12 La. Ann. 588 | La. | 1857
This is to recover $7,200, the aggregate amount alleged to be due for the salary of plaintiff for six years, and $800 amount of hire of a slave belonging to him.
Plaintiff avers that he acted as clerk and general agent of one Br. Samuel Bennett, from September, 1847, to the time of his decease, in September, 1868, a period of six years; that his services were reasonably worth $1,200 per annum, and that said Bennett received during said six years, hire for a slave of petitioners to the amount of three hundred dollars, making a total sum of $7,600 due plaintiff; that said Bennett left his testament, in which he made Mary B. G. Alexander, wife of petitioner, one of his testamentary heirs, and also appointed her executrix of his will.
In an amended answer, defendant pleads the indebtedness of plaintiff in various sums to Bennett's succession, and a further indebtedness for monies collected and unaccounted for, and for notes had in his possession, to be returned by order of court, or their amounts to be paid over to her; and lastly, she pleads a peremptory exception, that the plaintiff, his brother and the testator were partners in an ice and beef business, and that plaintiff’s demand should have been for a settlement of the partnership affairs. This exception, by consent of parties, was ordered to stand as part of the answer.
It is admitted, that the plaintiff and defendant are not now, nor have they, since the death of Dr. Bennett, been living together as husband and wife.
There was judgment for $4,800, and defendant has appealed.
The peremptory exception, that plaintiff should have sued for a settlement of the partnership affairs, instead of instituting this process, cannot be maintained ; the duties of plaintiff as clerk and general agent, wore totally distinct from those as partner in the ice and beef business ; his claim for salary in those capacities, has nothing to do with the settlement of the partnership.
Another exception of defendant was, that she is the universal legatee of all the property left by Samuel Bennett in the State of Louisiana; she is the actual party in interest in this suit, and that plaintiff cannot maintain any action against her, except for separation from bed and board, and settlement of the community of acquets and gains.
¥e consider that this exception is not well taken for the following reasons : She is sued in her capacity of executrix; - the rights of husband and wife are not so entirely merged by our laws, as to prevent the husband from suing his wife in a representative capacity for claims due by a deceased person, whose estate she administers as executrix.
There is no law which prohibits the husband from instituting such a suit, and ex necessitate rei, the action must lie to prevent a failure of justice.
She is authorized by her husband to stand in judgment, by the mere institution of the action, for he cannot be supposed to sue her, -without also intending that she shall be capable of standing in judgment.
There was also an order of court, authorizing her to stand in judgment.
Besides, there is nothing due the wife as legatee, until all the debts are paid.
This exception was then properly overruled by the lower court.
No proof was offered to establish the indebtedness of plaintiff to Bennett’s estate, nor of any sum due by way of reconvention, compensation, or otherwise ; and plaintiff also failed to prove the receipt of $800 by Dr. Bennett for the hire of his slave.
There is no plea of payment and no testimony to show that any salary was ever paid to plaintiff, so that the sole questions remaining are: Whether plaintiff was employed by Bennett; in what capacity; the value of his services, and the plea of prescription.
The lower court considered his services as general agent and clerk, worth a thousand dollars per year; that the plea of prescription must prevail as to the compensation due the plaintiff, as a clerk, from September or October, 1847, for the three years following, and for that time deducted $400 per annum, the usual salary at that time, according to the evidence, for a clerk in a house of limited business, which left $600 per year for salary as general agent. For the next three years the District Judge thought there was a sufficient acknowledgement of the debt due plaintiff to interrupt the prescription applicable to clerks, and that consequently he is entitled to the whole amount due as clerk and general agent, from September, 1850, although a small part thereof was prescribed.
We are of opinion, that the acknowledgment by Bennett, of a specific sum due plaintiff, is not sufficiently established by the evidence to arrest prescription.
It is also argued by plaintiff, that a continuity of services prevents prescription against claims for wages of a clerk.
It is true that it has so been decided (vide Pressas v. Mendiburn, 4 Martin, 129) but we are of opinion that a continuity of services as clerk does not arrest the prescription of three years ; the contrary doctrine seems to have been overruled. Vide Cresap v. Winter, 14 L. R. 554.
Although we are of opinion that the District Judge erred in deciding, that the prescription of three years was arrested for a part of the time, yet we are not disposed to interfere with the judgment; for there is sufficient evidence of the value of the services in the record to justify the judgment, oven if the time that is prescribed after the termination of three years from 1847, is considered ; besides, it appears from the evidence that defendant is the reputed natural daughter of Bennett, and when a brother of plaintiff went to him for a settlement, Bennett told him: “That plaintiff wished to draw the money which he owed him, but that he thought plaintiff in this suit ought to let the money remain, and intimated, that all of his, Bennett's property, would eventually belong to plaintiff and his wife, and wished witness to advise his brother (the plaintiff) not to draw out his salary, and admitted that he owed plaintiff his salary for his services, and that the same was due and unpaid, and said that he (Bennett) would pay him liberally for his services, but wished him to wait for it.”
In his will, he bequeaths nothing whatever to plaintiff, and the wife of plaintiff has been living separate from him since the death of Dr. Bennett.
It is very evident, that plaintiff did not insist on a settlement on account of having married the reputed natural child of Dr. Bennett, and of the expectation that Bennett would remember him in his will.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be affirmed, with costs.