Advance Thresher Co. v. Roger

49 So. 709, 123 La. 1067, 1909 La. LEXIS 821
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 24, 1909
DocketNo. 17,355
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 49 So. 709 (Advance Thresher Co. v. Roger) 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
Advance Thresher Co. v. Roger, 49 So. 709, 123 La. 1067, 1909 La. LEXIS 821 (La. 1909).

Opinion

Statement of the Facts.

NICHOLLS, J.

The plaintiff alleged that on the 11th of June, 1906, it received an order from the defendant for the following list of machinery with regular fixtures furnished by the company, to. wit:

“18 H. P. Traction engine with coal burner, one corn husker shredder. 12 roll with wind stacker attached, one corn husker feeder for 12 roll husker, one corn husker shredder bagger, to be shipped from petitioner’s factory at Battle Creek, about July 1, 1906, or as soon thereafter as possible, the said Ernest Roger to pay the freight and charges on the said machinery from the factory, and in addition to execute notes in favor of petitioner in the sum of twenty one hundred and eighty-seven dollars ($2,187.00) in the following amounts and payable on the following dates, to wit:
“One note for seven hundred and twenty-nine dollars due December 15, 1906.
[1069]*1069“One note for seven hundred and twenty-nine dollars due December 15, 1907.
“One note for seven hundred and twenty-nine dollars due December 15, 1908.
“That the said notes were to be executed at the date of delivery of the machinery and to bear 8 per cent, interest per annum, interest payable annually, from date until paid. A copy of which order and contract is hereto annexed for reference, and greater certainty.”

Petitioner further averred:

_ “That the said Ernest Roger ordered from petioner, and not specified upon the said order, one cab for the engine at the price and sum of $50, which amount was to be paid to petitioner in cash on delivery of the same.
“That it performed its part of the said contract and shipped to the said Ernest Roger in accordance therewith the said machinery and said cab. That the same was delivered to the said Ernest Roger on or about September 1, 1906. and that the same has come up to petitioner’s warranty, and performed the services for which it was intended. That the said Ernest Roger, though repeatedly demanded to comply with his portion of the said contract, refused to do so, and, in consequence, it is entitled to a judgment condemning him to execute in its favor the notes described in the said contract, or else to pay to it the amount of damages suffered in consequence of this failure, which damage it declares to be the value of the said machinery, to wit, the sum of $2,187. That in addition to the said sum the said Roger is indebted unto petitioner in the sum of $50, being the value of the engine cab ordered and delivered on open account. It prayed that the said Ernest Roger be duly cited; that it do have judgment condemning the said Ernest Roger to perform and comply with the obligations which he had entered into, to wit, to execute in favor of petitioner, under date of September 1, 1906, or thereabout, his three certain notes, each for the sum of $729, bearing interest at the rate of 8 per cent, per annum from date, payable annually, due on or before December 15,1906, December 15,1907, and December 15,1908, respectively, and to pay petitioner the additional sum of $50, with 5 per cent, thereon from September 1, 1906, until paid, being the value of the engine cab sold and delivered to the said defendant, or in default on the part of the said Ernest Roger to execute the notes in favor of petitioner; that he be condemned to pay petitioner as damages for failure to comply with his contract the sum of $2,187, with 8 per cent, thereon per annum from September 1, 1906, the said amount being the value of the machinery delivered in accordance with his written order of June 11, 1906, and the one engine cab.”

Accompanying plaintiff’s petition was an instrument purporting to he a copy of the agreement on which plaintiff declared, signed by Ernest Roger and J. A. Weber. The defendant, under reservation of all his rights to plead by way of exception or otherwise as he might thereafter be advised, urged that he could not plead without view and oyer of the document declared on and without view and oyer of the act of-incorporation of the plaintiff company. The court ordered the plaintiff to file the documents called for. The defendant thereafter excepted that plaintiff was a foreign corporation, and that it had to aver in its petition that it had complied with the provisions of article 264 of the Constitution by which it would be authorized to do business in Louisiana. The court ordered the exception to be referred to the merits. Defendant answered under reservation of his exceptions.

He first pleaded the general issue. He then admitted his signature to the document sued on. Further answering, he alleged:

“That at the time of the signature made to the said document there was signed, at the same time, and same place, and as a condition precedent to the giving by respondent of his said signature, another document in the words and figures as follows: .
“ ‘Greenwood 'Plantation, Thibodaux, La., June 11, 1906.
“ ‘This is to certify that the Advance Thresher Company of Battle Creek, Mich., agrees to send a man from the factory to give the thresher and engine 20 days’ trial before accepting the same, and that in the event of cash payment the company is to allow 8 per cent, discount. J. A. Weber.’
“Which said document and agreement and copy of agreement signed at the time is hereunto annexed as part of this answer and made part hereof for greater certainty.
“That the person, J. A. Weber, who signed the said document, was the person and the only person with whom your respondent dealt in this matter, and with whom whatever of contract there was was made. He represented himself at the time to be the selling agent of the present plaintiff. That your respondent stated at the time that, without the guaranty and agreement made in the said contract so signed by the said Weber, your respondent would not agree to buy or take the property offered for sale, and without this additional agreement would not sign the agreement aver[1071]*1071red upon by the plaintiff and annexed to these proceedings under the prayer for oyer.
“That the said Weber, acting as aforesaid, declared he was the agent of the plaintiff and acted as such, making the bargains averred upon and disclosed by the written agreement made part of the petition herein, and also the agreement witnessed by the document hereto annexed and signed by him, the said Weber.
“That without the signing and agreement so shown by the said document, your respondent had refused to sign or agree to purchase, and was induced so to sign and agree only upon the conditions therein set out, and that if the same be in violation of the powers and rights of the said Weber, which respondent denies to be the fact, then there was no agreement and no contract; both parties not having agreed to the same thing.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
49 So. 709, 123 La. 1067, 1909 La. LEXIS 821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/advance-thresher-co-v-roger-la-1909.