Ou the Merits.
Blanchard, LPlaintiff was the beneficiary of a certain interest in the succession of her grand-father, Dr. J. F. Beugnot, who died in New Orleans in 1887.
*459She was a minor and resided with her widowed mother in Germany.
The mother acted as her tutrix, though not formally qualified as such.
Defendant, by appointment of the mother, became the agent in America of the plaintiff, to act for her, represent her, collect, receive and receipt for the moneys coming to her from her grandfather’s estate.
This agency had continued about eleven years when the present action was brought.
By the laws of Germany the plaintiff did not reach her majority until she had attained the age of 25 years. Having been born in 1872, she did not become of age until June, 1897. This suit was filed in April, 1898.
No dispute as to the authority of the mother to appoint defendant agent aforesaid is raised.
Defendant, beginning with July 10, 1888, collected from time to time various sums for account of the plaintiff, and made to her and her mother various remittances extending through the period of his agency.
After attaining her majority, the plaintiff asked an accounting and settlement at the hands of.the defendant. The latter promptly tendered his account, showing a balance of $7,787.21 due his principal and offered payment of same, provided a receipt in full were given him. This was declined, the plaintiff claiming a larger sum was due her than what the agent’s account showed.
This suit followed.
It proceeds upon the hypothesis that the remittances made from time to time by defendant to his principals in Germany represented the earnings of the capital belonging to the plaintiff in the hands of defendant, realized by him for her account from the succession of her grand-father, that but a small part of the aggregate sum so remitted is chargeable against the capital itself, and that, in consequence, nearly the whole of the capital or principal amount so collected from her grand-father’s estate is due her — being a sum largely in excess of thatjtendered by defendant.
For answer defendant denies that the remittances he had made represented the earnings of the funds he held for account of his principal, annexed a detailed statement of the amounts received by *460Him and payments made, showing a balance due the plaintiff of $7,-787.21, and announced his willingness now, as in the past, to pay the same over to her on obtaining his discharge.
Following the filing of this answer and its annexed statement, counsel for plaintiff moved for judgment for the $7,787.21, the balance admitted to be due. In this connection it asked that the settlement and adjudication of all matters at issue in this suit, all questions of interest and income on capital, be postponed until such time as the cause might come before the court in due course for trial.
This motion was allowed, defendant was adjudged to pay over to plaintiff the sum he admitted to be due her, and other matters at issue were ordered postponed as prayed for.
This ruling was proper and is sustained by precedent. Gilly vs. Roumieu, 11 La. Ann. 746; Second Municipality vs. Corning, 4 La. Ann. 407; Parsons vs. Suares, 9 La. 411; Skinner vs. Dameron, 5 Robinson 447; Small vs. Zacharie, 4 R. 145.
Defendant paid the amount.
Plaintiff does not dispute any of the items appearing upon defendant’s account save one of $411.49, being a charge of 2% per cent, commission on $16,459.64 collected.
This, she contends, is not legally due defendant.
After payment of the $7,787.21 aforesaid, nothing was left in dispute between the parties, to be adjudicated on the trial of the case, except the item for commissions, and the claim set up by plaintiff in her petition that the remittances made to her from time to time-were earnings on the investment of her capital in the hands of defendant.
The decision below was against plaintiff on both these issues, and she appeals.
I.
The general rule is that the contract of mandate is gratuitous. The codal provision is that it is gratuitous unless there has been a contrary agreement. C. 0. 2991. But in a spirit of justice and where the services are onerous, responsible and toilsome the/Sourt has, sometimes, allowed remuneration to the mandatary. Packet Co. vs. Brown, 36th La. Ann. 144; Waterman vs. Gibson, 5th La. Ann. 672.
In the latter case the court held it was not necessary for an agent to establish an express agreement that he should have a pecuniary remuneration for his services, and that courts may infer such agree*461ment from the nature of the employment and th'e relation of the parties. *
Tins ruling was approved in Succession of Krekeler, 44th La. Ann. 726, where it was, in effect, held that it is of the nature, hut not of the essence, of mandate that it be gratuitous, and that without express agreement- courts may infer an implied contract to pay from the character of the services rendered and the relation of the parties.
