff’s work*554ing ability would continue, and any other uncertainties growiug out of the terms of the contract, as well as the likelihood that the plaintiff would be able to earn money-in other work during the time.”
But while proof of condition of health of the plaintiff before his discharge, or of his death thereafter during the term of the contract, as bearing upon the question of his ability to perform his contract for. the entire term, may be considered by the jury where the facts and circumstances proven furnish a competent basis for such consideration, the mere fact of illness after his discharge does not furnish such competent basis for the consideration of the jury. The fact that the employee, after his discharge, became ill furnishes no presumption, in the absence of proof of the character of the illness, that the illness would have arisen had he continued in his employment or that it would have been of such a character as, under the terms of his employment, would have justified a suspension of payment on the part of the employer. In the absence of competent evidence as to the.nature and character of the illness and the circumstances under which it developed, it is reasonably to be inferred that the illness might result from the character of some new employment, which the employer’s breach had compelled the employee to undertake, to lack of earnings sufficient to properly maintain health, because of his wrongful discharge, or to various other causes which might not have existed had he been allowed to continue his employment under his contract. To permit an employer guilty of breach of his contract to thus derive advantage from the probable results of his wrongful act would be subversive of justice. In this case there is not a scintilla of proof which would justify the jury in finding that had plaintiff continued in: defendant’s employ he would have been unable to fully-; *555perform Ms contract. The presumption is that he would have been able to perform Ms contract and enjoy the full benefits thereof. The evidence shows that he made all reasonable effort to obtain other employment and failed to do so. The trial judge, acting without a jury, erred, therefore, in giving judgment only for the amount of salary he would have earned for three out of the seven weeks of the unexpired term of the contract broken by defendant. Plaintiff was entitled to judgment for the salary for the full unexpired term of seven weeks at forty dollars per week, amounting to $280.
The judgment must, therefore, upon plaintiff’s appeal, be modified by changing the amount to two hundred and eighty dollars, with appropriate costs in the court below, and as so modified affirmed, with twenty-five dollars costs of appeal to the plaintiff. Upon defendant’s appeal judgment affirmed with twenty-five dollars costs to plaintiff.
Phiubin, J., concurs.