Grieser v. Haynes

404 P.2d 333, 89 Idaho 198, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 360
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 22, 1965
Docket9512
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 404 P.2d 333 (Grieser v. Haynes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grieser v. Haynes, 404 P.2d 333, 89 Idaho 198, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 360 (Idaho 1965).

Opinion

*200 TAYLOR, Justice.

Plaintiff (appellant)- brought this action to recover an alleged balance of wages due, a penalty of 30 days additional wages pursuant to I.C. § 45-606, and for attorney’s fees pursuant to I.C. § 45-605. The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury.

At the- close, of plaintiff’s evidence, defendant moved the court for a judgment of nonsuit, as follows:

“Comes now the defendant, the plaintiff having rested, and moves for a judgment of non-suit for the following,reasons : there has been no contract pleaded or proven' between the persons; there has been no proof of the amount of wage which should have been paid to the plaintiff; there has been no proof of the. worth of this person’s work. .-In.other words, there is a total failure, of proof, of the elements of the complaint which are required. The elements of the complaint required a proof of a contract.”

The court treated- the-' motion as one for a judgment ■ of involuntary dismissal, as follows: ' ; ' ; ' 1

“The court is of the -opinion that the plaintiff has failed to prove his case by a preponderance of evidence and the motion to dismiss or for a non-suit, whichever it is nowdays, is granted.”

Formal judgment of dismissal was thereafter entered, from which plaintiff brought this appeal. Plaintiff also appealed from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

In 1962 and 1963, defendant (respondent), a general contractor, was engaged in the construction of a grain elevator at Genesee, Idaho. The elevator was being constructed under the direction of one Vic Bartholme, who was defendant’s superintendent of construction. Plaintiff testified that in November, 1962, he inquired of Bartholme concerning employment on the construction of the elevator; that Bartholme told him he likely would need additional laborers later when construction reached the stage of “slipping,” (that is, the alternate pouring of concrete and upward moving of the forms in erecting the walls of the structure); that Bartholme said laborers would be paid the union scale of $3.04 per hour; that the same statements were made by Bartholme upon inquiry made by plaintiff in February, 1963; that he made further inquiry in March and was told to come on the night shift that evening; at that time nothing was said between plaintiff and Bartholme concerning wages; that he worked 8 days and was paid in full at the rate of $3.04 per hour; that he worked an additional 40 *201 hours, after which he was paid at the rate of $2.50 per hour, and deduction was made from his second paycheck to adjust payment for the first pay period to $2.50 per hour.

Two other local men were called as witnesses by the plaintiff. One testified that Bartholme had said the wage would be $3.04 per hour and that that was the lowest wage paid on the job. He also testified that he was paid at the rate of $2.50 per hour until he joined the union. The other witness testified concerning his conversation with Bartholme:

“Well, we talked about the warehouse and more so that when we went to work that laborers, that we was to get 3.04 an hour, and that was for laborers, and that is more or less — we didn’t discuss any about the pay or anything like that.”

On cross-examination this witness testified he was paid at the rate of $2.50 per hour.

Prior to commencement of the action, plaintiff through his attorney made demand upon defendant for a balance of wages due on the basis of employment at $3.04 per hour. In response to this demand, defendant by letter informed plaintiff’s counsel that the agreement between plaintiff and the foreman on the job was for wages at $2.50 per hour; that plaintiff was not a union member and was unskilled and that was the reason he was offered employment at $2.50 per hour; and that the'first paycheck was issued on the basis of $3.04 per hour through mistake of the bookkeeper in defendant’s office. A second demand by plaintiff’s attorney was answered by the project superintendent Bartholme. In this communication Mr.- Bartholme stated that he never made an agreement with plaintiff for a wage of $3.04 per hour and that he marked plaintiff’s payroll card $2.50 per hour; and that the payroll clerk had made a mistake in paying him at,,the rate of $3.04 per hour for the first pay period. These demands by plaintiff and the replies thereto by def endant were placed in evidence by plaintiff.

Plaintiff also called the defendant for cross-examination. Defendant testified that Bartholme was authorized to hire and -fire employees on the job, but was not authorized to fix or agree upon wages; that wages to be paid were fixed by the witness and his payroll clerk in the defendant’s office in accordance with his agreement with the union and also upon consideration of the experience or skill possessed by the employee.

The defendant’s wife was also ; called as a witness by plaintiff. She was- defendant’s payroll clerk. Her .testimony -was similar in effect to that of defendant. ,

While defendant -was on the witness stand, plaintiff sought to prove that; de *202 fendant was bound by a contract existing between himself as a member of an association of general contractors and a district council of laborers. Upon objection being sustained, plaintiff made the following offer of proof:

“Bielenberg [plaintiff’s attorney]: I would like to show by his being a member of the Associated General Contractors of America that he has assigned his bargaining rights to the laborers’ union chapter; that he does have a contract with the union; that we have the contract here for him to identify; and that his contract with the union includes all employees that •may come within his hire; and that this contract is a contract between two parties and it is a contract which also has a beneficiary such as a nonunion member such as my client.”

The court rejected the offer of proof.

Plaintiff urges that the court erred in treating defendant’s motion for non-suit as one for an involuntary dismissal and determining the motion on the theory that plaintiff had failed to prove his case by a preponderance of evidence. He urges that in the case of a motion for nonsuit “the question presented is not whether the plaintiff had produced a preponderance of evidence, but whether he has made a prima facie case.” This was the rule in this state in: both jury and non-jury cases prior to the adoption of the present Rules of Civil Procedure in 1958. In Stratton v. Stratton, 87 Idaho 118, 391 P.2d 340 (1964), this court held that upon the consideration of a motion to dismiss under IRCP 41(b) in a non-jury case, the court was authorized to determine the cause upon its merits. Referring to the prior rule, this court in that case said:

“ * * * jn non-jury cases, however, this stringent test is not applicable, for if the court, which is the trier of the facts in such cases, determines that the plaintiff has failed in his burden of proof and grants a motion to dismiss, it is a determination of the cause on its merits; 2B Barron and Holtzoff, Federal Practice and Procedure, § 919, p. 151.

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Bluebook (online)
404 P.2d 333, 89 Idaho 198, 1965 Ida. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grieser-v-haynes-idaho-1965.