Stark v. Parker
Stark v. Parker
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court. This case comes before us upon exceptions filed, pursuant to the statute, to the opinion, in matter of law, of a judge of the Court of Common Pleas, before whom the action was tried by a jury ; and we are thus called upon to revise the judgment which was there rendered. The exceptions present a precise abstract question of law for consideration, namely, whether upon an entire contract for a term of service for a stipulated sum, and a part-performance, without any excuse for neglect of its completion, the party guilty of the neglect can maintain an action against the party contracted with, foi an apportionment of the price, or a quantum meruit, for the services actually performed. Whatever may be the view properly taken of the contract between the parties in the case at bar, the point upon which it was ruled in the court below embraced but this single proposition. The direction to the jury was, “ that although proved to them, that the plaintiff agreed to serve the defendant for an agreed price for a year, and had voluntarily left his service before the expiration of that time, and without the fault of the defendant, and against his consent, still the plaintiff would be entitled to recover of the defendant, in this action, a sum in proportion to the time he had served, deducting therefrom such sum, (if any,) as the jury might think the defendant had suffered by having his service deserted.” If this direction was wrong, the judgment must be reversed, and the case sent to a new trial, in which the diversity of construction given to the character and terms of the contract by the counsel for the respective panics may be a subject for distinct consideration.
Upon examining the numerous authorities, which have been collected with great industry by the counsel for the plaintiff, it will be found, that a distinction has been uniformly recognised in the construction of contracts, between those in which the obligation of the parties is reciprocal and independent, and those where the duty of the one may be considered as a condition precedent to that of the other. In the latter cases, it is held, that the performance of the precedent oHigation can alone entitle the party bound to it, to his action. Indeed the argument of the counsel in the present case has proceeded entirely upon this distinction, and upon the petitio principii in its application. It is assumed by him, that the service of the plaintiff for a year was not a condition precedent to his right to a proportion of the stipulated compensation for that entire
That such a contract as is supposed in the exceptions before us, expresses a condition to be performed by the plaintiff precedent to his right of action against the defendant, we cannot doubt. The plaintiff was to labor one year for an agreed price. The money was to be paid in compensation for the service, and not as a consideration for an engagement to serve. Otherwise, as no precise time was fixed for pay ment, it might as well be recovered before the commencement of the labor or during its progress, as at any subsequent period. While the contract was executory and in the course of execution and the plaintiff was in the employ of the defendant, it would never have been thought an action could be maintained for the precise sum of compensation agreed upon for the year. The agreement of the defendant was as entire on his part to pay, as that of the plaintiff to serve. The latter was to serve one year, the former to pay one hundred and twenty dollars. Upon the construction contended for by the plaintiff’s counsel, that the defendant was to pay for any portion of the time in which the plaintiff should labor, in the same proportion to the whole sum which the time of labor done should bear to the time agreed for, there is no rule by which the defendant’s liability can be determined. The plaintiff might as well claim his wages by the month as by the year, by the week as by the month, and by the day or hour as by either. The responsibility of the defendant would thus be affected in .a manner totally inconsistent with the terms of his agreement to pay for a year’s service in one certain and entire amount. Besides, a construction to this effect is
The performance of a year’s service was in this case a condition precedent to the obligation of payment. The plaintiff must perform the condition, before he is entitled to recover any thing under the contract, and he has no right to renounce his agreement and recover upon a quantum meruit. The cases of M'Millan v. Vanderlip, 12 Johns R. 165, Jennings v. Camp, 13 Johns. R. 94, and Reab v. Moor, 19 Johns. R. 337, are analogous in their circumstances to the case at bar and are directly and strongly in point. The decisions in the English cases express the same doctrine, Waddington v. Oliver, 2 New Rep. 61 ; Ellis v. Hamlen, 3 Taunt. 52 ; and the principle is fully supported by all the elementary writers.
But it has been urged, that whatever may be the principle of the common law, and the decisions in the courts of New York on this subject, a different rule of construction has been adopted in this commonwealth ; and we are bound to believe that such has sometimes been the fact, from the opinion of the learned and respectable judge who tried this cause, and from instances of similar decisions cited at the bar, but not reported. The occasion of so great a departure from ancient and well established principles cannot well tie understood. It has received no sanction at any time from the judgment of this Court within the period of our Reports. As early as the second volume of Massachusetts Reports, in the case of Faxon v. Mansfield, the common law doctrine in relation to dependent covenants was recognised and applied,
It is only in cases where the desertion is voluntary and without cause on the part of the laborer, or fault or consent on the part of the employer, that the principle applies. Wherever there is a reasonable excuse, the law allows a recovery. To say that this is not sufficient protection, that an excuse may in fact exist in countless secret and indescribable circumstances, which from their very nature are not susceptible of proof, or which, if proved, the law does not recognise as adequate, is to require no less than that the law should presume what can never legally be established, or should admit that as competent, which by positive rules is held to be wholly immaterial. We think well established principles are not thus to be shaken, and that in this commonwealth more especially, where the important business of husbandry leads to multiplied engagements of precisely this description, it should least of all be questioned, that the laborer is worthy of his hire, only upon the performance of his contract, and as the rewaid of fidelity.
See Byrd v. Boyd, 4 M'Cord, 246 ; Willington v. West Boylston, 4 Pick. 103 ; Chandler v. Thurston, 10 Pick. 209 ; Shaw v. Turnpike Co., 2 Penn. 454 , M‘Clure v. Pyatt, 4 M'Cord, 26.
Huttman v. Boulnois, 2 Carr. & Payne, 510; Appleby v. Dods, 8 East, 300 ; Per Lawrence J. in King v. Whittlebury, 6 T. R. 467 ; Dalton’s Just. c. 58; 5 Burn’s Just 183 ; 3 Stark. Ev. (4th Am. ed.) 1765, et. seq. It is held in England, that if a yearly servant be dismissed by his master before the year exuires, for such misconduct as will justify his dismissal, the servant
See Moses v. Stevens, post, 332.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John Stark versus Thomas Parker
- Status
- Published