4 Rob. 62 | La. | 1843
The plaintiffs are appellants from a judgment by which the defendant has recovered, in reconvention, the sum of $6734 76, for his services as curate of the parish of Pointe Coupée, and for certain expenditures made by him for the church. By a resolution of the church-wardens of the 1st of July, 1834, a yearly salary of $1000 was allowed to the defendant for his services, with a stipulation that he should not receive any part of the sums paid for burials and funeral services, and that he should attend the church on the Mississippi, and that on False River, saying mass two Sundays, at least, in each month, at the latter. A misunderstanding having taken place between the wardens and the defendant, the former, on the 2d of December, 1835, rescinded the resolution of the preceding year, resolving, however, that the salary should continue to be paid until the last day of that month. This resolution being communicated to the defendant about the 16th of January following, he replied that he had expected it, and would depart as soon as he should be paid what was due to him. Afterwards, the defendant received the sums paid for certain burials and funeral services. He declared that for the services, arrangements must be made with him, as he had no longer anything to do with the wardens. A witness, who acted as sexton and chorister during six years, deposes, that the defendant went during this time on occasional journeys to Avoyelles, where there was no curate, and also to Bayou Sara. The testimony clearly shows, that after the defendant was notified that the salary theretofore allowed him would no longer be paid, he considered himself absolutely independent of the wardens ; and, indeed, acted in open opposition to them, while they viewed him as having ceased to have any claim on them.
On these facts it has been contended, on the part of the appellee, and his counsel has endeavored to establish, by the testimony of the bishop of the diocese, and the theologal of the cathedral,
The decision of this ease does not require us to examine the relation between the appellee and his superiors in the church, further than to say, that the church-wardens are, in their corporate capacity, the legal owners of the property which the act of incorporation authorizes them to hold, to be used for the purposes
Our learned brother in the District Court, sustained the defendant’s pretensions, observing, that “ the treaty of cession guaranties to the inhabitants of Louisiana the unrestrained exercise of their religion, and recognizes the right to self-government in the Roman Catholic Church, as then known and established.”
The treaty of cession, art. 3, provides, that the inhabitants of the ceded territory, shall, as soon as possible, be admitted into the Union or Confederacy of the United States, and that, in the mean time, they shall be protected in their persons, property, and the free exercise of their religion. Since the 30th of April, 1812, the day on which Louisiana took her rank as an independent State among her sisters, that article of the treaty has ceased to have any
The plaintiffs engaged to pay to the defendant, for his services as curate, a yearly salary of one thousand dollars, and at the end of about eighteen months, expressed their intention to cease to pay it. The defendant, on being informed of this, might have urged, that the second year having commenced, he was entitled to his salary until the end of it; this, however, he refrained ffom doing ; and, on the contrary, declared his intention to depart as soon as he was paid. Admitting, therefore, the authority of the bishop to insist on his curate’s remaining in the parish in which he had located him, notwithstanding the objections of the churchwardens to receive his services, and his want of inclination to render them, and a consequent obligation, on the part of the ehurch-wardens, to continue to pay the salary, maugre this, during the pleasure of the bishop, — it is certainly a non sequitur, that the defendant could not fairly consent to accept the contingent fees for burials and funeral services, instead of the salary by which he was formerly remunerated.
It appears to us, that the District Judge erred. It is established that after the defendant' received notice that the plaintiffs no longer intended to pay his salary, he declined the ordinary compliance with the duties for which the salary was a remuneration.
The counsel for the plaintiffs admits that the defendant is entitled to his salary for two years, to wit, from the 1st of April, 1834, to the 1st of April, 1836 ; and that he has, besides, a claim for expenditures amounting to a sum of $850 44, composed of $630, according to accounts numbered from 1 to 27, and of $220 44, as shown by the accounts in bundle 0. His other alleged disbursements are not supported by evidence. His salary, and an allowance for the washing of the church-linen, is admitted to be $20S0; which deducted from the sum of $2389 68, which he acknowledges to have received, leaves a balance of $309 68, to
It is, therefore, ordered, that the judgment of the District Court be annulled and reversed ; that the defendant have judgment in the main suit, and that he recover on his plea in reconvention the sum of five hundred and fifty dollars and seventy-six cents, with costs in the District Court; and that he pay those of appeal.
There seems to have been an error in the subtraction ; the amount due would be $540 76. R.