6 Rob. 309 | La. | 1843
Lead Opinion
This suit is brought to recover the sum of four
The defence is, that on or about the time mentioned in the petition, the plaintiff engaged and agreed to serve as a pilot on board of the John Jay in the Arkansas trade, and to continue thereon from that time, until the expiration of the steamboat season on the Arkansas river, which usually terminates on or about the 1st of July of each year; that on the 10th of January, 1839, the boat left this city, with a full cargo of freight and a lot of passengers, for Fort Smith, on the Arkansas river, and the intermediate landings ; that on or about the 16th of January, at the mouth of While river, and when the voyage had but fairly commenced, and long before the termination of the season, the plaintiff, without any just cause therefor, arid without any previous intimation of his intention so to do, deserted and abandoned the John Jay, contrary to the will of the captain thereof, and took a birth as pilot on board the steamboat Burlington, engaged in the same trade ; that as no pilot could be had at the mouth of White river to supply the place of the plaintiff, the captain was compelled to run the boat to Fort Smith, and return to New Orleans with but one pilot on board, lying by a part of every night, and sustaining damage by the wrongful conduct and breach of contract of the plaintiff, in the sum of $500, which is pleaded in reconvention. There was a judgment below for three hundred and seventy-five dollars in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants have appealed.
Our attention has been called to a bill of exceptions taken by the defendants, to the opinion of the inferior Judge refusing to reinstate this case on the jury docket, from which it had been stricken, in obedience to the 17th section of the act approved the 10th February, 1841, entitled “ An act to create two additional Sheriffs for the parish of Orleans, to fix the place of holding courts of justice, and for other purposes.” The ground taken was, that so far as the statute tends to regulate and control the trial of cases which were instituted, and in which juries were prayed for prior to its passage, it violates the twentieth section of the sixth article of the Constitution of the State, and is, therefore, void. The
This opinion was delivered in June, 1843. So much of it as was overruled by the subsequent opinion on the re-hearing, is omitted.
Rehearing
Same Case — On a Re-hearing.
On the application for a re-hearing, we have again attentively looked into the facts of this case, and the law which governs it, and have concluded to modify our former judg
It is a well settled principle of maritime law, that if, on a. voyage, an officer or seaman voluntarily leaves the vessel, without good cause, or the assent of the master, he thereby not only forfeits his wages, but in some cases is liable to be arrested as a deserter and punished ; and it makes no difference whether he is employed for the voyage, or at monthly wages. See Rights and Duties of Merchant Seamen, p. 62, 69. The contract, when on a voyage, is not determinable by either party at the expiration of each month. If it were, a vessel in the middle of a voyage might be abandoned by her whole crew, and no one left to navigate
The counsel for the plaintiff contend, that as he was shipped at the mouth of White river and had returned there, and it was a place where pilots for the Arkansas river were often to be' found,
It is, therefore, ordered and decreed, that the judgment of this court, affirming the judgment of the Parish Court, be so modified, that the plaintiff recover of the defendants, insólido, the sum of two hundred dollars, with a privilege and lien on the aforesaid steamboat John Jay, to secure the payment of the same, together with the costs in the lower court, those on the appeal to be paid by the plaintiff.
The clerk testified that the plaintiff had been employed for the season, ^t the rate of$200 month, payable monthly.