Holmes v. Murdock

51 So. 1035, 125 La. 916, 1910 La. LEXIS 572
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 28, 1910
DocketNo. 17,887
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 51 So. 1035 (Holmes v. Murdock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holmes v. Murdock, 51 So. 1035, 125 La. 916, 1910 La. LEXIS 572 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, O. J.

Plaintiff sued his principal on a contract of employment for services rendered in accordance with an agency with which he was charged.

He claims the sum of $23,802.21 and interest.

He is an attorney at law, and practiced his profession in the city of New York.

Mrs. Murdock, the principal, since the appeal was filed in this court departed this life. The executor of her will was made a party in this court.

Plaintiff met Mrs. Murdock in the city of Vicksburg. She was an interdict under the laws of Mississippi, and felt keenly the restraint the authorities of the law had seen proper to place around her in order to safeguard her property.

Steps were taken to obtain the removal of the decree of interdiction.

Plaintiff in that suit assisted the defendant, employed attorneys, and gave the suit some attention.

She gained her suit. The judgment of interdiction was removed, and her property was returned to her possession.

It had been well managed under the court’s decree while she was interdicted, and, when delivered, it was in a fair state of cultivation, and yielded a satisfactory return to the defendant.

We infer it was different two years subsequently, while under management of plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s mother and Mrs. Murdock were close friends, dating back from their early days when they were members of the same class at school.

In addition to the confidence defendant had in the son (the plaintiff),, prompted by the friendship for the mother, defendant had given some assistance in obtaining the removal of her interdiction. He at the time had her unlimited confidence. She proposed to the young plaintiff to employ him to take charge of her business affairs.

A contract was drawn and signed, in which she bound herself to pay him $4,000 a year for six years for his services.

Accompanying the contract and as necessary for him to properly perform the duties of his employment, she appointed him her agent with full power to manage all her business affairs in the two states.

She was in need of an agent. She could not intelligently attend to business of the character required to carry on plantation operations. She had two cotton plantations in Louisiana and a small place in Mississippi, besides movable property and paper values, all of which were placed under the control and management of the plaintiff.

'She was the widow of the late N. D. Murdock.

Her husband accumulated quite a competency. Dying, he made her his legatee. They had no forced heirs.

At least four times during their married life she was placed in an asylum because of her mental condition.

About the time of the death of her husband, she became an inmate of the asylum at Jackson, Miss., and the court rendered a decree of interdiction, which was subsequently removed as before stated.

We infer from the facts and circumstances, made evident by the record, that she was of a nervous temperament, and at times unable to properly control her mind.

As she had been released from the law’s restraining influence, we have to consider her case as that of a person sui juris, without overlooking, however, that in her nervous condition of mind she was entitled to every reasonable consideration in all that related to her business affairs.

After the property had been delivered into the possession of plaintiff, she became extremely extravagant, and, we infer, lived [919]*919beyond her means. She drank intoxicants to excess at times.

At the end of the first year of plaintiff’s gestión, he prepared an account which she signed. It consisted of a list of different amounts which plaintiff submitted to his principal, and it ends with an unsustained statement of a large indebtedness to him.

This statement she approved and signed.

The plaintiff thereafter continued with the management.

About the end of the second year the defendant chose to put an end to plaintiff’s employment. She notified him to consider himself discharged, and to surrender possession and management of the property to Judge E. O. Montgomery, his successor.

The right of defendant to discharge plain-* tiff is the first question before us for decision. •

Mr. Holmes, defendant’s employé, was not defendant’s servant or ordinary overseer or manager. He was her trusted agent, and had the administration, supervision, and control of her business affairs.

After her confidence had been shaken, she did not discharge him for good cause.

The mandate could be removed, even if she had not had good cause.

The principal may revoke his power of attorney whenever he thinks proper if the agency was not an agency with an interest. Oiv. Code, art. 302S.

The contract between the parties, inseparably connected with the deed conferring the agency, created in our opinion a mandate. The terms and conditions of the contract do not give rise to the thought that it secured to plaintiff unearned salary claimed in case the defendant decided to put an end to the employment.

Moreover, the death of defendant, before noted, had the effect of putting an end to the agency, so that all claim for unearned salary passes out of consideration.

As to cause for discharging plaintiff:

Her personal property of which plaintiff had control amounted to $46,434.40. In accounting for it the bookkeeping had been incomplete and insufficient, and in some instances entirely wanting of entries which is required in bookkeeping. It did not satisfactorily show what had become of a number of dollars expended according to statement.

In addition, she was in debt for over $16,-000.

She doubtless thought that a change was necessary in order to escape ruin.

An agent was needed who would bring more conservative influence to bear as relates to business affairs on all concerned, from the' first to the last.

In this, after having carefully examined the condition of affairs, we cannot hold that she erred in discharging plaintiff.

At this point it occurs to us to take up again the account, to which we referred above, as having been rendered by plaintiff at the end of the first year of his gestión.

As to this account, plaintiff’s position is that the account' was one rendered to the defendant, theaccountee; that it made complete proof and operated as a release from any further inquiry, because she had approved it.

If this account were near correct, it would be different.

The account of July, 1906, cannot be considered correct. The columns “credit” and “debit” were not added. Deducting the one from the other, the error is evident if the statement in red ink is to be taken as showing the correct balance after deducting the one from the other. The difference is great, taking the respective addition of the column into account.

The oversight of the accountant, if an oversight, discredits the accounting of that date. The balance arrived at is arbitrary. The [921]*921defendant sustained her defense that the approval of said account was an error.

It must be borne in mind that it devolved upon plaintiff to sustain his account under the circumstances.

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Bluebook (online)
51 So. 1035, 125 La. 916, 1910 La. LEXIS 572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-v-murdock-la-1910.