On September 9, 1902, appellant, then operating under the name of Union Cigar Stores Company, and appellee entered into a written contract by which appellee agreed to act as general manager of all of appellant’s Dallas stores, performing such duties as are usually entailed upon a general manager under like circumstances, for the term of one year at a monthly salary of $250. At the expiration of the one year the contract was extended for an additional year. Appellee continued in the services of appellant under said contract from September 9, 1902, until February 14, 1904, when he alleges he was wrongfully discharged. At some time during his employment under said contract, and before his unlawful discharge, his official title was changed to chief clerk, which change was one in name only, his duties remaining absolutely the same. At the time appellee was empk^ed the only store' appellant operated or owned was store Ho. 4, which was its headquarters and conveniently equipped and located for use as a basis of operations. At the time of appellee’s
On or about February-14, 1904, at which time appellee claims to have been unlawfully discharged, he received from appellant written notice to become “Chief Clerk” at store No. 5, at the same salary he was then receiving and until the expiration of his contract, or other arrangements would be made. He also received a letter demanding the same change, and saying further that it would regard and construe his failure, “to deliver over to us store No. 4 both as an act of insubordination as well as a refusal to accept our proposition to place you in charge of store No. 5, as above indicated.” Appellee refused to accede to the proposed change or to accept the new position, because it necessitated the performance of duties which were subordinate, inferior and materially different from those which he had contracted to perform, and tended to injure his business standing. Thereupon, possession of the store in which appellee had his headquarters was peremptorily demanded, and a suit therefor threatened. Upon agreement between appellant’s and appellee’s attorneys, possession was surrendered on February 14, 1904, without prejudice to appellee’s rights.
At the time of appellee’s unlawful discharge there was no opening in the city of Dallas for his employment in a like or similar capacity to that in which he was employed by appellant. Appellee had -had considerable experience as,a bookkeeper and after his unlawful discharge could have secured employment as a bookkeeper at $75 per month. He preferred not to accept such employment, and consequently immediately set about preparing to embark in business on his own account, which he did on April 30, 1904. Hp to September 8, 1904, the date on which appellee’s contract employment should have expired, appellee’s business showed no profit; to the contrary, during that period it was operated at a loss. The case was tried before a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of appellee in the sum of $1,076.50, upon which verdict judgment was duly entered and defendant appealed.
Opinion.—Error is assigned to the court’s refusal of special charge
On the former appeal of this case we held that the undisputed evidence showed that appellant had tendered appellee the same employment, in the same city, for the same length of time, at the same salary and the same duties which he had been performing, and this being so he was only entitled to recover $138, the amount due him at the time his services for appellant terminated, and reversed a judgment in favor of plaintiff for a larger sum, and rendered judgment in his favor for that amount. 89 S. W., 995.
A writ of error was granted by the Supreme Court and that Court held that the evidence was sufficient to raise “the issue whether or not the appellant broke the contract by requiring of plaintiff the performance of duties substantially different from those which he had agreed to perform,” and held that we properly reversed the judgment, but that the facts were such that it was not proper for this court to render judgment. 99 Texas, 597. The facts on the present appeal are substantially the same as those on the former appeal, and in deference to the opinion of the Supreme Court we hold that appellant’s requested charge No. 1 was properly refused.
Nor was there error in' refusing special charges Nos. 16 and 7, the refusal of which is made the basis of the second and third assignments. These charges present substantially the same proposition as that embraced in the first assignment. These charges conflict with the opinion
The giving of plaintiff’s special charge Ho. 1 is assailed as error. This charge is as follows: “If you find from the evidence, that plaintiff was ordered to assume a position with duties materially different or inferior from those for which he had contracted; and if you further find that he refused to do so, and that because of such refusal the keys of store Ho. 4 were demanded of him, and he surrendered the keys, then you are instructed that plaintiff was wrongfully discharged, and you will find for the plaintiff.”
It is contended that this charge is on the weight of evidence and covered an issue specifically submitted by the court’s charge, upon which issue the evidence was very conflicting. The part of the court’s charge which it is claimed covered this issue is the sixth paragraph, as follows : “If you find, and believe from the evidence before you, that in the change proposed by the • defendant the plaintiff would have been required to take a subordinate position, or one that was substantially different in its work and duties from the one for which he had contracted, then you will find by your verdict that the plaintiff was wrongfully discharged.”
The special charge announced a correct proposition of law and was not on the weight of evidence and was applicable to a phase of the case not covered by the main charge. The main charge contained no reference to the surrender of the keys by appellee to store Ho. 4.
"The giving of special charge Ho. 1 did not give undue prominence to a phase of the case covered by the court’s charge within the meaning of the law. Ratto v. Bluestein, 84 Texas, 59; Brady v. Georgia, etc. Ins. Co., 24 Texas Civ. App., 466. As stated in the case of Ratio V. Bluestein, “it is only where the repetition of instructions gives undue prominence to one phase of the case, and such prominence is calculated to prejudice a party by inducing the jury to believe that the issue presented is the controlling one, that such additional instructions are objectionable.”
Hor was there error in the court’s action in refusing appellant’s special charge Ho. 13, as follows: “You are charged that defendant had the right to demand of plaintiff the keys to store No. 4, notwithstanding that plaintiff was general manager of defendant’s stores at Dallas, and the demand made upon plaintiff for said keys to defendant did not of itself constitute a breach of the contract between plaintiff and defendant, and did not constitute a discharge of plaintiff by defendant.” Whether or not the demanding by appellant of appellee the keys of store Ho. 4 constituted a breach of the contract depended upon all the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties. This charge selects from the evidence a single isolated fact and seeks to have such fact given controlling effect in determining the issue.
