Bass Furnace Co. v. Glasscock
This text of 82 Ala. 452 (Bass Furnace Co. v. Glasscock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
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To justify an employer in discharging a servant, or employee, the rule, no doubt, is, that the servant must have been guilty of conduct which can be construed to be a breach of some express or implied provision in the contract of service. It seems to be settled, that it is an implied part of every contract of service, that the employee will abstain from habitual drunkenness, or repeated acts of intoxication, during the period of his employment. If he be guilty of this indulgence, his conduct will justify his dismissal. — 2 Addison on Contr. (Morgan’s ed.), $ 890; Wise v. Wilson, 1 Car. & 31 662; 2 Parsons on Contr. 36, note (f); Gonsolis v. Gearheart, 31 Mo. 585; Huntington v. Claflin, 10 Bosw. (N. Y.) 262. There may be circumstances, however, under which a single act of drunkenness would warrant a servant’s discharge ; as, for example, in the case of a minister of the gospel, where the act might bring personal reproach, and tends to degrade the moral standard of religion; or of a family physician, where it might result in negligence; or malpractice in pharmacy or surgery. — Wood on Master and Servant, § 111, p. 213. The same act when committed by a day laborer, in privacy, and when off duty, or on some rare occasion when great temptation was presented, might not be a sufficient excuse for his discharge. The rule is stated by a recent author to be, that “intoxication, while in service, is generally a good excuse for discharging a servant, particularly when it is habitual, and interferes with the discharge of his duties, or will be likely to. But it is held, that as to whether it is to be regarded as a proper excuse, depends upon the occasion.” — Wood on Master and Servant, § III, p. 213. We do not doubt that public drunkenness of any employee, while in the service of the employer, and mani[455]*455festing itself in boisterous and disorderly conduct, either towards the employer or third persons, is such misconduct as to constitute a violation of the stipulation, implied in every contract of service, that, the employee will conduct himself with such decency and politeness of deportment as not to work injury to the business of the employer. This he can do by a single act of drunkenness, which may tend to offend the reasonable prejudices or tastes of the public, or impair their confidence, or render him disagreeable in social or business intercourse. The drunkenness of employees may well deter the patrons of any business establishment from continuing their business intercourse with it, especially when social contact is frequently necessary to its consummation. It may prove, also, equally offensive to the master or employer, who may justly regard sobriety as an indispensable element of efficient service. The charge of the court laid down the rule, that no drunkenness justified the plaintiff’s discharge, unless it incapacitated him, and caused him to fail in the performance of his part of the contract. This, under the principles above declared, was erroneous, and must work a reversal of the cause. We may add, that the act approved February 17, 1885, entitled “ An act to prevent public drunkenness,” and making it a misdemeanor under certain circumstances, has no bearing on this case, having been passed after the present alleged cause of action.
We find the other rulings of the court to be free from error.
Reversed and remanded.
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