See also to the same effect Decoux’s Heirs vs. Plantevignes, 10 La. 508; Navigation Co. vs. Collins, 12 La. Ann. 120; Succession of Fowler, 7 La. Ann. 211.
While the rule announced in these decisions merits our re-affirmance, and is, we think, applicable to the instant case and 'determinative of the question at issue in favor of defendant, it should always be applied guardedly — with caution — to the end that it be not subversive of the plain declaration of the written law.
Here, the agency of defendant extended through many years; the principal was in a distant country beyond the seas; much correspondence was necessary and was had; there was the employment of counsel and the superintendence of litigation which was pressed to a highly successful issue; as the result considerable sums of money passed into the hands of the agent; remittances were necessary and were made; and the residue carefully preserved against the time when the minor should become of age, to be then handed over to her. All this involved no little labor, time, thought and responsibility, and from- the same may reasonably be inferred a tácit understanding, an implied contract, to reimburse defendant.
The court a qua did not err in allowing him compensation for his services, arrived at by a calculation of 2% per cent, upon the funds which passed into his hands, and which he administered.
II.
Plaintiff misjudged the nature of her demand against defendant. Her petition sets forth the relationship existing between her and him and drew therefrom certain conclusions. The testimony offered at the trial does not warrant these conclusions. She is-not entitled to a judgment for specific sums as earnings, apart from interest, on her capital in his hands. Proof is lacking to justify ¡this. There was no direct investment of her funds to earn the amounts claimed. The funds which came into -the agent’s hands were not specifically invested *462either in her name, or his. They were mingled with his own funds and thus lost their individuality. He used his own money and that of plaintiff thus mingled as a common fund in the purchase of bonds, stocks, etc. The purchases were all made in his own name and for his sole account. He testifies he bought bonds so that when his principal demanded her own he could readily turn them into cash to meet the demand.
The District Judge was right in holding plaintiff not entitled to judgment for any sum or sums as claimed in her petition.
But having used his principal’s funds in his own affairs he must be held answerable to her for interest on the same.
“The attorney,” says 0. C. 3015, “is answerable for the interest of any sum of money he has employed to his own use, from the time he has so employed it”.
And this is the demand which plaintiff, under the circumstances here disclosed, should have made in her petition and the prayer thereof.
Cases may arise where an agent should perhaps be taxed the highest rate of conventional interest on the use he makes of his principal’s funds, and there is authority for the same. 41 La. Ann. 386.
But we do not regard this suph a case.
This agent should be called upon to pay only the legal rate of interest (five per cent, per annum) upon the funds of his principal which came into his hands, and this according to the rule laid down in O. C. 2164 — that of partial payments. Succession of Coco, 32nd La. Ann. 333.
This interest should not be computed beyond the date of the payment by defendant of the amount awarded against him by the trial court, as hereinbefore explained. Whatever sum he then owed as interest at .five per cent., according to the rule of partial payments, should be given against him and ho more, and interest on'that interest is not allowable.
We would, perhaps, he justified (Smith vs. Cocoran, 7 La. 46; Beach’s Modern Equity Practice, Sec. 91), though that is not clear, in holding plaintiff entitled to a decree of this kind, notwithstanding the.. character of her demand and the nature of the prayer of her petition. But we deem it advisable to remand the case, both that plaintiff might amend her pleadings to present her demand in proper form as herein set forth, and in order that she may there, contradictorily with de*463fendant, fix ±be amounts and dates on which and from which interest is to be allowed, credits given, etc. In other words, to have adjusted there the accounts between them on the basis herein determined.
It is well settled that the court will, in its discretion, remand causes when the interests of justice require it.
Since the remanding of the case is made necessary, in large part, by reason of the deficiencies of allegation in plaintiff’s petition, and mistaken relief sought in the prayer, the further costs in the court a qua should be at her expense.
For these reasons, it is ordered and decreed that the judgment appealed from, in so far as it allows defendant the charge of $411.49, being 2% per cent, commissions on $16,459.64 collected and administered by him, be affirmed, and in other respects the said judgment be reversed and the case remanded to be proceeded with according to the views herein presented and the law — costs of appeal to be taxed against defendant and appellee.
Monroe, J., concurs in the decree.Rehearing refused.