The sixth and seventh assignments of error present the same proposition of. law. One complains of the refusal of a special charge arid the other of the exclusion of testimony.
Special charge No. 9 is as follows: “You are instructed that if you believe from the evidence that the plaintiff’s services in his cigar business, established on April 30, 1904, were reasonably worth to himself
“In this connection you are further charged that the value of plaintiff’s services to himself is not necessarily what it would have cost to employ him, or one like him, but the pecuniary value of that which his services yielded him in his business. This might consist of something more than profits actually received in money, if any, and if no such profits were made by plaintiff during the months through which his services with defendant should have extended, yet, if appreciable value was added to his business by plaintiff’s efforts during said period, you may take the same into consideration in determining the value of plaintiff’s services to himself for said period.”
The undisputed evidence shows that at the time of the termination of appellee’s services with appellant he could not have obtained employment in Dallas as general manager with duties substantially the same as he filled in his employment by appellant. He could, however, have secured employment as a bookkeeper at $75 per month, and he was competent to perform the duties of bookkeeper. He did not accept employment, but on April 30, 1904, opened up a cigar business for himself. His business up to the 9th day of September, 1904, the expiration of his contract of employment with appellant, had been unprofitable. He had given his services to the business, which consisted of selecting a location for the same, securing a house for the same, planning the arrangement of his business, fixing the same up attractively, buying his stock, employing salesmen, in advertising, in keeping his own books and in selling cigars. Appellee testified that, aside from fitting out his new store with new furniture, showcases, etc., he expended in sundry improvements, such as papering, painting, wiring, new front for store, linoleum, draperies, gas fixtures, water cooler, sundry hardware, advertising his business before opening, architect’s services, stationery to begin with, and a bonus in order to get immediate possession of the place, the aggregate sum of $1,746.39, not including current salaries, which aggregated $200 per month. These expenses were all incurred during the first four months of his business during the time covered by his contract with appellant, and he charged all these expenses up against his business for those four months. The benefits he derived from the expenditures mentioned extended over different periods, of from a year to more than three years, after the same were made. His gross sales during the first four months of his business aggregated $12,769, twenty-five percent of which was profit. His sundry expenditures for the benefit of his business, made during that period, aggregated $2,546.39, not including his expenditures for permanent improvements (showcases, furniture,, etc.,—which aggregated $1,426).
From the time appellee opened up his business until the expiration of the time covered by his contract with appellant, September 9, a period
A discharged emploj'-e can not sit idly about. during the contract period and recoup in damages, but the law imposes upon him certain obligations with reference to minimizing the damage that he has sustained : First, it becomes his duty to use reasonable diligence to secure another position of substantially the same character and grade as that which he had held with defendant. If within a reasonable time such a position can not be secured, it then becomes his duty to use reasonable diligence to secure other employment for which he is fitted, and in either case the amount which he should have earned in this way during the term of service should be deducted from the damages re-suiting from the breach of the contract.
The evidence shows that appellee could not have secured employment of the same character and grade as that he had with the appellant, because there was no opening for the same in Dallas. Appellee could have secured employment as a bookkeeper, for which position he-was fitted, at a salary of $75 per month. Had he remained idle during the remainder of his contract period with appellant, this amount would have been the sum to be deducted from his recovery. As stated by the Supreme Court on the former appeal, “should it be found that no employment of the defined character could have been had by the diligence required, then and then only the question will arise as to the deduction to be made on account of plaintiff’s business.” In such event, it was said, his recovery should be diminished to the extent of the pecuniary value of that which his services yielded to him in his business.
We do not think that the court erred in refusing to permit appellant to show the details of appellee’s business after the termination of his contract of employment by appellant. Had the inquiry been permitted, and it had been shown that plaintiff’s business was highly profitable how much of that condition could be attributed to plaintiff’s services after the contract period and how much before the contract period; what portion of the success of plaintiff’s business could be attributed to the value of his location; what portion to the value and the personality of his clerks; what portion would be attributed to the amount of capital invested and from time to time increased; what portion could be attributed to changed conditions generally, and especially in the locality where plaintiff’s place of business was situated; and, lastly, what portion of the success could be attributed to other conditions and circumstances too numerous to mention ? It can readily be seen that to permit inquiry along the line suggested would have been to embark upon a sea of uncertainty from which logical deductions and conclusions would have been impossible. The evidence showed,
“The testimony shows that after the business relations between plaintiff and defendant were severed, that plaintiff engaged in business on his own account, and if you find from the evidence that the plaintiff was wrongfully discharged from defendant’s employment, and further find that the reasonable value of his services to himself in his business was in excess of $75 per month, for the period of time between the 14th day of February, 1904, and the 8th day of September, 1904, then the measure of your finding should be the contract price of $250 per- month from the 14th day of February, 1904, to the 8th day of September, 1904, less the reasonable value of his services to himself in his business, with interest at six percent per annum from the 8th day of February, 1904, and to this amount add $138.”
“The value of plaintiff’s services to himself need not be limited to profits which he might' have received during the time that elapsed the 14th day of February, 1904, and the 8th day of September, 1904, but you may consider all the circumstances and facts in evidence before you in order to determine what was the reasonable value of plaintiff’s services to his business that were rendered prior to September 8, 1904.”
This was sufficient and there was no error in refusing appellant’s special charge Ho. 9, or in refusing to permit appellant to inquire into the details of appellee’s business subsequent to the expiration of the contract period, for the purpose of showing the value of appellee’s services to his business during the contract period.
The evidence was sufficient to support the verdict and the appellant’s . motion for new trial was properly overruled.
Finding no reversible error in the record the judgment is affirmed.