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1. EVIDENCE-its admission. Where it is claimed that a person employed a stage manager for the season at $60 per month, it was not error to admit evidence of the acts done by the agent in the fall in reference to the business of the next year, when the acts were done with the knowledge or approval of the employer, as tending to show that the agent was employed for the season.

2. INSTRUCTIONS-evidence. Where such evidence is admitted, and the court instructed the jury that it should not prejudice defendant unless the acts were authorized or ratified by him: Held, that the evidence could have worked defendant no harm.

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Opinion of the Court.

3. An instruction which informed the jury that if defendant employed plaintiff for a specified time, and defendant committed a breach of the contract whereby plaintiff was prevented from serving for the period he was employed and he thereby suffered loss, he was entitled to recover the salary which defendant agreed to pay for the time for which he was hired, less the amount of net earnings the evidence showed he had made during the time for which he was hired: Held, in view of the evidence before the jury, that this instruction could not have misled the jury and worked no wrong to defendant.

4. DAMAGES reduction thereof. Where there is such an engagement, and the employer violates the agreement and prevents its fulfillment, he is liable for the wages during the time, and it is for him to prove that plaintiff has been actually employed in other profitable business, or that such employment had been offered to and rejected by him, to entitle him to a reduction of damages. And where a defendant fails to prove that the plaintiff was or could have been so employed, and the evidence is vague and indefinite as to plaintiff's earnings during the time so that the jury could make no estimate of the amount, the judgment will not be reversed because no deduction was allowed.

5.

NEWLY DISCOVERED EVIDENCE.

Where it appears, from the affidavits filed in support of a motion for a new trial because of newly discovered evidence, that it is only cumulative and indecisive, a new trial should not be granted.

6. PRACTICE--new points for a re-argument. Where a case has been argued and decided on the points presented, a rehearing will not be granted on new questions raised for the first time in the petition, unless it be to prevent manifest injustice.

APPEAL from the Circuit Court of Cook county; the Hon. HENRY BOOTH, Judge, presiding.

Messrs. GRANT & SWIFT, for the appellant.

Messrs. MERIAM & ALEXANDER, for the appellee.

Mr. CHIEF JUSTICE LAWRENCE delivered the opinion of the Court:

This was an action brought by Little against Fuller to recover damages for breach of a contract alleged to have been made between the parties by which the plaintiff agreed to pay the defendant a year's salary at the rate of $60 per week in consideration of the defendant's services as stage manager

Opinion of the Court.

at a place of amusement called Wood's Museum, in the city of Chicago. The defendant sold the museum on the 1st of August, 1869, and the question in this case was, whether he had previously engaged the plaintiff for the season, commencing on the 1st of August and terminating on the 1st of the next July. The jury found for the plaintiff, assessing his damages at $2800.

The first error assigned is, that the court admitted illegal evidence. The plaintiff was acting as stage manager for the defendant at the time of the sale, and the court permitted him to show what steps he had taken to carry forward the business during the next year. If these acts of the plaintiff were done under the direction or with the knowledge or approval of the defendant, they were very material in aiding the jury to pass upon the question at issue. They related to the correspondence of the plaintiff and advertisements by him for the purpose of forming a dramatic company for the next year, and if, in all this, he was acting under the direction of the defendant, the presumption would be reasonable that an engagement had been made between them. The plaintiff testified positively to his own engagement, and that he acted, in making his arrangements for the coming season, under the express directions of the defendant. The court properly admitted the evidence, and after the defendant had contradicted, on the stand, the statements of the plaintiff, the court instructed the jury that the former was not to be prejudiced by the acts of the plaintiff in making engagements with authors or theatrical persons unless the defendant had authorized or ratified his acts. This instruction placed this evidence in its proper light before the jury, and the appellant can not justly complain of the ruling of the court.

It is next urged that the court erred in giving the second instruction for the plaintiff, which was as follows:

"The jury are further instructed that if they believe, from the evidence, that the defendant entered into a contract with

Opinion of the Court.

the plaintiff, as stated in the declaration, and committed at wrongful breach of such contract with the plaintiff, whereby the plaintiff has suffered loss, the rule of damages in this case, and the amount the plaintiff is entitled to recover, is the amount of salary which the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff, if any such agreement or amount is shown by the evidence, for the entire time for which he hired him, less the amount of the net earnings, if any shown by the evidence, made by the plaintiff during the time for which he was so hired."

The objection taken to this instruction is in the use of the phrase "net earnings." That this phrase in such connection would be objectionable in some cases, is very clear. Whether it worked the defendant any injury in this instance depends upon its application to the evidence, and the mode in which the jury must necessarily have understood it. The only testimony as to the earnings of the defendant was the following statement by himself:

"After the 1st of August I was around town for some time, not knowing what to do scarcely. Finally I got a company together; some gentlemen put in some money, and we went out traveling; we were out some two weeks, when the parties became dissatisfied who had the capital and left.

"I borrowed money to carry on the company; when I got back I was some hundreds of dollars in debt; I was gone about four months, I should judge; all my jewelry was gone -my watch and chain, and my wife's watch and chain and jewelry.

"I was not able to get into a paying position that season. It would be impossible for me to tell how much I earned through the year; I earned nothing over and above my expenses; I put my name on the books of various agencies and applied for engagements; accepted two engagements, such as they were."

In reference to this evidence, so far as it relates to the pecuniary success of the plaintiff while traveling in the country

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