Puryear v. Ould
Puryear v. Ould
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff brought this action to recover of defendant $160, as salary due her upon a contract made on or about September 15, 1906, for the term ending September 1, 1907, at forty dollars per month. Defendant discharged plaintiff from his service on May 1, 1907, and the suit was for the salary from May 1 to September 1, 1907. Defendant admitted having employed plaintiff, but denied that the employment was for the term as alleged; but alleged that he employed plaintiff by the month, and that he discharged her because her services were unsatisfactory. The judgment was for plaintiff for the amount claimed.
*460
The qualification was in accordance with the general rule, that matter in justification must be pleaded. Latimer v. York Cotton Mills, 66 S. C., 135, 44 S. E., 559; Henderson v. Bennett, 58 S. C., 30, 36 S. E., 2, 26 Cyc., 1005.
Similar requests to charge were given without qualification, as, for example, the jury were instructed, as requested by defendant: “If a justifiable cause for dismissal existed plaintiff cannot recover, although not dismissed expressly on that ground.” “If just cause for dismissal existed plaintiff could only recover for the services rendered, and not for the remainder of the term.”
We discover no error of law justifying reversal.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Puryear v. Ould.
- Cited By
- 6 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. Pleadings — Evidence.—Under allegations of a contract for personal services for a definite period it is competent to show a contract was made at first with the principal and his manager, who had authority to contract, for no definite period, but soon thereafter the manager made the contract run for a year. 2. Election. — Under a complaint, alleging only one cause of action, plaintiff cannot be required to elect under which cause of action he will proceed. 3. Nonsuit is properly refused where there is evidence tending to support the allegations of the complaint. 4. Evidence — Conversations—Hearsay.—Statements made by 'another to one contracting party and by him related to the other contracting party during the negotiations about the contract may be brought out as a part of the conversation between the contracting parties and is not hearsay. 5. Ibid.- — Principal and Agent. — Whether the agent informed his principal of a change in the contract can be of no probative value in determining what the contract with the agent was. 6. Ibid. — Master and Servant. — Whether other employees were employed by the master by the month can be of no value in determining whether this employee was employed by the year. 7. Ibid. — Declarations by an employee to the master’s second manager that she had an established line of custom can throw no light on whether the contract made between such employee and the master and first manager was made on the representation by the employee that she had an established line of custom which she would bring to his store. 8. Ibid. — Principal and Agent. — Declarations of an agent accompanying an act are a part of the res gestae and are also admissible here in response to evidence by defendant that plaintiff was dismissed because of unsatisfactory service. 9. Master and Servant — Pleadings.—Defendant was not prejudiced by the modification to his request to charge that if sufficient cause existed for the discharge of an employee it will justify the discharge, although not the inducing cause, to the effect that any justification must be pleaded and any justification here pleaded, if established, would defeat the action, and the point was covered in other requests.