Pond v. Butler
Pond v. Butler
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was a suit begun in a justice’s court for services as a carpenter performed by the appellee, and being afterwards taken to the Court of Common Pleas, the appellee, who was plaintiff, recovered judgment.
It appears that the appellee, a short time before he attained his majority, went to work with the appellant for wages, with an understanding that after he became of full age, he would serve an apprenticeship with him, if they could agree on the terms. The appellee continued to work
We cannot say that the judgment is for the wrong party. It was a matter of indifference whether the father or son was entitled to the compensation for the services rendered before the appellee was of age, as the date of the payments proved by the appellant showed that they could only have been applied to the amount due for those services. If the appellee, by the consent of his father, was entitled to all his earnings, yet, as from the evidence it appeared that a portion of his services had been paid for, it was not necessary to include them in the account on which suit was brought, and his failure to do so did not confer on the appellant a right to apply the payments thus made to a debt due for a portion of services which had never been satisfied. If there is a running account between individuals, and articles are furnished on one side, and payments made on the other, after the account for articles furnished is nearly balanced by payments, and other articles are supplied, but no payment is made, and an action is brought for the price of the articles for which no payment has been received, not including those which were furnished previously, on what principle would a defendant be allowed to use as a set-off or payment the money paid for the articles previously furnished ?
The other Judges concurring, the judgment will be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- POND v. BUTLER
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