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(ARTHUR
BELISLE |
PLAINTIFF |
BETWEEN |
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(AND
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(CARLTON
RUSSELL |
DEFENDANT |
Supreme
Court
Action No. 320 of 1982
8th March, 1984
Rajasingham, J., Q.C.
Mr. Denys
Barrow for the Plaintiff.
Mr. Philip Zuniga for the Defendant.
Contract
of employment - Oral agreement - Breach of agreement - Whether
Plaintiff justified to cease work due to default by the
Defendant on a secondary agreement albeit related to employment
agreement - Whether the Plaintiff's cessation of work was
a material breach of employment agreement - Whether Defendant
justified to treat employment agreement as at an end.
J U D G M E N T
The Plaintiff's
Action is based on an agreement to build three boats for the
Defendant. The consideration agreed upon for each boat is
not contested except in so far as the first and largest boat
is concerned. However, even in relation to that boat, the
disagreement is centered on the question of whether admitted
weekly payments were payments towards the agreed consideration
or not. The entire transaction is made far more complicated
by what was evidently a close and trusting relationship between
the parties. This relationship reduced the contractual relationship
to a casual arrangement which was not fully understood by
either party. When in due course financial strains were put
on the relationship each party felt aggrieved at the apparent
capriciousness of the other.
The facts
as became apparent from the evidence are as follows:-
In or
about the month of May, 1981 the Defendant was having a 32
foot boat (which the Defendant kept referring to as a 34 footer)
being built by a young fellow. The Defendant, who was a good
friend of the Plaintiff's brother, asked the Plaintiff to
have a look at the boat and tell him what he thought of it.
The Plaintiff did not report favourably on that boat and the
Defendant asked the Plaintiff to supervise its construction.
The Plaintiff reluctantly agreed to it. Within a very short
time the Plaintiff and the fellow working on the boat fell
out and the Defendant was forced to terminate the services
of that fellow. There appears to be some slight disagreement
as to whether the Plaintiff was himself building a 40-foot
boat for the Defendant when this happened or whether he commenced
building it after the young fellow was dismissed. It is of
little consequence. What is relevant is that shortly before
the time the young fellow's services were terminated or shortly
thereafter the Plaintiff commenced work on a 40-footer for
the Defendant. I am inclined to believe this agreement was
entered into after the Plaintiff had commenced work on the
32 footer, because the agreement was so casually entered into
by both men that one is forced to the conclusion that they
had developed a very close relationship of trust by that time.
Each man's understanding of this agreement varied from that
of the other. The Plaintiff drew a plan of the proposed boat
and asked for a sum of $20,000.00 as consideration for his
labour. The Plaintiff repeatedly referred to this sum as being
"for labour". The Defendant, according to the Plaintiff,
while agreeing to the sum of $20,000.00 proposed that he would
pay the Plaintiff $200.00 a week. The Plaintiff commenced
work on this basis under the apparent belief that this weekly
wage was over and above the $20,000.00 he had asked for as
consideration for his labour. The Defendant had, however,
intended that this sum should be a weekly payment towards
the $20,000.00 asked for by the Plaintiff. These payments
commenced in May, 1981 and were increased to $250.00 in July,
1981, and to $300.00 a week in December, 1981.
I am satisfied
that these payments were made towards the agreed consideration
of $20,000.00; to hold otherwise would be to hold that, whereas
the Plaintiff valued his labour at $20,000.00, the Defendant
was paying him almost twice as much as the Plaintiff stipulated.
The Plaintiff asked for and was to receive $20,000.00 for
building a 40 foot boat; the Defendant, perhaps for his own
convenience preferred to pay it as a weekly wage. I am supported
in this finding by the fact that the Plaintiff was, at the
time he went to work with the Defendant, receiving a weekly
wage of $150.00 at Hoare's dockyard. I am fully aware that
factors such as the Defendant asking the Plaintiff to stop
work on the 40 footer and work on the 32 footer or the 20
footer appear to militate against such a finding. I am convinced
that these things are amply explained by the relationship
between the parties. I am also convinced that the Plaintiff
worked on the Defendant's farm for some three or four days
as a friendly gesture and not for wages. Mr. Barrow argued
that the payment of the weekly wages continuing while the
Plaintiff worked on the farm or on the other boats could only
be explained if the Plaintiff was working on a weekly wage
which was to be paid in addition to the lump sum consideration.
