American Slicing Machine Co. v. Rothschild & Lyons

125 So. 499, 12 La. App. 287, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 797
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 31, 1929
DocketNo. 3712
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 125 So. 499 (American Slicing Machine Co. v. Rothschild & Lyons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Slicing Machine Co. v. Rothschild & Lyons, 125 So. 499, 12 La. App. 287, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 797 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

REYNOLDS, J.

Plaintiff sued defendants to be decreed owner of a certain slicing machine numbered 217427 and restored to the possession of it, and, in the alternative for $128.20, as its value, if restoration were not made.

It alleged that it had conditionally sold' the machine to one Chrest Slavent, at the time a resident of the state of Louisiana, for the price of $200, and that he had paid $71.80 and still owed $128.20 of the amount; that the offer of purchase was made to it in the state of Illinois and accepted by it there, and the machine delivered to a carrier in the state of Indiana for transportation and delivery to Slavent in the state of Louisiana; and that the sale was upon condition that the title should not pass from it to the purchaser until the price was paid.

The contract is made part of the petition and reads as follows:

“Order

“Date 10 — 21—27.

“American Slicing Machine Co., 209 South State St., Chicago, 111. — Gentlemen:

“Please, enter order for one American Slicing Machine, f. o. b. Indianapolis, Indiana.

“Price of Scout Machine without Pedestal $200.00.

“The machine hereby ordered is purchased subject to a discount of five per cent, if the amount is paid in cash within thirty days from date of shipment.

“The said machine shall be property of the American Slicing Machine Company until fully paid for by the undersigned.

“No verbal agreement can change or modify the conditions of this contract, and the undersigned states that there is no verbal or written understanding or agreement different from or other than the printed conditions of this contract. The undersigned also states that no machine nor any other article of trade or barter is to be received by the American Slicing Machine Company in payment or part payment of the purchase price of the American Slicing Machine therewith ordered.

“All payments must be made direct to the Chicago office.

“This machine is not purchased subject to trial.

“This order shall not be countermanded.

“Signed: Chrest Slavent

“Shipping { St. and No.

“Address: { City, Ferriday. State, La.

“If Direct Current, give voltage.

“If Alternating, give voltage 110.

“Cycles 60 Phase 1 2 wire 3 wire.

“Machine No----------------- Pedestal No............

“Salesman: Reginald Smith.’’

[289]*289(All of the foregoing appears on the obverse of the sheet, and the following on the reverse:)

“Guaranty.

“The American Slicing' Machine Company guarantees the machine or machines shipped by virtue of this order to he constructed of good material and free from defective workmanship. This guaranty holds for one year from date on which shipment is made, and if the machine is paid for in full within one year from date of shipment the guaranty is extended for another year.

“American Slicing Machine Co.,

“By W. B. Wollf, President.

“The American Slicing Machine Company also agrees, upon receiving written notice to that effect made by the party whose name is signed to the within order at the time the within order is given and not otherwise, that it will permit payment of the purchase price to be made in the following manner:

“$24.00 cash accompanying said notice and $16.00 to be paid during each and every succeeding month thereafter until paid for in full.

“The American Slicing Machine' Company further agrees to accept a receipted freight bill covering freight only for the freight that has been paid by the party whose name is signed to the within order as such a part of the second payment as the amount of freight paid, provided that said second payment is forwarded within thirty days' from date of shipment from the factory or other point from which delivery is made.

“A default in making payment of any monthly installment when due and payable shall cause all the unpaid remainder "f the purchase price to become immediately due and payable, and the American Slicing Machine Company may, at its option, take possession of the machine or machines, and retain all money therefor received in part payment as its liquidated damages.

“The undersigned hereby gives notice of making payment, in accordance with the above terms.

“Signed: Chrest Slavent.”

The defendants admitted the sale by plaintiff to Slavent of the machine for $200 and that $128.20 of the price was owing, but denied that the contract was entered into in the state of Illinois or the state of Indiana, and alleged that it was entered into in the state of Louisiana, and denied that the plaintiff was the owner or entitled to the possession of the machine.

Further, answering, they alleged that, as shown by the contract, the machine was to be shipped by plaintiff, from the state of Indiana, to Chrest Slavent, in the state of Louisiana, and that it did so ship it and he so accepted it, and that such shipment and acceptance constituted the transaction a Louisiana contract.

They further alleged that it was the intention of the plaintiff and of Chrest Slavent that the contract should be a Louisiana contract and be construed and controlled both as to its form and effect by the laws of the state of Louisiana.

And they further alleged that they purchased the machine in good faith and in ignorance of plaintiff’s claim from the sheriff of the parish of Concordia at a sale thereof made by him as the property of Chrest Slavent under a seizure thereof upon a writ of fieri facias issued upon a judgment rendered by the district court of Concordia parish in suit No. 5015 styled Rothschild & Lyons vs. Chrest Slavent.

By agreement entered into between plaintiff and defendants it was admitted:

First. That both in the state of Illinois and the state of Indiana the sale of a chattel upon condition that the title shall not pass to the purchaser until the price has been fully paid is legal, and that if the contract between plaintiff and Chrest Slavent be either an Illinois or an [290]*290Indiana contract, he never acquired title to the machine.

Second. That the contract sued on was prepared and printed by the plaintiff and presented to Chrest Slavent in Eerriday, La., on October 21, 1927, for his signature, by Reginald Smith, at the time a salesman of plaintiff, and that Slavent then and there signed the contract, after inserting therein the words “Eerriday” and “La.” and the figures “24.00” and “16.00” and paid to plaintiff’s salesman $24 in cash, and that Smith then and there signed the contract himself. That Slavent had not previously seen the contract.

Third. That the machine was delivered to the carrier at Indianapolis, Ind., consigned to Chrest Slavent, at Eerriday, La., and was by the carrier delivered to him at the latter place upon his paying the transportation charges thereon.

Fourth. That defendants purchased the machine at sheriff’s sale in good faith and in ignorance of plaintiff’s claim.

On these issues the case was tried, and judgment was rendered decreeing plaintiff owner of the machine and entitled to the immediate possession thereof and ordering defendants to surrender it to plaintiff, and the defendants appealed.

OPINION

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 So. 499, 12 La. App. 287, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 797, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-slicing-machine-co-v-rothschild-lyons-lactapp-1929.