Gates v. School District

Battle, J.

The School District of Fort Smith, in May, 1888, employed N. P. Gates to superintend its public schools for twelve months, commencing on the first of July, 1888, and ending- on the 30th of June, 1889, and agreed to give to him for his services a salary of $1800 per annum, payable in monthly installments of $150. He entered upon the discharge of his duties as such superintendent, and continued to discharge them from July 1st, to November 7th, 1888, when the school district discharged him without cause, and refused to allow him to act any longer as such superintendent, although he was willing- and offered to perform his contract. ’ On the 13th of February, 1891, he brought an action against the school district for $335 for services actually rendered the defendant from September 1, to November 7, 1888, and for $1165 for damages sustained by him on account of the - refusal of the defendant to permit him to fully perform his contract.

The defendant answered, saying that the plaintiff had failed, after his discharge, to make diligent and reasonable efforts to obtain employment in the line of his profession, and instead thereof removed to his farm in Washington county, in this State, a distance of nearly one hundred miles from Fort Smith, and there devoted a part of the year to farming and improving his fruit farm, and was benefited by so doing in the sum of $1200 ; aud insisted that this amount should be deducted from any damages the plaintiff might recover.

In the trial of the action, the court gave to the jury an instruction numbered ten and in the following language: “You are instructed that whatever plaintiff earned by his labor and the benefits received therefrom upon his farm, and whatever benefits he received by reason of his labor, residence upon, and personal supervision of, his farm, should be deducted from the contract price in estimating- plaintiff’s damages.”

And also gave an instruction numbered eleven in the words following: “You are instructed that the necessary expenses in carrying out plaintiff’s contract with defendant that were saved by plaintiff and rendered unnecessary by his removal to his farm should be deducted from the damag-es recovered by the plaintiff. ”

And instructed them to return special verdicts in answer to the following questions : ‘ ‘No. 1 — "What do you assess, if any, under court’s instruction number eleven, for the amount of the expenses saved by plaintiff by his removal from Fort Smith to his farm? ” “No. 2 — What amount, under court’s instruction number ten, do you assess for whatever was earned by plaintiff by his labor and benefits he received by reason of his labor, residence upon, and personal supervision of, his farm?”

The jury returned into court a verdict as follows: “We, the jury, find for the plaintiff in the sum of $335 with interest from November 7, 1888, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum; and we, the jury, find for the plaintiff in the sum of $768 with interest from June 30, 1889, at the rate of 6 per cent per annum.

“H. M. Tate, Foreman.”

And answered the questions propounded to them by saying- in reply to the first, $48, and to the second, $349. The plaintiff thereupon moved for a judgment for the sums found for him in the general verdict and the $349 and $48 and interest thereon, but the court denied the motion, and rendered a judgment in accordance with the general verdict.

Plaintiff presented his bill of exceptions, which was signed and made a part of the record ; and he appealed to this court without filing a motion for a new trial.

x. when

The general verdict and special findings of the jury show the facts upon which the judgment of the court was based. The error complained of by the appellant is the failure of the court to pronounce judgment according to such facts and the law of the case. He insists that judgment should have been rendered in his favor against the appellee for the $335 and $1165, and interest, without deduction ; and this is the only error of which he complains. Inasmuch as the facts upon which this complaint is predicated appear in the verdicts of the jury, upon which the judgment of the court was rendered, no motion for a new trial was necessary to bring' it before this court for review. Mansfield’s Digest, sec. 5143; Smith v. Hollis, 46 Ark. 17; Louisville, etc. R. Co. v. Brice, 84 Ky. 298.

2. Damages ofrsc¿oSsu?e perinteiidant.

Did the court err? When one contracts to employ another for a stated time at a certain compensation for the whole period, and discharges him without cause before the expiration of the time, he is liable for damages. If the employee sues after the term of service has expired, the contract price is prima facie the measure of the damages he is entitled to recover. He is entitled to recover it, unless the defendent by evidence shows that the damages sustained were actually less. Walworth v. Pool, 9 Ark. 394; Costigan v. Railway Co. 2 Denio, 609; Gillis v. Space, 63 Barb. 177; Jaffray v. King, 34 Md. 217; King v. Steiren, 44 Pa. St. 105.

3 Dama.es when!duced

The fact, the appellant was discharged, without cause, before the expiration of the time for which he was employed, and his right to recover his wag'es, are established by the verdict. But the jury found that he curtailed his expenses, after he was discharged, by removing from Fort Smith to his farm, and the appellee contends that it is entitled to a reduction in the damages recoverable against it to the extent they were reduced. Is it entitled to the reduction?

To support its contention, appellee cites Brodie v. Watkins, 33 Ark. 545. Turner, an attorney, was employed to bring that action to enforce the collection of a claim. He was to receive 10 per cent, of the amount collected. It was necessary for him to bring the action in a distant county. To render the services he contracted to perform, he was compelled to leave home and incur expenses in the way of traveling and hotel bills. He was discharged without cause during the pendency of the action. He offered to perform his contract. When judgment was recovered, he claimed a lien on it for the 10 per cent, he was to receive; and the court held that he was entitled to recover it, less the said expenses he would have incurred in the event he had performed the stipulated services.

The principle upon which the compensation of Turner in Brodie v. Watkins was reduced is not applicable to a case like this. Turner was compelled to leave home to perform his contract. Had he reduced his expenses of living at home on account of his discharge, his client would not have been entitled to the benefit of the reduction in the way of a credit on the fee he was to pay. Such expenses would have constituted no part of the cost of the performance of the contract. They depended on circumstances wholly independent of the contract, and may have been as great or small as Turner had the will and ability to make them.

While Gates was performing his contract, he resided at Fort Smith. He had the right to reside there. His contract with the appellee did not bind him expressly or impliedly to regulate his expenses in any particular manner. All it was entitled to from him was the faithful performance of their contract on his part, and he to the reward he was to receive'for his services. His expenses were none of its concern, and affected it in no manner. He had the right to regulate them as he had the will and ability to do, and to indulge in the luxuries and comforts of life, according to his capacity. His discharge did not affect his right or duty to do so, but limited his financial ability, and thereby his control over his expenses. For the comforts, pleasures and luxuries he may have denied himself and family by reason thereof, the appellee is entitled to no reduction in the damages for which it may be liable. He is not indebted to it in any way for the enforced frugality. For the hardships or denials imposed, or change of residence made necessary, by its wrong'ful acts, it is entitled to no reward.

4. when (Uiced.

.The jury also found that the value of Gates’ labor upon his farm and his supervision of the same was $48, and deducted this amount from his damages. The authorities are not agreed as to the appellee’s rig'ht to this reduction. In Harrington v. Geis, 45 Mich. 374, the right is denied, and in Huntington v. Ogdensburgh, etc. Railroad Co. 33 How. Pr. 416, it is sustained. But the better rule seems to be, the deduction ought to be made if the work performed on his own account was incompatible with the performance of the service stipulated to be performed under the violated contract; otherwise it should not. In that way he would recover the damages actually sustained. Jaffray v. King, 34 Md. 222; 2 Sedgwick on Damages (8th ed.), sec. 667.

Whether the work performed by Gates on his own account was compatible with the service he contracted to do for the appellee does not appear in the verdict or special findings of the jury. Placing a fair and reasonable construction on the findings of the jury which is most favorable to tbe judgment of the court, as we should, the reduction was properly made,

According to the verdict and special findings of the jury, judgment for the $349 and 6 per cent, per annum interest thereon from tlie first of July, 1889, should have been rendered in favor of the appellant against the appellee in addition to the amounts recovered; and it is so ordered.