I think it is more easily explained by the casual and mutually
trusting manner in which these two men behaved towards each
other. I do not think either of them gave their minds to the
financial implications of the Plaintiff spending three or
four days assisting the Defendant on his farm. The Defendant
himself said, and I am inclined to believe him, that he was
quite willing to let the Plaintiff earn more than the agreed
consideration in the event the $20,000.00 ran out before the
40 footer was completed. Since they were simultaneously working
on the 32-footer and the 20-footer, these weekly payments
could have been continued until the $10,000.00 for the 32-footer
and the $2,000.00 for the 20-footer were exhausted too.
The final
argument against the Plaintiff's understanding of the arrangement
is that he was to receive only $10,000.00 for the 32-footer
and $2,000.00 for the 20 footer and not those sums plus a
weekly wage. Against that, a sum, of $20,000.00 which was
his own estimate, appears more than reasonable for his labour
on the 40 footer.
The Defendant
claims, and the Plaintiff does not seriously challenge, that
a sum of $18,000.00 was paid in weekly wages and a sum of
$2,000.00 was paid for the 20 footer. Here again I am struck
by the closeness of the relationship between these men; neither
has actually bothered to maintain an account of these payments
and yet there is no conflict about the payments. I cannot
help but feel that both men are losers as a result of this
litigation, because each has lost a friend.
Be that
as it may, the next question that arises for consideration
is what sum is owing to the Plaintiff from the Defendant as
monies advanced by the Plaintiff for materials and labour.
The Defendant admits that a sum of $30,100.00 is due. The
Plaintiff claims a sum of $30,532.65 as being the balance
due on advances of $26,532.65 and $10,000.00. The Plaintiff
has produced a notebook in which he has kept a note of the
money advanced by him. His evidence and that notebook show
that he had advanced the sums of $26,532.65 and $10,000.00
for and on behalf of the Defendant and was repaid a sum of
$6,000.00. The Defendant has not challenged that account beyond
stating that he thinks his debt is $30,100.00. I accept that
the sum involved is $30,532.65.
The evidence
is that the Plaintiff, fearing a devaluation of the Belize
dollar, sought to ensure that he would not lose if that should
happen. He did this by asking the Defendant to give him United
States currency in exchange for his Belize dollars. The Defendant
says he once gave the Plaintiff $1,500.00 in United States
currency in exchange for Belizean currency. He thereafter
decided to use the Plaintiff's money to meet his expenses
on the boat building in Belize and says he told the Plaintiff
that when the Plaintiff's money ran out he, the Defendant,
would make bank transfers in favour of the Plaintiff and would
see to it that the Plaintiff would not lose by any devaluation.
I cannot accept this explanation of the transaction as it
would achieve little or nothing for the Plaintiff. I believe
they both agreed to repayment in United States dollars, at
the rate prevailing at the time, in the event of any subsequent
devaluation. I believe the Defendant is, by his evidence of
how repayment was to be made, trying to get away from his
having agreed to what he thought was an illegality. In an
attempt to avoid the consequences of devaluation the Plaintiff
advanced his monies and went on to withdraw money he had in
a fixed deposit account to advance that too to the Defendant.
The Plaintiff says the Defendant was shown a bank slip stating
that interest was payable at the rate of 18% per annum at
that time and that the Defendant authorised him to go ahead
and borrow from the bank at that rate. At first the Plaintiff
said he borrowed from the bank and then he said he used his
son's money and finally admitted that he used his own money
which he had in the bank in a joint account with his son.
The Defendant denied being shown any bank slip setting out
any interest rate. I am not satisfied with the Plaintiff's
evidence on this aspect and believe that the Plaintiff withdrew
the sum of $10,000.00 in order to convert that too into United
States currency and avoid the feared devaluation.
Mr. Zuniga
argued that this transaction was an illegal transaction in
contravention of the exchange control laws and was therefore
unenforceable. I do not agree with this submission for the
reason that the agreement per se was not illegal although
the receipt of the repayment in foreign currency without the
requisite Central Bank authorisation would have made it illegal.
The transaction never reached that stage, although according
to the Defendant he did, prior to such agreement, give the
Plaintiff $1,500.00 in United States currency for its equivalent
in Belize currency. That single transaction may have been
illegal, but the subsequent agreement to repay monies spent
on the boats in United States currency was not.
I come
now to the difficult question of termination of the agreement.
