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Gifford v. Waters

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 31, 1876
67 N.Y. 80 (N.Y. 1876)

Opinion

Argued September 20, 1876

Decided October 31, 1876

W.H. Arnoux for the appellants. W.I. Butler for the respondent.


By the contract between the parties, the defendants agreed to pay the plaintiff and two others, as a salary for their services, a sum which should be equal to one-quarter of the net profits of the business, exclusive of the salary to be divided between them in proportions specified in the contract. The contract also provided that the plaintiff should be entitled to receive on account of the said salary not to exceed the sum of thirty-five dollars per week, as a minimum estimate of the value of the services. The plaintiff claims damages for a breach of the contract, by reason of the defendants preventing him from performing the same, and the referee found that the defendants discharged the plaintiff from his employment by them before the time fixed for the determination of the plaintiff's services, and prevented and prohibited him from performing the said agreement, or from rendering any services whatever in his said employment without good or sufficient cause or reason, and refused to perform the terms of the agreement. It was, therefore, the fault of the defendants that the plaintiff did not fulfill the contract. They refused to allow this to be done, and in consequence of their action no opportunity was furnished to the plaintiff by services rendered to assist in making the profits, of which he was to receive a proportionate share. Even if no profits had been realized up to the time of the plaintiff's discharge, it is no defence to the plaintiff's claim for damages; for it was not made to appear upon the trial that such profits might not have been earned if the plaintiff had been allowed to continue in the defendants' employment until the close of the period fixed for the termination of the contract. The plaintiff, therefore, was not to blame because no profits were earned, and upon the facts presented was lawfully entitled to indemnity for all losses sustained by reason of the failure of the defendants to fulfill the contract. Such losses could not be determined by proof of profits, because the act of the defendants had deprived the plaintiff of an opportunity to furnish any such evidence, and after having done this they are not in a position to claim that no profits would have accrued if the contract had been fulfilled. They cannot thus relieve themselves from liability. If they had discharged the plaintiff and then discontinued the business entirely, thus preventing any future profits, it would be no answer to a claim for remuneration that there were no profits. They stand precisely in this position in the case at bar, and are not relieved from it by the fact that without the plaintiff's services, his aid and assistance, they did not make any profits. It must be assumed from the evidence and the findings of the referee, that the plaintiff was injured by the breach of the contract, and as the defendants have fixed a definite value upon the plaintiff's services, if he had been allowed to continue to perform the same according to the contract by providing for the payment of a specific sum weekly, they have furnished a criterion from which the damages may be fairly estimated. They thereby assented to this amount as a minimum estimate of the value of the plaintiff's services, and it may properly be considered as a reasonable compensation for the same for the period during which he remained unemployed under the contract and as none other can be furnished in consequence of the defendants' act, this sum was properly adopted by the referee as the true measure of damages. If the views expressed are correct, then the request to find that the plaintiff was not to receive for his services, under the said agreement, any salary or compensation at a fixed or absolute sum, but a sum proportional to and conditional upon the profits of the business of the defendants, and not otherwise, was immaterial and could not affect the case. Nor can any other question presented affect the disposition of the case made by the referee.

The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.

All concur.

Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Gifford v. Waters

Court of Appeals of the State of New York
Oct 31, 1876
67 N.Y. 80 (N.Y. 1876)
Case details for

Gifford v. Waters

Case Details

Full title:GEORGE P. GIFFORD, Respondent, v . RHINALDO W. WATERS et al., Appellants

Court:Court of Appeals of the State of New York

Date published: Oct 31, 1876

Citations

67 N.Y. 80 (N.Y. 1876)

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