DocketNumber: Nos. 18,340—(219)
Citation Numbers: 124 Minn. 366
Judges: Holt
Filed Date: 1/23/1914
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 9/9/2022
Plaintiff worked for defendant from October 4, 1910, until some time in March following as a compounder of liquors. When hired it was agreed that the first month’s wages, $7 5, should be retained by defendant “on the conditions that I wouldn’t get drunk while I was in their employ,” as plaintiff testifies. Plaintiff sues for the $75 retained under this agreement. The defense is, plaintiff was discharged for repeatedly becoming intoxicated while at work,- and thereby defendant became entitled to the money as liquidated damages. The court assumed that plaintiff breached the agreement, and submitted to the jury the single question whether the deposit was in the nature of liquidated damages or a penalty. No point is made that the answer was not for the jury. No fault is found with the guide given them for determining the issue, and which was practically in line with Taylor v. Times Newspaper Co. 83 Minn. 523, 86 N. W. 760, 85 Am. St. 473. Hence the only matter presented here is the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding that the money could not be retained by defendant as liquidated damages.
Courts are inclined to place that construction upon contracts of this nature which will give actual compensation for a breach rather than one which creates a forfeiture. The considerations to be kept in mind in construing such contracts are well stated in Keeble v. Keeble, 85 Ala. 552, 5 South. 149. We need not discuss these in detail as applied to the instant case. It is sufficient to point out that judging from the salary, the position plaintiff filled could not have been of great consequence to defendant. He did not come in direct contact with its customers, for he worked in the cellar, and the effect of his blends could neither have attracted nor deterred the trade. And, what perhaps weighs most, he was not hired for any
Order affirmed.