Beale v. Yazoo Yarn Mill

88 So. 411, 125 Miss. 807
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1921
DocketNo. 21264
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 88 So. 411 (Beale v. Yazoo Yarn Mill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Beale v. Yazoo Yarn Mill, 88 So. 411, 125 Miss. 807 (Mich. 1921).

Opinion

.Ethridgei, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee sued the appellant for knowingly employing, willfully interfering with, and enticing away employees under the provisions of section 1146, Code of 1906 (section 874, Hemingway’s Code) ; the affidavit reciting:

[809]*809“That the said defendant, without the consent of the plaintiff, heretofore willfully interfered with, enticed away, induced to leave plaintiff’s employment and knowingly employed one J. S. Porter, a laborer, who was then and there under a contract of employment with the plaintiff for a specified time, said contract not having expired, the said defendant then and there well knowing that the plaintiff’s contract with the said Porter has not expired. To the great damage,” etc.

The contract relied on in support of the declaration reads as follows:

“This contract, made and entered into this 14th day of September A. D. 1918, by and between Yazoo Yarn Mill, party of the first part, and J. S. Porter, party of the second part, witnesseth:
“That for and in consideration of the sum of ninety dollars, cash in hand paid to the party of the second part by the party of the first part, receipt whereof is hereby acknowledged, the party of the second part hereby agrees to move himself and his family to the said, mill, before the expiration of two days, and to work for the said mill for current wages to be paid himself and the membérs of his family; the party of the second part agrees to render good and faithful and efficient services to said mill, and agrees that two dollars and fifty cents per week, due to himself or any member of his family, for wages, may be deducted by said mill and applied on any indebtedness due said mill; that in case of controversy, or in the event of the termination of this contract, all sums due the party of the second part. or any member of his family may be applied in full to any indebtedness due said mill by the party of the second part; that the party of the first part has employed the party of the second part, and the party of the second part has agreed to work for the party of the first part, at said mill, for current wages for a term beginning the 16th day of September, 1918, and ending the 1st day of May, 1919; that the services to be rendered under this contract are such [810]*810as may be prescribed, by tbe superintendent of said mill or its overseers.
“Witness our bands this 14th day of September, 1918.'
“[Signed] Yazoo Yarn Mill, by M. W. Driver, Mgr., Party of the First Part. J. S. Porter, Etta May, Estell, Eugene, by J. S. Porter, Party of Second Part.”

The manager of the appellant testified to the making of the contract and to advancing Porter ninety dollars to pay off an account which he then owed for which the appellant, Beale, was responsible by way of guaranty; that he took the said Porter and his family to the mill and they entered into the service of the yarn mill. He testified that on or about the 26th day of December, 1918, he had a conversation with Mr. Beale in which he told Mr. Beale that he heard he was going to move Porter and that Beale said that was true; that he told him that if he did he would be subject to damages; that there was a law in the state and that people generally abided by court decisions and jury verdicts; that in the latter part of January Beale moved Porter upon his place, away from the mill; that Porter still owed part of the money advanced, sixty-three dollars and fifteen cents, for which this suit' wag brought. He denied that he had authorized Beale to hire Porter or Porter to abandon his employment, and denied breaching the contract in any respect or discharging any of the members of the family under the contract, except Porter’s youngest child, whose age was such as to make it doubtful whether he could work in the mill, and except that he laid off Porter for about two hours one day after he found out he was going to quit anyway, or was dissatisfied.

Beale testified to a conversation on December 26th and gives a different version of what transpired from that of the manager, Driver. Beale says he was asked whether he was contemplating moving Porter on his farm and he told Driver, the manager, that he was; that Porter had said he could not make a living at the mill on account of not getting work for all the members of his family, and that he had promised to give him employment; that the manager [811]*811stated that he had a contract with Porter, but that he (Beale) did not know the duration of the contract; that in the conversation he told the manager that he did not contemplate moving Porter right away; that it would’ be all right for the mili to work Porter until about the 1st of March, and that the manager said he would be mighty glad to do that and agreed to work Porter until the 1st of March following; that afterwards he saw Porter’s children idle and asked Porter why they were not working and that Porter told him they had been laid off or discharged; that after this conversation with Porter he saw Porter idle and asked why he was not working, and that Porter told him he had gone to the foreman and told the foreman unless they could work his children and give them employment that he could not work as he could not make a living without the help of his children, and that the foreman would not agree to take his son back at the mill, but told Porter, to take them and go to the farm; that he was tired of fooling Avith them. Beale further testified that he believed in good faith what Porter had said and that he had traded with Porter believing what Porter'had related as stated above. Porter corroborated Beale’s statements and said he was not finally employed by Beale until after they Avere all laid off and the foreman had refused to re-employ his son. Porter’s wife and daughter also testified, in effect, that the daughter had been discharged or laid off several different times, and that Ms wife had gone to the foreman and requested that he give employment to the daughter, as Mr. and Mrs. Porter had a large number of children unable to work and were dependent upon the labor of the father, mother, daughter, and two sons.

The foreman., Mr. Carpenter, also testified that he had discharged the boy, Estell, and would not take him back as he could not get work out of him; part of Carpenter’s testimony being as follows:

“Q. Mr. Carpenter, what was it you told Mr. Porter that Sunday eAnning — you told him to take his boy and go to the cotton fields with him? A. He asked me—
[812]*812“Q. Is that what you told Mm? A. Yes, sir; that is what I told him.
“Q. You told him just as Mr. Porter says — to take his boy and go on, and go to the cotton field? A. That I couldn’t work that boy.
“Q. You say you meant for the little boy to go on to the cotton field — is that the idea? A. I meant for him to take them all.
“Q. Take them all and go? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. But finally you told him to go\to the cotton patch, you didn’t want him at the mill? A. I told him to take the other one and go to the cotton patch — I was not working him.
“Q. You say you meant for him to take his family to the ' cotton patch, and let him stay there? A. I didn’t have anything to do with him.
“Q. You did have the others? A.

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Related

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 So. 411, 125 Miss. 807, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beale-v-yazoo-yarn-mill-miss-1921.