The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mason, J.:On August 1, 1910, O. B. Manross was employed by the Uncle Sam Oil Company for one year at a salary of $2,050, payable $150 on the first days of September and October, and $175 a month thereafter. On October 14 he was discharged. In November, 1910, he brought an action against the company for $175 as his compensation for the month of October.' He recovered a judgment for that amount, which was reversed in December, 1912, because of the omission of an instruction to the effect that the general manager of the company had authority to discharge the plaintiff, if sufficient cause existed, and in that case he could recover only what was due him at the time of his discharge. (Manross v. Oil Co., 88 Kan. 237, 128 Pac. 385.) In June, 1916, the plaintiff amended his petition so as to claim a recovery for $2,212.50, being the full amount of the agreed salary, with interest, less what he had been paid. He was given judgment for that sum, with interest, less what he testified he had been able to earn at other employment during the remainder of the year, amounting to $648. The defendant appeals.
1. The petition after setting out the contract of employment alleged that the plaintiff had at all times been ready to perform' the services required of him thereunder, and had performed them so far as permitted by the defendant. Under various assignments of error the defendant urges that no recovery should have been permitted as compensation for constructive services because the theory on which such a recovery has sometimes been allowed is unsound and is not, and ought *73not to be, recognized in this jurisdiction; and that no recovery-should have been permitted as damages for the breach of contract because that was not pleaded — the petition not alleging a wrongful discharge.
The common-law doctrine of “constructive service,” by which an employee wrongfully discharged is permitted to recover wages as such for the period subsequent to his discharge, being founded on fiction, has not been widely accepted in this country, the remedy of an action for damages for a breach of the contract being regarded as adequate and more in keeping with the modern tendency to conform the pleadings to the actual facts. (Notes, 5 L. R. A., n. s., 439, and 6 L. R. A., n. s., 50.) The constructive-service theory appears to have received some recognition in this state (James v. Parsons, 70 Kan. 156, 158, 78 Pac. 438), but its soundness need not be passed upon in this case. The defendant in the opening statement on its behalf admitted the validity of the contract of employment, asserted that the plaintiff was discharged for incompetency and insubordination, and “elected to submit the case upon that issue.” The vital controversy between the parties was whether the plaintiff was discharged wrongfully or rightfully. That question was fairly submitted under an instruction (of which the defendant complains) that it was all the jury had to determine. The measure of recovery applied by the court was the amount of the unpaid salary less what the plaintiff testified that he had been able to earn at other work after his discharge, during the remainder of the year covered by his contract. This did no injustice to the defendant, whether the amount awarded be regarded as damages for the breach of the contract, or as compensation for constructive service. Whether or not the petition was defective in not alleging that the plaintiff had been wrongfully discharged, no prejudice could possibly have resulted to the( defendant from the omission, and it would be manifestly unjust to reverse the judgment by reason thereof.
The jury were told that they might return a verdict for the plaintiff if they should find that he had carried out his part of the contract so far as permitted, and was ready, willing and able to finish it according to its terms. This instruction is objected to as adopting the common-law doctrine referred to. *74Considered in connection with that previously stated, it amounted to no more than saying that the plaintiff’s claim was valid if the fact that he did not perform the services for which he was employed was due, not to any fault on his part, but to the action of his employer — in other words, that his discharge, which the parties agreed had taken place, was wrongful. The verdict necessarily implied a finding that the defendant wrongfully discharged the plaintiff, and that being true, the objections made to it lack substance; they concern matters of procedure having no relation to the fair determination of the essential issue of fact upon which the rights of the parties depended.
2. An instruction was given to the effect that the amount of recovery was not in dispute — that if the plaintiff was found to have been wrongfully discharged he was entitled to the salary promised him, less what he had been paid and what he testified he had been able to earn. The defendant complains of this as invading the province of the jury. The plaintiff’s testimony as to what he had earned and that it was all he was able to earn during the remainder of the year after his discharge, was uncontradicted. The cross-examination developed nothing to discredit it, and the defendant introduced no evidence on the subject. There was no occasion to submit the matter to the jury, for if that had been done, and a larger allowance had been made for the possible earnings of the plaintiff, the verdict could have been set a,side as without support. (Hollicke v. Railway Co., 99 Kan. 261, 161 Pac. 594.)
3. The amount of recovery indicated by the court and adopted by the jury included no allowance for interest, the verdict explicitly so stating. The court in rendering judgment corrected the omission, and complaint is made on that account. There was no real controversy of fact as to the amount of recovery, and the addition of the interest by the court is not a ground of reversal. (Smith v. Railway Co., 90 Kan. 757, 136 Pac. 253.)
The judgment is affirmed.