Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. Williams

183 So. 128, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 368
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 29, 1938
DocketNo. 5692.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 183 So. 128 (Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. Williams) 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
Arkansas Fuel Oil Co. v. Williams, 183 So. 128, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 368 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

This suit is a sequence to that decided by this court on May 2, 1935, reported in Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation v. Williams, 160 So. 811. The former case was a concursus proceeding provoked by the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, to whose property and assets the present plaintiff has succeeded, and against the present defendant, the partnership of Dawson &’ Winn et ais. The principal issue tendered and passed upon in that proceeding was whether or not an account due to the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation by Dawson & Winn, sub-contractors of defendant, Wilson H. Williams, had been paid and settled, in keeping with an alleged prior agreement, by the delivery to said corporation by said partnership of a certificate of indebtedness of the Louisiana Highway Commission, hereinafter referred to as “scrip”, for the sum of $588.02. We held that the account had thus been extinguished.

As appears from the recital of facts in the decided case, the scrip was issued and delivered to Williams as a payment or credit against an amount due him by the Highway Commission for road construction work. Williams endorsed it “without recourse” and handed it to Dawson & Winn, presumably as a credit against the amount due them by him for road work. This firm then sent the scrip to the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, at Shreveport, for the purpose of having the amount thereof credited on the account with that corporation, subsequently sued on. It was held by that corporation for some three months and was then returned by it to Williams, accompanied by a letter reading as follows:

“We return herewith Louisiana Highway scrip No. 522-1 in the amount of $588.02.
“We are unable to accept this scrip as collateral or to hold it in any way for the reason that the scrip is endorsed without recourse. It is returned to you for your disposition.”

Williams did not return the scrip to the oil corporation nor to Dawson & Winn, so far as the record discloses.

The present suit was instituted to recover judgment against Williams for the face amount of the scrip, plus interest.

The tortuous history of the embattled scrip, the findings of fact and conclusions of law arrived at by this court, disclosed in our former opinion, are fully set out in the petition. It is additionally alleged that when the scrip was delivered to said Williams by the said oil corporation, that *129 corporation was not indebted or obligated unto him to any extent or in any manner, and that the scrip was sent to him through error and mistake arising out of and resulting from the state of facts, acts and circumstances hereinabove related or referred to.

Plaintiff additionally alleges:

“Petitioner further shows that upon the receipt by the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation of said Louisiana Highway Commission certificate No. 522-1 from Dawson & Winn, and prior to the institution of the above mentioned suit, said Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation in the honest belief that it was not entitled to retain said certificate, did on or about July 1/1932, as hereinbefore alleged, deliver said certificate to Wilson H. Williams, who with the knowledge that he was not entitled to receive said certificate and with the further knowledge that no obligation of any nature whatever was due him by the Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation, did so receive and has since that time retained said certificate and has refused to either return the certificate so delivered to him or to pay unto Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation or its successor the face value of the certificate or the return thereof to Louisiana Oil Refining Corporation and its successor. By virtue thereof and for the reasons herein stated, said Wilson H. Williams is legally obligated to return to petitioner the certificate so described above, or to pay to petitioner the face value of said certificate, together with interest and cost, as aforestated.”

It is also alleged that at the time the said scrip was delivered back to Williams, it was worth its face value and has retained that value to the present time.

Plaintiff does not pray that the scrip be ordered restored to it, if possible for defendant to do so, and for money judgment for its face value, should he fail or be unable to comply with such a decree, but prays primarily for judgment for the face of the certificate plus interest.

An exception of no right and no’ cause of action was filed by defendant, which was sustained and plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

Plaintiff's action, it is argued, is founded upon those articles of the Civil Code pertaining to “Quasi Contracts” and “Of the Payment of a Thing Not Due”, of which we quote the following:

“He who receives what is not due to him, whether he receives it through error or knowingly, obliges himself to restore it to him from whom he has unduly received it.” Article 2301.
“To acquire this right, it is necessary that the thing paid be not due in any manner, either civilly or naturally. A natural obligation to pay will be sufficient to prevent the recovery.” Article 2303.
“If there be any want of good faith on the part of him who has received, he is bound to restore not only the capital, but also the interest from the day of payment.” Article 2311.

Article 2133 of the Civil Code is also germane:

“Every payment presupposes a debt; what has been paid without having been due, is sub j ect to be reclaimed.
“That can not be reclaimed that has been voluntarily given in discharge of a natural obligation.”

As well as Article 18 of the Code of Practice:

“He who pays through error what he does not owe, has an action for the repetition of what he has thus paid, unless there was a natural obligation to make such payment; but he must prove that he paid through error, otherwise it shall be presumed that he intended to give.”

The underlying philosophy of all of the equitable as well as legal principles announced in these articles is that no one should be allowed to enrich himself at the expense of another. It is natural law that one who has paid money to or delivered a thing of value to one not entitled to receive it, acts through error or mistake' and there arises from such transactions the right to invoke judicial aid to recover back the money thus paid or the res delivered, if the receiver is in a position to do so. If the res cannot be restored, then its value is recoverable. This is expressly recognized and provided for in Article 2301 of the Civil Code and Article 18 of the Code of Practice, quoted above. And Article 2311 of the Civil Code provides the penalty that may be inflicted upon a receiver in bad faith. All persons who receive that which they know they are not entitled to, are not in good faith. Such a one simply receives and holds that which is owned by another.

In Drainage Commission of New Orleans v. National Contracting Company of *130 New York et al., C.C., 136 F.

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Bluebook (online)
183 So. 128, 1938 La. App. LEXIS 368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arkansas-fuel-oil-co-v-williams-lactapp-1938.