Court Opinion

ID: 4938308
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-24 01:21:29.146219+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:14:46.677344
License: Public Domain

King, J.
Action of assumpsit to recover an alleged balance of $80.20 for the labor of the plaintiff and his wife under a contract with the defendant. The verdict was for the full amount sued for, and the case comes before this court on defendant’s motion for a new trial.
*436It was undisputed that the plaintiff and his wife worked for the defendant from February 13 to July 21, 1915, under an express contract for a certain monthly wage for the two together. The plaintiff claimed that the monthly wage agreed upon was to be $30 up to June 1, 1915, and $35 thereafter, and that the total amount earned was $165.20, of which he had received but $85, leaving due the balance of $80.20 sued for. On the other hand, the defendant contended that the monthly wage agreed upon was $30 per calendar month, and that the total wages amounted to only $156.50, all of which had been paid.
The testimony was flatly contradictory. The plaintiff was corroborated by his wife as to the terms of the contract, and also to some extent as to the credits to be given. The defendant was likewise corroborated by his wife, both in respect to the terms of the contract and as to payments made to the plaintiff. And each part}' claimed to have kept in a book an account of the payments made on account of the wages. The plaintiff’s book, however, was not produced. He said he destroyed it after, giving the account to his attorney for collection. The defendant’s book was introduced at the trial, but was not produced at the Law Court. The printed case, however, shows, as we understand, the items of credit as shown on the defendant’s book.
We have examined the testimony with care and find it to be irreconcilable. But it has been considered and passed upon by the jury who had the. opportunity of seeing the witnesses as they testified, and of examining the defendant’s book, an advantage which this court has not. Their conclusion was in the plaintiff’s favor, and although we might have reached a different conclusion, we do not find sufficient proof in the record that their, conclusion is clearly wrong.
The entry must therefore be,

Motion overruled.