{
  "id": 5097320,
  "name": "Kathleen F. Cummings, Appellee, v. Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railway Company, Appellant",
  "name_abbreviation": "Cummings v. Chicago, Aurora & Elgin Railway Co.",
  "decision_date": "1952-12-10",
  "docket_number": "Gen. No. 45,844",
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  "last_updated": "2023-07-14T21:56:17.120334+00:00",
  "provenance": {
    "date_added": "2019-08-29",
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  "casebody": {
    "judges": [],
    "parties": [
      "Kathleen F. Cummings, Appellee, v. Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railway Company, Appellant."
    ],
    "opinions": [
      {
        "text": "Mr. Justice Kilby\ndelivered the opinion of the court.\nThis is an action for breach of an alleged employment contract and for vacation pay. The court without a jury found for plaintiff and entered judgment for $465, being $232.50 for damages under Count I, and $232.50 for vacation pay under Count II. Defendant has appealed.\nPlaintiff began to work for defendant\u2019s predecessor in November 1928 and for defendant in July 1945. For more than a year before January, 1951 she had the position of purchasing agent at $465 per month. January 31, 1951 she received the following notice: \u201cDue to the strike, which has forced a suspension of all operations, the Company is constrained to suspend your employment until such time as operation can be resumed. You will be notified when your services \u00e1re again required. . . . The Management. \u2019 \u2019 March 15, 1951 she was told that her services were no longer required. This suit followed.\nIn Count I of her amended complaint she alleged that the notice led her to believe that she would be reemployed and consequently she sought no other employment, holding herself in readiness and incurring damages thereby in the amount of six weeks\u2019 salary. In Count II, she alleged that defendant\u2019s custom of giving two weeks\u2019 vacation with pay was part of her employment contract, and that having worked the full year of 1950 without a vacation she was entitled to the vacation in 1951. The defense was that there was no employment contract, but a hiring at will; that the notice did not lead plaintiff to believe she would be re-employed nor induce her not to seek other employment; and though the vacation custom was followed, it was not part of the relationship arising from a hiring at will, and was discretionary in the defendant to grant.\nThe strike of the Railway Clerks Union lasted 41 days. Plaintiff was then told she would not be needed \u201cany more.\u201d During this six weeks she talked to the defendant\u2019s office about twice a week, saying she was anxious to get back to work, and inquiring \u201chow it looked.\u201d She was told \u201cit does not look too good, it might be drawn out.\u201d No reason was given her for the decision not to re-employ her but increased wages granted Union necessitated economies through staff reductions and the inference is plain that this was the reason. Plaintiff was not a member of the Union though she had been before her promotion. She retained her clerkship seniority standing while acting in the executive capacity. A Clerical Group Seniority List shows plaintiff\u2019s rank as No. 22, and indicates that as clerk 12 days vacation were due her in 1951. This vacation was earned under the Union agreement, which provides that no vacation with pay would be due an employee whose employment had ended before the vacation was taken.\nThe question on appeal is whether the findings for plaintiff on the two counts are erroneous as a matter of law.\nIt is not disputed that, since plaintiff\u2019s salary was paid monthly with no agreement as to the period of duration, the relationship is a hiring at will. White v. American Electric Fusion Corp., 328 Ill. App. 128; Fuchs v. Weibert, 233 Ill. App. 536.\nWe think the finding on Count I is erroneous. Assuming but not deciding, there was a breach of promise to rehire plaintiff, there is no basis whatever for the allowance of two weeks\u2019 pay for damages. Plaintiff claims that the notice has but one meaning, i.e., that plaintiff was \u201claid off\u201d for the duration of the strike. If she were entitled to damages for standing by during the period, the measure would be six weeks\u2019 pay. There is nothing to show that she incurred \u201ctwo weeks pay\u201d damages after the alleged breach.