The Plaintiff says that after his money was exhausted, the
Defendant arranged for remittances to be credited to the Plaintiff's
account at the Royal Bank. This commenced in or about March,
1982. These remittances often proved insufficient to meet
payments and on occasion the Plaintiff had to go without pay
until the next remittance. The Plaintiff finally confronted
the Defendant and the Defendant reacted to the Plaintiff's
shouting at him by shouting back words to the effect that
'all Belize people thought about was money' and offered the
Plaintiff his ring. The Plaintiff's reaction to this clearly
shows that the Plaintiff was demanding all the money owed
to him and not merely any small arrears due at that time as
his weekly wages. The Plaintiff told the Defendant "Mr.
Russell, if that ring value what you say, before I clear the
door the Police will arrest me". The Plaintiff said he
then used his own money to pay the workmen that day which
was a Saturday. He said the Defendant came there and smoothed
things over saying the money would be there on the Monday
or Tuesday and by buying beers for everyone. The Plaintiff
says the money was in fact received on the Monday and the
workmen were paid, which presumably included the Plaintiff.
Thereafter that same day at noon, the Defendant went there
and a quarrel ensued between him and the Plaintiff. In the
course of it the Plaintiff told the Defendant he wanted a
"settlement" and demanded that the Defendant should
pay the Plaintiff "what he owe(d)" him. The Plaintiff
added that he would not work until the Defendant paid him.
The reference to a "settlement" and to "what
he owe", to my mind, clearly shows that what was being
demanded was repayment of all monies advanced rather than
arrears of salary. The evidence of Russell Garbutt is that
the Plaintiff told Garbutt that some money was also owed to
him as wages at that time. When the Plaintiff said he was
going to stop work, the Defendant said "you can't do
that; you and I have an agreement!". To this the Plaintiff
said he said "I want my money" and the Defendant
replied "we will settle that in Court". Plaintiff
said he then packed up his tools, locked the tool-house and
gave the key to the workmen and left. Russell Garbutt says
the Plaintiff told him he was going to strike but that Garbutt
should not do so. The Plaintiff said he came back every morning
and gave instructions to the workmen but this is not supported
by the evidence of Russell Garbutt; Garbutt says the Plaintiff
came back for glue or tools from the tool house. About two
weeks or so later the Defendant changed the lock on the tool
house door to prevent the Plaintiff getting into it. There
is a curious discrepancy in the Plaintiff's evidence on this
aspect; the Plaintiff says he gave the tool house key to the
workmen when he left and yet says the Defendant had to change
the lock to keep him out. It would seem the Plaintiff retained
a key to the tool house. This to my mind suggests that the
Plaintiff had some intention of continuing his work. I am
convinced that the Defendant also intended that the Plaintiff
should so continue as is evident from his protest when the
Plaintiff told him he was stopping work. The Defendant subsequently
in changing the tool house lock was perhaps to prevent the
Plaintiff using the Defendant's materials and tools on other
work because the Plaintiff had already removed all his own
tools. Thus I am led inevitably to the conclusion that neither
man intended to terminate the agreement but was led by his
stubbornness into a situation which became a de-facto termination
of the agreement. However, it was the Plaintiff who started
this chain of events by stopping work. It, therefore, becomes
relevant to ascertain whether the Plaintiff was justified
in stopping work when the monies advanced by him were not
repaid on demand. The Plaintiff's evidence is that this was
an arrangement independent of the agreement to build the boats
and one which he sought for reasons of his own. I do not think
that the fact that the money advanced by him was spent on
the boats makes the transaction any the less a transaction
quite independent of the agreement to build the boats. Thus
I must conclude that he was not justified in stopping work
for that reason, although he may have been justified in stopping
work until his arrears of wages were paid. These arrears,
even by his own evidence constituted a relatively insignificant
sum and would have been paid if the disagreement had been
focused on that. Even the Plaintiff does not say what arrears
of wages remained unpaid for long or that falling into arrears
was not something that had not happened before and been accepted
by him. If, therefore, he had said "I am not coming to
work until my arrears of wages are paid", I have no doubt,
in view of the way things had been conducted up to that time
that they would have been made up. The fact that the Plaintiff
did, after he had stopped work, receive another remittance
on behalf of the Defendant and the fact that he did not help
himself to all his arrears from that remittance reinforces
me in my belief that what the Plaintiff stopped work over
was the failure to repay his advances for materials and labour
under their secondary arrangement. Thus I am led to the conclusion
that the Plaintiff's stoppage of work because his advances
had not been repaid was a breach of the agreement between
him and the Defendant. As this was a fundamental breach of
the agreement, the Defendant was entitled to treat the agreement
as terminated by the Plaintiff. The Plaintiff claims, and
the Defendant has not disproved that claim, that the Plaintiff
is owed a sum of $1,200.00 as arrears of wages.
