24 La. Ann. 109 | La. | 1872
The i>laintiff claims of the defendants two hundred dollars on a contract for taking off the sugar crop of 1870, two hundred and five dollars on account, and two thousand dollars on a contract for his services as overseer on the plantation of the defendants, in the parish of Assumption for the year 1871, alleging that as he was unjustifiably discharged by the defendants on the thirteenth May, 1871, his whole year’s salary became thereby due aud exigible.
The defense is the general issue, a plea of payment of the claim lor taking off the crop of 1870, and an averment that the defendants were justified in discharging the plaintiff in May, 1871; also a reconveutional
The court came to the conclusion that the defendants were justified' in discharging the plaintiff, but that he was entitled to $450 for his-salary under the contract, from the first of January, 1871, to the date-of his discharge, and also found the other claims set up by him to be correct; and finding also the defendant’s reconventional demands to he correct, the court deducting the same from the aggregate amount of the plaintiff’s claims thus ascertained, finally gave judgment for the i'laintiff for the balance of two hundred and twenty-six dollars. From tills judgment defendants appeal.
The main controversy is as to the correctness of the claim for salary for the year 1871, the court fixiDg the value thereof at four hundred and fifty dollars from first January to the thirteenth May, the date at which the plaintiff was discharged.
In the contract under which the plaintiff was employed and upon which this claim is based, we find the following clause: “ As a compensation of his services Mr. J. S. Woodward is to have an interest of eight dollars per every hogshead made on the said plantation.”
This suit was filed on the tenth July 187.1, and judgment rendersi on the third day of November following. At this time it was impossible’ to fix, with legal certainty, the number of hogsheads raised on the plantation that year; and without this, the salary could not he estimated, either for a part, or tire whole year, because the compensation was to ho eight dollars per hogshead. The plaintiff claimed that with proper cultivation the cane on the place ought to yield two hundred and fifty hogsheads, which, at eight dollars per hogshead, would make his salary amount to two thousand dollars; the court, however, fixed the probable amount of the crop at one hundred and fifty hogsheads, and upon that calculated that the plaintiff ought to recover four hundred and fifty dollars for his services up to the time he was discharged. We think the yield of the crop could not he legally established until it was actually raised and taken off. And, therefore, there was no certain basis upon which the court could act in determining the sum due the plaintiff on account thereof.
As the fact can now he shown, we believe that justice requires this case to be remanded for new trial.
It is therefore ordered that the judgment herein he annulled, and that this cause he remanded for now trial, appellee paying costs of appeal.