Meyer v. Roberts

OPINION.

Smith, J.

Roberts complained that, on the -13th of October, 1882, he had been employed by Meyer, as a manager of his plantations, for the remainder of that year and also for the following year, provided neither of the parties should object on the 1st day of January, 1883, to the continuance of the arrangement; that his stipend was to be $100 per month, besides being furnished with a house to-live in and his horse to be fed at his employer’s expense; and that he continued to serve without objection until the 1st of May, 1883, when he was discharged without cause,, to his damage $600.

The answer alleged that the hiring was only from month to month, and set up the statute of frauds.

The jury returned a verdict of $400 for the plaintiff.

The exceptions to the charge of the court being general, not designating the objectionable portions, we confine our review to the sufficiency of the testimony to support the verdict, discarding all of the evidence adduced which tended to sustain the defendant’s version of the contract.

Roberts testified that Meyer wished to engage his services for five years, but that he declined on the score of health to enter into so extended an engagement. The parties finally came to terms on the 13th of October, 1882. It was orally agreed that he should undertake the superintendence of the defendant’s planting interests until the 1st of January ensuing, and that if his health permitted and the defendant was satisfied, he should continue in his employment for the year 1883, for the compensation mentioned in the complaint. When the 1st of January arrived, Meyer expressing no dissatisfaction and no communication or additional understanding having been had then or afterwards between them in relation to such employment, he continued to serve in the same capacity. In the latter part of April, Meyer, by letter, dismissed him from his service, assigning as a reason his inability to pay such high wages. Meyer paid him down to the 1st of May, but the plaintiff notified him that he considered himself hired for the year and that he stood upon his legal rights and the terms of the contract. Being thrown out of employment in the middle of the season, the plaintiff had been unable to obtain a place until the 10th of September, when he secured a situation at $75 per month. Another witness swore that, in the beginning of the year 1883, he had intended to propose to Roberts a co-partnership in farming, but received information from both the parties to this action that he was engaged for the year by Meyer.

1. statute Contracts than one See. 3371 of Mansfield’s Digest enacts that no action shall be brought to charge any person upon any contract that is not to be performed within one year from the making thereof, unless the contract or some memorandum, or note thereof, shall be made in writing and signed by the party to be charged or his agent.

The decisions upon this clause of the statute cannot all be reconciled. But ever since the case of Peter v. Compton, Skinner, 353; S. C., 1 Smith’s Lead. Cas., 8th ed., 614, it has been considered settled that the statute applies only to agreements which appear from their terms to be incapable of performance, or such as the parties never contemplated should be performed, within the year. Consequently, where the duration of the agreement depends upon a contingency, as the death or marriage of one of the contracting parties, a note in writing is not necessary, for the contingency may happen, and thus the contract be fully performed, within a year from the time it is made. So a contract determinable at any time by either party, is a contract which is to last during the pleasure of the parties or so long as they are mutually satisfied.

But a contract for personal services to continue and hold the parties together for a longer period than one year is plainly within the statute. Thus, if at Christmas I orally hire a servant for a year, to begin from New Year’s day, when he presents himself at the time appointed in fulfillment of that contract, I am not legally bound to receive him into my service; and if I do receive him, may after-wards discharge him without incurring any other liability than the payment of his wages for the time he actually served. Bracegirdle v. Heald, 1 Barn. & Ald., 721 (4 E. C. L. R.), 342; Snelling v. Lord Huntingfield, 1 Cr. Mes. & Ros., 19; Hill v. Hooper, 1 Gray, 131; Tuttle v. Swett, 31 Me., 555; Sutcliff v. Atlantic Mills, 13 R. I., 480; Kelly v. Terrell, 26 Ga., 551; Amburger v. Marvin, 4, E. D. Smith, 393; Nones v. Homer, 2 Hilton, 116.

Nor does it make any difference that the contract, if for more than a year, is subject to determination sooner on a given event. This is illustrated by the case of Dobson v. Collis, 1 Hurl. Nor. 81, where a traveling agent was employed for two years, with a proviso that the contract might be determined on three months’ notice. Pollock, C. B., stated that the object of the statute was to prevent contracts, not to be performed within the year, from being vouched by parol evidence, when at a future period any question might arise as to their terms, and that a contract was not the less a contract not to be performed within a year because it might be put an end to within that period. And Alderson B. observed: “When once the contract exceeds the year, the circumstance that it is defeasible will not make it other than a contract for more than a year. See the absurdity of holding otherwise; at the end of two years and a half one of the parties might claim a right to put an end to a parol contract for five years by giving three months’ notice; but the very subject of dispute might be, whether or no he had a right to give such notice. That shows that this is a contract within the statute.”

Here was an absolute agreement to take charge of the defendant’s business from October 18, 1882, to the end of the calendar year; and a further conditional agreement for the year 1883, which might have been annulled by either party on the 1st of January, 1883. If not annulled, the agreement could not possibly have been performed within a year from the making of it.

Beeston v. Collyer, 4 Bing., 309 (13 E. C. L., 517), relied on by the plaintiff, is distinguishable. There a clerk had been hired by afi army agent for a year, beginning on the 1st of March, but had remained in service for more than twenty years. He was dismissed without cause on the 23d of December, and it was held that his salary must be paid until March. This was upon the ground that the original hiring having been by the year, and the parties having gone on for a long time without any new arrangement, the law would imply from the circumstances a fresh contract for the same length of time at the commencement of each year. But in the present case there was an express contract for the year 1888; and the law does not readily imply contracts between parties when they have covered the same subject matter by their express agreement,

Moore v. Fox, 10 Johns., 243, was an action by the minister of a church to recover from one of his members for two years’ services as a minister. The proof was that the defendant, about six years before, had verbally promised to pay the plaintiff $2 a year, and had continued to pay at that rate, in semi-annual installments, until the last two years. And a recovery was allowed. But the action was brought on a bygone or executed consideration, and the statute did not apply. The plaintiff had continued to preach in the same church and to the same congregation. The defendant had enjoyed the benefit of his ministrations, although apparently he had not profited by them. The acceptance of a benefit, even under an invalid contract, obliges the party to pay for it.

There is, however, a case in 19 Hun., 234 (Smith v. Conlin), decided by a divided court, wM-ch, if correct, would lead to an affirmance of the judgment. In October, 1876, the plaintiff entered into a verbal agreement with the trustees of a school district to teach a school for the year, ending October 1, 1877, at a fixed salary, and for a further term of one year, at the same salary, to begin on the last-mentioned day, if no notice to the contrary should be given by either party, at least two weeks prior to that date. Such notice not having been given, the plaintiff continued his services for a few weeks into the second year, when he was -discharged. He claimed and was permitted to recover his salary for the entire year.

This is certainly contrary to the rule established in Eng-Hand by a long course of decisions, that an option to determine at any time a contract for a designated period ex-needing a year, has no effect in taking the case out of the statute of frauds.

As the plaintiff’s contract extended over a period of more than a year, and could not, in the nature of things, have been completed within a year from the time it was made, and as it was not manifested by any writing, there is no competent evidence to warrant the verdict.

Reversed and remanded for a new trial.