DocketNumber: No. 16,685
Judges: Hamer, Rose
Filed Date: 5/29/1912
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
Plaintiff was tbe manager of tbe Hastings Independent Telephone Company, defendant, from January, 1906, to February, 190.7, and tliis is an action to recover an unpaid balance of $200 on bis salary under his contract of employment. The amount of the monthly salary which defendant agreed to pay him for his services for the eight months from April to November, inclusive, was tbe controverted issue. What defendant in fact paid him was $75 a month. For that period he recovered in this action upon a trial to a jury a judgment for $25 a month more and interest, or $241.45 in all. Defendant has appealed.
In the form in which the record is presented for review, the judgment must stand or fall upon the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict. Plaintiff did not sue upon a quantum meruit, hut. upon a contract. In his petition he alleged that he was employed as manager December 13, 1905, that his services were to begin January 1, 1906, and that defendant agreed to pay him $75 a montli “for the first two or three months, and, if the said defendant retained the plaintiff longer than two or three months, to pay him $100 for the balance of the time said plaintiff was employed by defendant.” He further alleged there is due him from defendant “on said contract of employment for services rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant, from April 1, 1906, to December 1, 1906, a balance of the sum of $200.” Both parties agree that plaintiff’s salary for the months of January, February and March was fixed by the coniract at $75 a month and paid. For the mouths of December and January plaintiff re
In view of these facts, it was incumbent on plaintiff, since he sued upon a contract of employment fixing his salary, to prove that defendant agreed to pay him for his services $100 a month from April to November inclusive. Was the contract proved? His oral testimony shows that he had previously occupied a similar position at Broken Bow. While thus employed, early in December, 1905, he attended at Hastings a meeting of defendant’s •directors — a board composed of five members. On the witness-stand he said lie told the board at that meeting his salary at the time was $100 a month. When asked if he was getting that, he answered: “I was; yes, sir. One of the board then asked me what my object was in coming down here for $75 — asked what was my object in leaving there at $100, when I was only to get $75 here. I said that this was a larger town and a larger company, with larger opportunities for me, and they finally said: ‘You come as an entire stranger. All that we know is what you tell us of your experience, and you should be willing to work for a month or two for $75 per month/ until, as they expressed it, they could ‘try me out;’ and I told them I would under those circumstances, but that I would not consider that permanently, and that, I think, was the sum and substance of the whole conversation. They told me that they would take the matter under consideration and notify me, and I took that as indicative that they were through with me that night.”
Referring to his first meeting with the members of the board, plaintiff testified he told them what he was getting, and that he had said: “I wouldn’t take less, except that I would take less for a month or so, until they found I was the man they wanted;” and, further: “I don’t know as I would have any objection to working- a month or so with you for that figure” — $75 a month. He testified that no particular timé was fixed to begin the payment of $100 a month; that, though it was his duty to bring matters of business before the board, he never presented the question as to when full compensation should begin; that in April or May he spoke to two of the five directors about bringing the matter before the board, and that they said they would bring it up; that he “made no statement to the board at the end of three months as to why his sálary should not be $100 a month.”
Plaintiff is bound by his petition and by his own testimony in support of its allegations. It follows that in making his own case he has conclusively established against himself these propositions: The copy of the letter quoted did not contain the terms of his contract of em
The judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Reversed. ,