I. The auditor finds that the plaintiff' worked two Sundays in the sugar-place, at the request of the defendant, “ when it was necessary in order to save a great waste of sap.” The necessity of the work is established, unless in the eye of the law it never can be necessary to work on Sunday to prevent a great waste of sap.
In the business of making maple sugar, it is extremely difficult to tell when there will be an abundant flow of sap, and to provide fully for it. Perhaps there is nothing in ordinary farm work more uncertain. When the weather is just right and the advance of spring, the frost, the snow, the air and the sunshine, are propitious, there will sometimes be an extraordinary flow of sap, calling for much extra labor to save it, though lasting perhaps *299only one, two or three days. The opportunity well improved secures to the farmer an abundant reward, and constitutes the chief profit of the season : — neglected, a great loss is incurred. We cannot say'that it would be unnecessary in all cases to prevent such waste. A religious man would by gathering his sap on Saturday, and by furnishing ample storage for it, provide as far as possible against such necessity. Still, unavoidable circumstances may produce the necessity. Indeed the individual condition and necessities of each man may go far to determine whether it is his duty to labor on Sunday to save property from destruction. The saving of a piece of property to one man might prevent great misery and suffering to himself and family * — to another it might be of no consequence. It is easy to suppose cases where every one would recognize the duty of working on Sunday to prevent the immediate destruction of property — as in the case suggested by counsel of the burning of a dwellings house. But it is needless to dwell on the point.
II. The term of service was one year — but with this proviso ■■ — that each party might terminate the contract at any time if he should become dissatisfied and should desire to so terminate it. It was not — “ if he had good reason to bet dissatisfied,” as in Patrick v. Putnam, 27 Vt. 759 ; or “ if the cause of dissatistaction could not be removed,” as in Seaver v. Morse, 20 Vt. 620. Here each party reserved the right to judge of the cause of dissatisfaction for himself — and, if really dissatified, to put an end to the contract. " It is like Prevost v. Harwood, in the 29th Vt. 219, where the plaintiff reserved the right “ to quit at any time if dissatisfied.” The court held in that case that the plaintiff’s leaving the defendant’s service without cause was no violation of the contract. But here he had cause. It is said, however, that in that case the plaintiff only recovered what his services were worth for the time. But as the plaintiff took no exceptions in the ease and only claimed what the services were reasonably worth, the question whether he could have recovered according to the contract price did not arise. The same is true in Hubbard v. Belden, 27 Vt. 645. But as there was no breach of contract by the plaintiff, as in leaving he only exercised his right under the contract — a right which belonged alike to each party — we *300think he has in fact fully performed according to the terms of the bargain, and can recover the contract price.
The cases which have been cited where the party is excused from full performance by sickness stand upon a different ground. Such are Fenton v. Clark, 11 Vt., Seaver v. Morse, 20 Vt., and Hubbard v. Belden, and Patrick v. Putnam, in the 27th Vt.
Judgment affirmed.