Becker v. Choate

204 So. 2d 680
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1968
Docket2096
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 204 So. 2d 680 (Becker v. Choate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Becker v. Choate, 204 So. 2d 680 (La. Ct. App. 1968).

Opinion

204 So.2d 680 (1967)

Robert BECKER, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Avery O. CHOATE, d/b/a Choate Towing Service, Defendant-Appellee.

No. 2096.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit.

November 29, 1967.
Rehearing Denied December 28, 1967.
Writ Refused February 2, 1968.

*682 Maurice T. Mouton, Abbeville, for plaintiff-appellant.

LeBlanc & Boudreau, by Albert Boudreau, Jr., Abbeville, for defendant-appellee.

Before FRUGÉ, HOOD and CULPEPPER, JJ.

FRUGÉ, Judge.

This is a companion case with Hollis Becker v. Avery O. Choate, No. 2097, 204 So.2d 686 (La.App.3rd Cir., 1967), which cases were consolidated for trial purposes. Since the issues are identical in both of these cases, we shall consider them as one for the purposes of this appeal.

These two actions were brought by plaintiffs in forma pauperis to recover from the defendant, Avery Choate, sums allegedly due them in back wages for May 1 and 2, 1965, and penalties, which sums total $1,687.50 for each plaintiff, plus interest and $562.75 in attorney's fees.

The defendant filed a reconventional demand against the plaintiffs in these two suits, charging them with wrongful abandonment of the boat and claiming damages therefrom totaling $10,101.30. The district judge rejected the claims of the plaintiffs and gave judgment in favor of the defendant as plaintiff in reconvention in the sum of $91.30. From these judgments the plaintiffs alone have appealed.

The plaintiffs, Robert and Hollis Becker, worked together on a rather small tugboat belonging to the defendant called the "Louis D". Hollis Becker was the mate of the tug and his older brother, Robert Becker, was the captain. The two brothers were each paid $18.75 per day and worked in shifts of ten days on and five days off. At this time the tug on which they were working was on 24-hour standby—that is, the tug was subject to being called out on a job at any time. On the evening of May 2, 1965, the tug was docked in port several hundred yards from defendant's office awaiting a call for her services. Sometime between 7:00 and 8:00 P.M., plaintiffs both left the boat and proceeded to a nearby tavern to get a snack. At the tavern plaintiffs imbibed a couple of beers and then they met Paul Baudoin, who generally worked as a deckhand for defendant but on that night was watching the defendant's office. His duties consisted primarily of answering the phone and taking messages for the defendant, who was out of town that evening. While plaintiffs and Mr. Baudoin were talking, the subject as to their respective wages apparently arose, and, the plaintiffs testified, upon their discovery that Mr. Baudoin was being paid more than they were, they told him they were "quitting" their job that night and for him to tell the defendant to get another crew to take care of the boat. About an hour later the plaintiffs went back to the boat and collected their belongings. Robert Becker testified that he phoned Mr. Baudoin around 9:00 or 9:30 P.M. and re-affirmed the position that they were quitting their job and leaving the boat immediately. Mr. Baudoin apparently did not believe the plaintiffs were serious or else he misunderstood them. He did, however, tell them that if they wished to call the boss he would give them the defendant's number and they could tell him that they were quitting. Plaintiffs, *683 however, did not want to call the defendant themselves; instead, they told Mr. Baudoin to convey the message. The message was not conveyed and the defendant had no actual knowledge of the plaintiffs' quitting their job until the next morning, when he reached the office and discovered they had left the boat. He then went to the tug and discovered both bilge pumps missing. The cost of $91.30 in replacing the two bilge pumps was one item of damages sought from the plaintiffs by the defendant and recovered in his reconventional demand.

R.S. 23:631 provides that an employer must pay an employee who has been discharged or who resigns "within twenty-four hours after such discharge or resignation * * * upon demand being made on the employer by the discharged or resigned * * * employee at the place where the employee * * * is usually paid." And R.S. 23:632 provides penalties for the employer's failure to timely pay the wages due the employee. The penalties include up to three months' pay, plus attorney's fees.

Although an employer's delay in paying wages earned by employees within twenty-four hours after their discharge or resignation renders him liable for penalties under R.S. 23:632, this statute must be strictly construed, and it is well settled that the courts will refuse to allow penalties if the employer had some equitable justification for not paying the wages timely. Mitchell v. First Nat. Life Ins. Co. of La., 236 La. 696, 109 So.2d 61 (1959); Clevy v. O'Meara, 236 La. 640, 108 So.2d 538 (1959). See also, Strickland v. American Pitch Pine Export Co., 224 La. 949, 71 So.2d 338; Deardorf v. Hunter, 160 La. 213, 106 So. 831 (1926); Tuberville v. Foster, La.App. 1 Cir., (1959), 113 So.2d 805.

In such cases the court, in its sound discretion, may refuse to award the statutory penalties. For example, the employer in the Mitchell case, supra, acting in good faith, withheld from an employee's check the sum of $20.00 which represented the amount of shortage in a cash box to which this employee was among those having access. The court stated:

"But the fact that defendant did not have the legal right to withhold the $20 from Mrs. Mitchell's salary does not justify the infliction of penalties upon it, if its action was not motivated in bad faith or founded on an unreasonable or arbitrary stand."

Although defendant's legal defense was unsupportable, the court denied the imposition of penalties and attorneys' fees in view of equitable considerations.

The Clevy case, supra, is analogous to the instant case. There the employee notified their superior of their resignation after working part of one day. His pay check, however, did not include wages for that part of the last day on which he worked. The employer's failure in this regard was due to haphazard bookkeeping, the error having been committed by a supervisor. On this point the court said:

"* * * [B]ecause of the equitable considerations hereinafter discussed plaintiffs are not entitled to the penalties and attorneys' fees demanded.
"In the first place undoubtedly the defendant acted in good faith in refusing to pay plaintiffs any wages for February 29."

In this case the employer had no real defense at all, yet the Supreme Court, considering all the circumstances, affirmed the trial court's judgment in disallowing the penalties and attorneys' fees.

While cases on this point generally state that R.S. 23:632 is subject to "equitable defenses", we are of the opinion that the word "defenses" does not mean a "defense" in the strict sense of the word. Rather, the tenor of these cases seems to indicate that the court will refuse to assess penalties and attorneys' fees where the facts of the particular case strongly indicate that greater justice will be attained by such refusal. These facts then become equitable considerations, *684 or "defenses" in a loose sense of the word, which will move the court to deny the penalties.

We feel that in this case there are sufficient equitable considerations for us to affirm the trial court in rejecting the assessment of penalties. In the first place, the plaintiffs quit the boat abruptly and without any actual notice to any superior.

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204 So. 2d 680, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/becker-v-choate-lactapp-1968.