Sawyer v. Davis
Sawyer v. Davis
Opinion of the Court
This is a controversy between an employer and a 'number of laborers engaged by him in the cultivation of a cotton plantation during the year 1869. A written contract was entered into between the plaintiff and Henry Zinco as planting partners on the one side, and about thirty laborers on the other, by which it was agreed on the part of the laborers that they would work on St. Genevieve plantation, in the parish of Concordia, in a good and faithful manner for the employer during tho year 1869, in producing a crop of cotton .-and corn; that they would obey all orders that Sawyer and Zinco or their agent might give from time to time, put up and repair fences, and perform any work that might be required to be done; that, failing in any of these engagements, Sawyer and Zinco were to have the privilege to declare the contract void so far as any one offending was concerned. Tiie employers were to furnish the work animals needed in the cultivation of the place, feed for the animals, the farming utensils, etc., needed on the place, famish provisions for the laborers, and give them the one-fourtli part of all the cotton and corn grown on the plantation that year.
It seems that about the first of July of the year 1869 Zinco and Sawyer dissolved partnership, the latter, as he alleges, having purchased the interest of the former in the business.
About the commencement of tho picking season, or not long afterward, dissensions and difficulties arose between the parties to this «contract. The employer, without tho consent of the laborers employed
In the month of February following twenty-six of the laborers, by their counsel, prayed for and obtained a writ of provisional seizure to-seize and take into the possession of the sheriff the crop or a sufficient amount thereof, if found, to satisfy tlieir demand, and if not fotfnd, a sufficient portion of the proceeds thereof, alleging that they have bylaw a privilege upon the crop or its proceeds. They aver that the crop raised on the St. Genevieve plantation in the year 18C9, amounted' to two hundred hales or thereabout, of tlie average weight of four hundred pounds each; that it has been entirely removed from the plantation; that a part of it, as they have reason to believe, has been-shipped to New Orleans and sold on account of G. S. Sawyer; that-they have not received more than eleven hales in the whole. They pray judgment for ono-fourth the amount of the crop loss the eleven hales they admit they have received, and that they receive the same in. kind, and failing in that, that they have judgment.against their said employer for such amount as may he due them at the rate of eighty-five dollars per bale.
The two suits were consolidated and tried together. The injunction was perpetuated as to two of the laborers complained against, and dissolved as to the others. The proportional amount of cotton received, by the parties respectively was fixed by the judgment at one hundred and fourteen hales by G. S. Sawyer and twenty-nine by the laborers..
There is a mass of evidence in the record of a very contradictory character. It is apparent enough that neither of the contracting parties have properly complied with their obligations. There seems to have been dissatisfaction on the part of the employer on account of the maimer in which the labor was performed, and distrust on the part of the laborers of the fairness and good faith of the employer. After a review of the testimony, we are not inclined to think that justice has not been done between the parties.
It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court be affirmed, with costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- George S. Sawyer v. Robert Davis, and Robert Davis v. George S. Sawyer. (Consolidated.)
- Status
- Published