Beck, J.
1. Whether the letter from Emerson, who was the vice-president and general manager of the corporation, was intended as a dismissal and discharge of the plaintiff from the position of auditor and superintendent, must necessarily depend to a certain extent upon the construction which should be placed upon that document in the light of the proved facts and circumstances in the case. Independently of any oral testimony, it would seem to us ■that the Tetter was practically a dismissal of McFarland, at least temporarily, from said position. He was instructed to put another “in possession of the office at Darien.” And the party to whom absolute possession of the .office was to be given was not only to take actual, physical possession of the office, and all of his books, documents, papers, etc., but the auditor and superintendent was to put himself absolutely under the control and direction of the new acting auditor, and was to receive orders Trom him as if they came from the general manager. The plaintiff'was deprived of the right to sign vouchers'and checks, and the suspension of his right to exercise these functions was for an indefinite time; and it might be inferred from the terms of the letter itself that it was to be for a long-continued period. According to instructions given in the letter, he was not only to surrender the right to sign vouchers and checks, but he was to introduce the party who was placed in his position “to the bank and have them take his signature, and explain to them that all vouchers, on or after the date he determines, are to be signed by him instead of yourself.” Could this not be construed into a request not only to submit gracefully to decapitation, but to assist at the execution? But we can not say as a matter of law that under the circumstances of the case the instructions should not have been obeyed, if it were true, as the witness for the defendant testified, that in cases of this kind it was customary for the special auditor “to go down and make himself the officer of that particular place.” If it' was usual and customary in cases like that under consideration for the special auditor who comes down to audit the books and accounts of the permanent auditor, to take possession and control of the office, and to assume *100all functions pertaining to the one whose books are being investigated, and deprive the latter for an indefinite period of all authority relative to that office, then the plaintiff should have been governed by the instructions contained in Emerson’s letter, and his refusal to do so would have been an act of disobedience authorizing his discharge by the proper authorities. But the jury might have found, under the testimony in this case, that the plaintiff was requested to submit to an assumption of authority which was not. usual and customary for special auditors, such as Mr. Bailey was,, at the time the letter was presented, to exercise,-especially as there was no hint in the letter itself, nor in anything that Mr. Bail'ey said when he presented it, to indicate that within any reasonable or definite time said Bailey would be divested of the authority which he claimed the right to take upon himself by virtue of Emerson’s instructions, or that plaintiff would ever be revested therewith. So whether the plaintiff refused to obey a proper order,, in his refusal to comply with the instructions contained in the letter referred to, depended upon evidence tending to show whether- or not the thing that he was commanded to do was the customary and proper thing to do in such cases. Upon this point the evidence was conflicting, and the issue thus made should have been submitted to the jury; and the court erred in determining the-question himself. And moreover it seems to us that the jury should also have been permitted, .under the facts of the case, to find, and by their verdict to say, whether the letter written by Emerson and presented by Bailey was intended to effectuate a bona fide purpose to audit the books, papers, and documents in the office of' plaintiff, or whether it was the first step of a series which should ultimately lead to the displacement and discharge of the plaintiff' in this case, — in other words, whether it was not part of a covert-scheme to displace and remove McFarland without ground, and without having preferred charges of any character against him.
2, 3. The rulings in the headnotes sufficiently dispose of the other assignments of error in the various grounds of the motion, which were based upon the exclusion of certain evidence offered by the plaintiff, and the admission of other evidence introduced by the defendant. Judgment reversed.
All the Justices concur.