Birdsall v. Birdsall
Birdsall v. Birdsall
Opinion of the Court
The first count of the complaint is for the plaintiff’s services from November 7, 1878, to July 25, 1879, and the second count for the services of his wife for the same time. The third count is, substantially, that prior to September, 1878, the plaintiff and his wife were engaged in a profitable business at Atlantic City, in New Jersey, worth $600 per year, and while so employed the defendant engaged the plaintiff and his family to come to the city of Fond du Lac, and promised to employ them in a like business at that place, and “ agreed that the plaintiff should not be at any pecuniary loss, by reason of his giving up his business at Atlantic City and engaging at once in the service of the defendant as aforesaid;:” that in pursuance of such agreement the plaintiff sold his-property and business in Atlantic City at great sacrifice, and arrived with his family in Eond du Lac on or about the 7th day of November, 1878, and were taken by the plaintiff to his house to perform said agreement; and that defendant failed and refused to perform said agreement on his part, through no fault of the plaintiff or his wife, by reason whereof -the plaintiff has suffered damages of $500.
The defendant demurred to this third count on the- grounds that it stated no cause of action, and that the plaintiff’s wife should have been joined as a party plaintiff. The reasons for the first ground stated on the argument were —-first, that the three counts stated one and an indivisible cause of action; and secondly, that the agreement was void by the statute of frauds.
This count is certainly very vague and uncertain, and might have been ordered to be made more definite and certain on motion; but we think it substantially -states a good and separate cause of action.
As to the second ground of demurrer, we can scarcely say whether the plaintiff has stated any damages to himself on account of the non-employment of his wife by the defendant, in violation of his contract, or not, and we need not say, in disposing of this ground of the demurrer, whether, even if it does, the plaintiff’s wife should be joined; for this count shows a good cause of action of the plaintiff alone for his loss and damages by the sacrifice of his business and property, and by the expenses of his removal and failure of employment; and, to that extent at least, it is not liable to the demurrer.
By the Court. — The order of-the circuit court overruling the demurrer is affirmed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.
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