85 So. 2d 55 | La. | 1955
Charles Allen Elliott, a carpenter by trade, having been discharged by his employer, General Gas Corporation, upon completion of certain repair work for which he had been employed, instituted suit for the recovery of the amount due him for wages, $140, being at the rate of $1.75 per hour for ten days’ work of eight hours per day, and, availing himself of the provisions of LSA-R.S. 23:631 and 23:632, is seeking to recover an amount representing full wages at the same rate for a forty hour week from the time of demand for payment until paid,
The plaintiff, employed along with another carpenter to make inside repairs to a company-owned house about a mile from the defendant’s Bossier Parish branch office (on the Benton Road), began work in November of 1952, at a rate of pay of $1.75 per hour. According to his version of the happenings, which is not disputed except in one particular, the work continued through January 14, 1953, when plaintiff was informed his services were no longer needed since the work was almost
In the year 1920 the Legislature of this State, mindful of an evil practice then prevailing among some employers of fore-, ing a discharged laborer to wait until pay day, or longer, to receive the wages he had - earned, adopted its Act 150, requiring that the laborer or employee be paid any amount: regularly due under the terms'of the em-' ployment within twenty-four hours after-discharge,
Under the particular facts of this case we agree with the trial judge in his equitable conclusion that this is not a proper instance for the application of penalties. The record clearly shows that the plaintiff’s pay was made available for him on Saturday, within 24 hours after his demand, and that he called for it only on the following Monday; it is equally clear that the shortage in the pay check tendered to plaintiff was occasioned by a day’s work performed on January 1, 1953, a holiday, when the only two employees of the branch office who worked were the two carpenters (plaintiff and another) engaged in the repair work on the house; that there was no record of such work, either in the local office or in the Baton Rouge office, as it was reported to no one; and that the company'was unaware that such work had been performed until the branch manager, in checking with the other carpenter (who acted as timekeeper) following plaintiff’s complaint, for the first time learned of the work on January 1, and that this carpenter’s pay check had also been a day short. We are impressed with defendant’s prompt efforts to set matters straight; its claim that the correct amount was available to plaintiff at its office on the day following his visit of Monday, January 19, and continuously 'thereafter — instructions having been' left that he was to be paid the additional amount from petty cash — not only found favor with the District Judge, as shown by his written reasons, but is consonant with the pattern of admitted facts in this case.
For the reasons assigned, the judgment is affirmed.
. When submitted to the District Court for judgment on the merits, the plaintiff’s demands were $4,030, exclusive of interest and costs.
. Defendant’s principal office is in Baton . Rouge.; it was there that payroll cheeks ...were-made up and sent to the district office in Bossier City following submission of pay-order requests covering employees who worked on an hourly basis. The checks usually arrived a couple of days after the pay period had run.
. The 1920 Act was amended by Act 138 of 1936 by extending its provisions to an employee who had resigned, and allowing attorney’s fees.
. See Deardorf v. Hunter, 160 La. 213, 106 So. 831; Hazel v. Robinson & Young, 187 La. 51, 174 So. 105; Bannon v. Techeland Oil Corporation, 205 La. 689, 17 So.2d 921; Strickland v. American Pitch Pine Export Co., 224 La. 949, 71 So.2d 338.