Cresap v. Winter

14 La. 553 | La. | 1840

Morphy, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a suit to recover wages, as defendant’s overseer, for the last six years. The petitioner claims, moreover, the proceeds of a certain quantity of moss, sold by the defendant for his account. Defendant answers, that he entrusted plaintiff with the management of his plantation, at the request of said plaintiff, who represented himself as qualified to act as an overseer, and as possessing experience and skill in the management of a sugar plantation ; that, instead of being *555so qualified, the plaintiff was entirely ignorant of the business ' he undertook, or so intentionally mismanaged defendant’s estate, that it yielded crops very inferior to what it was susceptible of producing, and hardly sufficient, on an average, to pay the expenses ; that, in consequence thereof, defendant has suffered damages to the amount of ten thousand dollars, which he demands in reconvention, together with divers other claims set forth in his answer. He pleads also the prescription of three years, given by article 3503, of the Louisiana Code, against the claims of ove'rseers.

This plea presents the only question of law for our decision in the cause. It is urged by the plaintiff, that the continuity of his services, as overseer, presents an obstacle to the application of prescription ; that the Louisiana Code, article 3500, in treating of the prescription of one year, declares, that in the cases to which this prescription attaches, continuity is no bar to prescription, thus affirming, says the counsel, the converse proposition, that, in all other cases, it is a bar. This reasoning is far from being conclusive. Arguments thus drawn a contrario, seldom have the weight attached to them. They are sometimes found to be of no value at all, when the reason of the particular law is inquired into, from which an inference is attempted to be deduced. That part of article 3500, referred to, is taken verbatim, from the Napoleon Code; its framers found it expedient to provide in it that continuity of services should be no bar to prescription, in order to remove doubts which might otherwise have arisen, on account of the anterior jurisprudence of that country; until then, it had been held, that the right of action of all menial servants accrued only when they left the service of their masters. “ N’étant pas raisonnable,” says Legrand, “ qu’un serviteur demeurant encore an service de son maitre entreprenne de luifaire une sommation.” Thus prescription began to run only when the services ceased to be rendered. If such be the origin and intendment of that provision of the Napoleon Code, which has found its way into our laws, it should seem that an •inference quite the reverse of that contended for, should be ■drawn from article 3500, to wit: that continuity of services *556should, a fortiori, be no bar to prescription for the claims of a higher grade, embraced by article 3503, and for which a longer time is provided by law. Such, moreover, seems to have been the construction heretofore given to it by this court. 5 Louisiana Reports, 15; Coote vs. Cotton; 6 Martin, N. S., 515; Judice’s Heirs vs. Brent. As to the other claims set up against each other by these parties, we fully concur in the view taken of them by the judge below.

It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the judgment of the District Court be annulled and reversed, and that plaintiff recover of defendant two thousand five hundred and sixty-eight dollars and forty-nine and a half cents, with privilege upon the sequestered property for one thousand dollars, amount of wages for the last year, together with costs in the lower court; those of this appeal to be borne by the plaintiff and appellee.