The evidence
is that the Plaintiff worked alternatively on one or other
of the three boats. He completed the smallest boat and was
paid the agreed $2,000.00 for it. He completed between half
and two thirds each of the 40 footer and of the 32 footer;
this is the evidence of the Plaintiff and Russell Garbutt
respectively and is not seriously contradicted by the Defendant.
The Plaintiff was paid a sum of $18,000.00 towards his labour
on these boats and is to be paid a further sum of $1,200.00
as arrears due to him, thus making a total outlay of $19,200.00.
The Defendant would have incurred a sum of $30,000.00 on these
two boats if they had been completed under the agreement.
The Defendant has, according to his counterclaim, incurred
a sum of $4,285.00 in completing work on the boats. The Defendant
has thus failed to establish that he has suffered any loss
by the breach of the agreement by the Plaintiff, and his counterclaim
must therefore fail. This also disposes of the Plaintiff's
alternative claim for reasonable consideration for his labour.
The Plaintiff himself claimed that he had completed half the
work on each of the two boats, but Russell Garbutt estimates
that two thirds of the work on each boat had been completed
when the Plaintiff stopped work. These estimates are at best
rough estimates. The Plaintiff has received $18,000.00 already
and would have received $19,200.00 when he receives his arrears
of wages. This constitutes almost exactly two thirds of the
consideration for the two boats. Thus the Plaintiff has received
reasonable consideration for his labour. In view of the fact
that almost from the very commencement of the boat building
the Defendant was paying a second man for labour as an assistant
to the Plaintiff, the boats ultimately cost the Defendant
far in excess of the price at which the Plaintiff had agreed
to construct them himself.
In conclusion
I hold that the weekly payments made by the Defendant to the
Plaintiff were payments towards the agreed consideration of
$20,000.00 for the construction of the 40 footer and the agreed
consideration of $10,000.00 for the construction of the 32
footer because the Plaintiff was working on both of them at
the relevant time. I accept the Defendant's evidence on this
aspect of the case when he says he started paying these weekly
sums and continued to do so while the Plaintiff worked on
one or other of these boats and the 20-foot skiff. Upon completion
of the 20-foot skiff the Plaintiff accepts that he was paid
$2,000.00. Hence these weekly payments have to be credited
towards that part of the Plaintiff's labour that was unpaid
for at the termination of agreement. I hold that the Plaintiff
received a sum of $18,000.00 for his labour on these two boats.
I further find that the Plaintiff was owed a sum of $1,200.00
as wages at the time of the said termination, which sum he
is entitled to received both as arrears of wages and as reasonable
consideration for his labour.
I find
that the Defendant owes the Plaintiff a sum of $30,532.65
as monies advanced by the Plaintiff for the material and labour
expended on the construction of the Defendant's boats.
I hold
that the Plaintiff was in breach of the agreement when he
ceased work on the boats because the Defendant failed to repay
the money advanced by the Plaintiff voluntarily in an attempt
to avoid the consequences of a feared devaluation. This was
a breach so material to the agreement as to justify the Defendant
in treating the agreement as being at an end. This appears
to be what the Defendant did, although perhaps not consciously,
when he proceeded to continue the construction of the boats
with other hired help. This did not cost the Defendant any
more than it would have cost him if the boats had been completed
under the agreement. I, therefore, dismiss the Plaintiff's
claim for damages and the Defendant's counterclaim for $4,285.00
and for damages.
In view
of my finding that the Plaintiff has received reasonable consideration
for his labour, I dismiss the Plaintiff's alternative claim
upon a quantum meruit.
I award
the Plaintiff a sum of $31,732.65, being a sum of $1,200.00
as arrears of wages and $30,532.65 as being money advanced
by the Plaintiff for materials and labour expended on the
construction of the Defendant's boats. I also award costs
and interest on the said sum from 30th September, 1982. In
doing so I am fully cognisant of Mr. Zuniga's letter inviting
the Plaintiff to receive "certain" money, an offer
which does not appear entirely bona fide on the part of the
Defendant in view of the several denials in the defence filed
in this action.
I dismiss
the Plaintiff's claim for a sum of $10,000.00 for construction
of the 32- footer in view of my finding that the Plaintiff
has received payment for so much of that work as he completed
before he ceased work.
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