A clerk was discharged by his employer; he brought suit for wages for the' year for which he was employed; the jury gave him a verdict, and the employer made a motion for a new trial, which being refused, he excepted, and the case is before us for review.
1. We think that the court went too far in charging that if the clerk was guilty of bad conduct, the employer should discharge him immediately, or it would be too late to fall back upon such conduct as a reason for the discharge. There was evidence of bad conduct, or an attempt to prove it, some months before, and there was evidence going to show bad conduct a few days before the clerk was discharged. We are of opinion that the court should have instructed the jury that the employer must act in a reasonable time after the conduct of the clerk of which he complained, and left the jury to judge of what time would be reasonable under all the facts of the case.
2. If the servant misbehaves, or if he make mistakes about his master’s business, so that he does not suit the place for which he was employed, the employer may, bona fide on account of such mistake, discharge the servant; and *758the court should not have charged that “a simple mistake, that works no great loss, would not be a violation of a contract, unless that mistake was of a negligent nature and worked very great damage to the defendant.” The extent of the damage and the reasonableness of the discharge in consequence of the mistakes of a clerk, are questions for the jury, and the court laid too much emphasis on the degree of damage which would authorize a discharge, when he said that the mistake must have resulted in very great damage
3. We see no reason why the defendant could not recoup for any damage done him by the clerk springing out of the contract of hire. The clerk contracted to serve the employer faithfully and well, and if he failed to do so, and thereby endamaged him, the amount of such damage might well be pleaded by way of recoupment, and the plaintiffs salary diminished to that extent. To that end the defendant was entitled to introduce any evidence going to show loss of custom, or other injury, if any, by the bad conduct of the clerk, and the extent to which he was damaged thereby. Of course, if there were such evidence and recoupment wa3 pleaded, which seems to be the case, though perhaps the plea needs amendment, the court should not have confined the case to the single issue of rightfulness or wrongfulness of the discharge. Juchter vs. Boehm,, Bendheim & Co., last term. That is the main question; but if decided for the defendant, then the clerk could recover only his wages up to the discharge, less such damage as the employer had received.
Looking at the case in its entirety, while the verdict may be right, we think that there is such conflict as requires a good, substantial, legal charge; and the court wont too far, in our judgment, in requiring the defendant to show great damage before he could discharge his clerk, and in requiring him to act immediately on the happening of the bad conduct of the clerk. How far these charges may have misled the jury, or how they may have been affected by them in finding their verdict, we do not know. It is best that the case be tried again.
*7594. There is nothing in the demurrer, and the other allegations of error strike us as immaterial. The questions are, was the master, in view of all the facts proven, justifiable in discharging his servant, or did he tire of him on account of the approach of dearth of business, and discharge him on mere pretexts % and, if he was right in discharging him, what amount had the clerk damaged him to recoup against his wages ? See, cited by plaintiff in error, 55 Ga., 75 ; Smith’s Master and Servant, original pages 73-76.
Judgment reversed.