Jacquinet v. Boutron
Jacquinet v. Boutron
Opinion of the Court
Mademoiselle Sophie Boutron, the defendant, carrying on the millinery business in New Orleans, engaged at the city of Paris, in France, in October, 1860, for three years, the services in that line of business of the plaintiff, Miss Olemenee Jacquinet. The services were to
From this judgment defendant has appealed.
The defendant complains of the judgment, because it was determined by events that transpired after the contestedio litis,” instead of being decided exclusively upon the state of facts that existed in February, 1862, when the parties joined issue. At that time, it is contended that it was impossible for defendant to comply with her part of the contract. It was shown on her part, that at that time tbo port of New Orleans was blockaded by a squadron of United States vessels of war, and that'tho port was opened outlie 1st of June, 1862, fads which are matters of history. It is contended that the blockade of the port constituted the
Tho judgment of the Court a quo, was predicated upon the reason that defendant having been put m mora by the demand made before the instition of the suit, and the vis major alleged, being removed by the opening of the port on the 1st of June, 1862, sometime before tho decision of the suit, she could no longer refuse to comply with the contract.
A bill of exceptions was taken on the part of defendant, to the introduction of evidence to show the amount necessary to defray the traveling-expenses of plaintiff from New Orleans to Paris by way of New York, as defendant by her contract, was under no obligation to pay plaintiff’s passage across the sea, except on board a sailing-vessel direct from New Orleans. Wo think the testimony was properly admitted. No route is expressed in the contract. It is simply that the traveling expenses shall be paid by defendant, or a passage secured at her cost, on board a first-class sailing-vessel.
There might be force in the objections urged against tho judgment, if the facts justified the inferences which seem to have been drawn from them on tho part of the defendant. But we see no evidence in the record showing that the impediment of the blockade, formed in this case the “ irresistible force,” contemplated by law to exonerate a party from complying with a contract. The defendant had the option to pay the money necessary to discharge the traveling expenses of the plaintiff from New Orleans to Paris, or to secure for her (free of cost to plaintiff) a passage to Havre on board a first-class sailing-vessel.’ She might have paid the money, if she could not, on account of tho blockade, have engaged a passage on board a vessel going to Prance. The latter being impossible, did- not release her from doing the former—the very thing required by the plaintiff. Where an obligor, from inevitable accident or irresistible force, cannot perform one of two things, cither of which ho had at the time of his engagement the option to do, he is notrelieved from the obligation to perform the other. Neither, on the other hand, do we see the vis major which deprived the plaintiff of the power to perform the condition upon which she had the right to demand her traveling expenses, viz: that of returning from New Orleans to Paris. If, at the time of the institution of this suit, and for a month or two afterwards, it were impossible for the plaintiff to sail for Prance from Now Orleans, it by no moans follows that she could not have gone by land to Now York, or some other port not blockaded, and from thence set sail for her native land. Being, -what the record authorizes to suppose, a subject of Prance, no serious difficulty would have been encountered by her in passing through the two sections of this country, then warring against each other, France being a neutral power. The mere dictum of counsel in tlieir brief, that it was impossible for the plaintiff to comply with her obligation to return to Paris, in the absence of any evidence establishing that
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the District Court be annulled, avoided and reversed. And it is further ordered, adjudged and decreed, that the plaintiff recover from the defendant the sum of two hundred and thirty dollars, with judicial interest thereon from judicial demand, with all costs incurred in the Court below, the plaintiff and appellee paying costs of this appeal.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.