This was a suit between employe and employer for the recovery of wages alleged to be due the former for the entire term fixed by the contract of employment notwithstanding his discharge by the latter prior to the expiration of that time.
The defense is that the discharge was justified by good and sufficient causes.
There was judgment for the plaintiff, and defendant appeals.
The facts are that defendant was engaged, in his own name, in the sale of machinists’ tools and supplies, and as an adjunct thereto, though as a separate and distinct enterprise, in the manufacture of pulleys and power transmission machinery under the name of the Standard Pulley Company, of vwhich Company he was the president.
Plaintiff was his clerk and had especial charge of the small fool department, which was a branch exclusively of the machinists” tools and supply business.
He had been in the employ of the defendant for several years and in this same department; his fidelity and his efficiency securing .him an increase of salary from $75.00 per month, which it was for the first of his three years employment with defendant, to $100.00 per month and a fixed percentage on t'he profits oi McArdle’s individual business, which it was during t'he last year of his connection with the house. The specific agreement for *57that year, and about which there is no dispute, being $1,200 per ar.nufm payable monthly, and as an additional compensation 5 per cert, of the net profits of the business as shown 'by the books at the expiration of the fiscal year, December 31st, this latter amount being ’‘guaranteed to be not less than $300.00” and restricted to the profits of his own business, (the machinists’ tools and supply business), and not comprehending any percentage on the profits of the business of the Standard Pulley Company.
On the 23rd of October of that year, 1903, the contract’s life being from the 1st of January to the 31st, of December, 1903, the plaintiff was discharged, defendant assigning no reason therefor whatsoever.
In his answer to the suit, however, the causes assigned by the defendant for plaintiff’s discharge are that “the plaintiff neglected, failed and refused to perform his work for which' he had been employed and, on the contrary, he did not only neglect to perform the work or attend to his duties, but used his position and tilie time while in defendants employ for the purpose of establishing another business, competitive with defendant’s; that in so doing the plaintiff acted in bad faith and contrary to what should have been his duty and his obligation”; which he amplifies by a supplemental answer setting forth that on the 21st of October, 1903, and on other dates during the month of August and September of that year the plain tiff absented himself from the business without leave, “causing demoralization of the office and working force and leaving his, (the plaintiff’s) department without a head”; “that tire plaintiff used defendant’s time attempting to induce other employes of defendant to join with him in a competitive business, and actually did use the time for which he was paid by 'tire defendant to organize said business and induce his fellow employes to join with him, and at the same time, he used defendant’s correspondence list of customers and other facilities which were intrusted to him confidentially to help him to start said new business.”
*58There is not a scintilla of .evidence in the record sustaining these averments. The nearest approach thereto is the fact that on one occasion and on that one occasion alone during this year, a legal holiday, and during the absence frotan the State of the defendant, the plaintiff was absent from his business; but he had previously obtained the full, free and prompt permission and consent of those in whose charge and management McArdle had left his business during his absence, to so absent' himself; and the further fact that during this same period of McArd-le’s absence the plaintiff hadi discussed with the chief of tire office force, or as he is nominated 'by tire defendant, “the financial roan of the business/’ the person holding at that time the defendant’s power of attorney, with authority “to sign checks and such other commercial paper as may be necessary to conduct the ordinary financial affairs” of defendant’s business, a proposition of entering into a business on a small scale for their own account upon the expiration, of their respective' terms of employment with the defendant. The venture contemplated was not similar to that com ducted by McArdle. in his own name and would have not been in competition with that of the Standard Pulley Ox, and ever, if it were to be simular to the one or to both or in competition with one or both, we know of ho just and valid reason why an employe may not contemplate during the time of his employment the entering into such business upon the termination of his contract of employment, without subjecting himself to valid discharge, unless, of course, the time due to his employer has .been invaded, his confidence abused, his business neglected, or by other means, incompatible with fidelity and trust and the" obligations .due by the employe to his employer, injury to his employer’s business has resulted by t)he employe’s action. But such is not tire case here. His employe’s business, so far as the same fell within the province of the plaintiff’s duties was faithfully, attended to; not a moment of t'he time, so far as the record shows, which should have been devoted by the plaintiff to defendant’s business was otherwise employed; -no confidential comjmunications or imformation was *59improperly taken advantage of; he did not seek to induce any of defendant’s employes to quit their employment and join with him in his contemplated venture. McArdle’s per pro was evidently as desirous of entering with the contemplated venture as was the plaintiff; and the record leaves it in doubt whether the proposition for the contemplated joint venture did not originate with the. one as much as with the other. At any rate both were willing to enter into it, the plaintiff to furnish but one third of the capital, $iaoo.oo, and St. Paul, defendant’s per pro, the remaining $2coo. The venture, however, was not entered into, St. Paul receding from the proposition after McArdle’s return; the plaintiff alone, however, was discharged. Nor is there the -slightest evidence to show that the business of the defendant suffered in the slightest degree by this contemplated action of his employe. The only evidence directed to the establishment of injury is to be found in one sentence of tire testimony; that of the defendant himself, who testifies that on his return to 'his place of -business after long absence he found1: “demoralization complete in 'the whole office force.” He is not corroborated in this 'by any ot ■his office force, on the contrary his office force were all retained; the plaintiff being no member whatsoever of that force.
The discharge of the plaintiff was without any serious ground of complaint, and, the Code provides that if without any serious ground of complaint, a man should send away a laborer whose services he has hired for a certain time, before that time has expired, he shall be 'bound to pay such laborer the whole of the salaries which he would have been entitled to receive, had the full term of his services arrived, C. C. 2749, the plaintiff is entitled-to recover for the full term. The plaintiff has, 'however, • received on account $ioco.oo of 'his wages. His suit is for the balance of $250.00 and $300.00 guaranteed profits, with reservation of his right to recover such further amount as may be found to be due beyond this $300.00 on a proper accounting, and judg*60ment was rendered accordingly. The judgment is not error, and it is affirmed.
December 12th, 1904.Writ refused by Supreme Court.