\nThere was no promise, however, to re-employ. The notice suspends plaintiff\u2019s employment until operation can be resumed. The word \u201cuntil\u201d suggests temporariness, to end when the strike is over. The next sentence tells her she will be notified when her services are again required. Bead in connection with the earlier sentence this seems to say that when the strike ends her services will be required, and plaintiff will be notified. Nevertheless, we cannot reasonably construe the notice as a promise to rehire. There is no mutuality. Consideration for the promise is not pointed out though plaintiff implies reliance on her forebearance to seek work while she \u201cstood by.\u201d Defendant could not have claimed a breach had plaintiff been employed elsewhere during the suspension. There being no understanding on the part of the defendant to continue employment for a definite period, plaintiff cannot recover. Orr v. Ward, 73 Ill. 318.\nHad there been a promise to re-employ her, the relationship would have been again a hiring at will because there is no contention that duration of re-employment was specified. Therefore the plaintiff could have been discharged immediately upon re-employment with no liability arising to defendant. She must be presumed to have known that even if there were a promise to re-employ, it gave rise to no more than a relationship which left either party free at any time to terminate. Davis v. Fidelity Fire Ins. Co., 208 Ill. 375. She was under no obligation to stand by and wait. We agree with the defendant that both parties may have expected that re-employment would take place, but this does not affect the matter. Orr v. Ward, 73 Ill. 318. Plaintiff may have suffered a loss because of her anxiety to work for defendant. The question however, as defendant pointed out. in oral argument, is a legal one. The case of McGee v. St. Joseph Belt Ry. Co., 232 Mo. App. 639, 110 S. W. (2d) 389 is not helpful because there defendant breached a contract duty and plaintiff had a right to stand by and recover.\nWe think the court correctly decided the issues in Count II. The testimony shows that the right to a two weeks\u2019 vacation arose from plaintiff\u2019s contract of employment. The right was subject to the limitation that it had to be earned, that is, plaintiff would not get a vacation the first year of employment, but would earn a vacation in the first year to be enjoyed the following year. This testimony was buttressed by that of witnesses of both parties that the customary usual practice was to give the executives two weeks\u2019 vacation with pay each year. Since plaintiff\u2019s right arose from her contract of employment, a corresponding obligation was imposed on the defendant to secure the benefits represented by the right. There was no discretion in the defendant once plaintiff had earned the vacation to decide whether she should have it. There is nothing to justify a conclusion that plaintiff forfeited this benefit under the Union agreement because she was suspended before she enjoyed it, nor since she did not enjoy it in 1950 she forfeited it. Neither Gutzwiller v. American Tobacco Co., 97 Vt. 281, 122 Atl. 586 nor Nicholson v. Amar, 7 Cal. App. (2d) 290, 45 P. (2d) 697 are inconsistent with our conclusion.\nFor the reasons given the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions, (a) to enter judgment for the defendant on Count I, and (b) to enter judgment for plaintiff on Count II in the amount of $232.50.\nReversed and remanded with directions.\nLews, P. J. and Feinberg, J., concur.",
        "type": "majority",
        "author": "Mr. Justice Kilby"
      }
    ],
    "attorneys": [
      "Friedman, Zoline & Bosenfield, of Chicago, for appellant; Joseph T. Zoline, and Jack H. Oppenheim, both of Chicago, of counsel.",
      "Ben Copple, of Chicago, for appellee."
    ],
    "corrections": "",
    "head_matter": "Kathleen F. Cummings, Appellee, v. Chicago, Aurora and Elgin Railway Company, Appellant.\nGen. No. 45,844.\nOpinion filed December 10, 1952.\nReleased for publication December 31, 1952.\nFriedman, Zoline & Bosenfield, of Chicago, for appellant; Joseph T. Zoline, and Jack H. Oppenheim, both of Chicago, of counsel.\nBen Copple, of Chicago, for appellee."
  },
  "file_name": "0537-01",
  "first_page_order": 559,
  "last_page_order": 564
}
