in person, but the delegation from the particular mine primarily
refers to conditions in that mine. It is obvious, therefore, that to penalize a delegate for attending to his duties as such, is as much an injury to the interests of the miners who send him, as penalizing a member of the legislature for attending Parliament would be a direct and patent injury to his constituents.
And, further, a refusal to permit delegates to attend is a breach of the compact which cannot be compensated for in damages. It sets aside an agreed precaution for which no money compensa- tion can be regarded as a substitute, and no pecuniary standard can be assigned. It makes the contract a different and a more dangerous one, it makes the work a more hazardous, and alto- gether less desirable work to engage in, and, therefore, I am of opinion that the contention of Mr. Wise, that the breach of this term goes to the root of the bargain, and entitles the miner to rescind it altogether, is sound. The miners clearly rely on the performance of such a condition as a vital part of their bargain, and not on a monetary compensation for its breach, and, there- fore, on the authority of such cases as Franklin v. Miller 1 and Bettini v. Gye 2, the breach by the employer would give the employé the right to withdraw altogether from the contract.
Then was there such a term, and was there a breach of it, or, at least, was Alexander acting reasonably in thinking there were both the term and the breach; because men in his position are not lawyers, and, as I think, ought not to be sent to gaol with hard labour for acting upon what seemed to them the honest truth at the time. My learned brothers think there was no evi- dence of such a term, and as I have the misfortune to take the opposite view it is my duty to refer to the testimony itself.
The custom of delegation has, according to the uncontradicted evidence, been in force for a great number of years. And the evidence is equally clear and undenied that, except the refusal of the prosecutor on this occasion to permit Cairnes to attend, there is no evidence on record of any employer whatever attempting to prevent a delegate representing his fellow miners at a board. The practice of granting this permission has been universal, and
14 A. &E., 599, at p. 606, per 21 Q.B.D., 183, at p. 187, per