Bates v. Lilly Brokerage Co.

159 So. 457, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 153
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 8, 1935
DocketNo. 4989.
StatusPublished

This text of 159 So. 457 (Bates v. Lilly Brokerage Co.) 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
Bates v. Lilly Brokerage Co., 159 So. 457, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 153 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

This is a redhibitory action. Plaintiff alleged that defendant, a foreign corporation, was indebted unto him in the sum of $235, for the following:

That defendant on February 8,1934, sold to him 200 empty barrels at the price of $1.50 per barrel, or a total of $300; that said barrels were sold on the representation of defendant that they were fit for use as vinegar barrels, knowing at the time that petitioner was in the vinegar business. He further alleges that defendant represented that said barrels had formerly contained food products, which would not make, them unfit for containing vinegar.'

Plaintiff further alleged that under the above representations and defendant’s implied guarantee that the barrels were fit for the purpose for which they were sold, he bought them and paid the sum of $300, and, upon receiving the barrels, discovered that 150 of them had contained pyroligneous acid, or some other substance which rendered them totally unfit and unsafe as containers for vinegar, which fact was promptly made known to defendant; that plaintiff has requested that defendant furnish disposition of said barrels, has made tender of same, does’'now tender the barrels, and is willing to dejiver them to any point designated by defendant. ■

Plaintiff further alleged that he had in-' curred an expense of $10 for telephone calls and telegrams, by reason of defendant’s default as above set forth. He alleged defendant was' a nonresident and permanently out of the state, and that a writ of attachment was necessary to protect petitioner in the premises. He prayed for a writ of attachment to issue and that certain property of defendant, within the jurisdiction of the court, be attached; that defendant be cited through a curator ad hoc; and, finally, for judgment in the sum of $235, and that the writ of attachment be sustained.

The writ issued, and a car of barrels on the track of the I. G. Railroad Company owned by defendant was attached. It was bonded :by defendant.

Defendant filed an exception of no cause of action which, by consent, was referred to the merits. Defendant answered and admitted it was a foreign corporation with no place of business within the state; admitted. the sale of the barrels at the price alleged, but denied it represented them as being fit for use as containers'of vinegar; admitted plaintiff paid for the barrels; alleged the tender made by plaintiff to be wholly insufficient; and denied it had any knowledge of the intended use of the said barrels or that it had warranted them fit for use as vinegar containers. It averred the sale was made by sample of the barrels defendant had for sale and such samples were inspected and approved by plaintiff, after which the order for a carload of like kind was shipped to plaintiff. Defendant further alleged that plaintiff received the barrels on or about February 8, 1934, inspected and fully approved them and paid for them; that plaintiff made no complaint and immediately made use of a large quantity of the barrels; and on February 12,1934, ordered another carload of the barrels, which was shipped about February 19th and was the car of barrels attached in this suit.

Defendant alleged it was damaged by the issuance of the writ and asked that its rights to sue for said damages be reserved to it. It specially pleaded compromise and settlement of all claims made by defendant on said car of barrels, and prayed that plaintiff’s demands be rejected.

. The lower court overruled the exception of no cause of action and awarded judgment to plaintiff, as prayed for. Defendant has perfected an appeal to this court.

The exception of no cause of action was referred to the merits by consent and necessarily must be considered with the merits of the case. The answer sets up as a defense the same facts upon which the exception is based and, in passing on the merits, we will necessarily pass on the exception. It is based upon the allegation and fact that part of the barrels paid for were used by plaintiff, and that he only tendered 159 of the 209 back to defendant; that he never offered to ténder the entire 200 barrels, nor made an offer or tender to place the parties in status quo. In other words, defendant’s contention *459 is that a redhibitory action in all cases is indivisible; that a purchaser cannot retain for himself a portion of the goods bought and sue to rescind the sale of the remainder. Defendant’s contention is unsound. If 50 of the barrels were up to specification and fit for the purpose for which they were sold, plaintiff was in law bound to keep that number, and in a suit by plaintiff for a return of the purchase price of the 200 barrels, he could only recover for the 150 defective barrels for the reason that, if several things sold together are independent of each other and do not form a whole, and if the value of each thing is not increased by its union with the rest, a redhibi-tory action can be maintained only for those things which are found to be defective, and the contract must stand and be carried into effect in relation to the others. C. S. Burt Co. v. Laplace, 46 La. Ann. 722, 15 So. 293. .

In Huntington v. Lowe, 3 La. Ann. 377, a case on all fours with the case at bar, involving a number of hogsheads of pork, a part of which was defective and damaged, the court said; “But it is said that, When the plaintiff was dissatisfied with the sale, he should have tendered the return of the whole, and had no right to keep the sound part, reaping the profit of an improved market, and returning only the unsound. The rule that the redhibitory vice of one of several things sold together gives rise to the redhibition of all, applies to a limited class of cases; those where one of the things would not have been bought without the other. The illustrations given in our Code are, a pair of matched horses or a yoke of oxen. The rule is obviously a reasonable one, and we have borrowed it from the Roman law. ‘Quum autem ju-menta paria veneunt, edicto expressum est ut, cum alterum in ea causa sit ut redhiberi de-beat, utrumque redhibeatur; in qua re tarn emptori quam venditori consulitur, dum ju-menta non separantur.’ But when the things are independent of each other, the redhibitory action lies for that which is affected with the redhibitory vice. The example given by the civilians is, a lot of unmatched horses or a flock of sheep. If one proves to have been unsound, the partial dissolution of the sale is permitted. See Duranton, vol. 16, § 319. Troplong, Vente, 578. Voet, lib. 21, tit. 1, de Ædil, edict.”

Certainly the sale of 200 empty secondhand barrels sold together at a price of $1.50 per barrel is independent of each other and does not form a whole, and the value of each barrel is not increased by its union with the rest.

Defendant in answer denied that it warranted the barrels to be fit for use as containers fdr vinegar and averred that it had no knowledge of the intended use of same. This defense is so clearly refuted by the telegrams and letters between plaintiff and defendant prior to the purchase of the barrels that it is difficult to understand why the defense was made. On January 4, 1934, defendant wrote plaintiff as follows:

“Mr. Bates, The Arkansas Vinegar Co., Shreveport, La.,
“Dear Sir: Can you use a mixed ear of 30 and 50 gallon vinegar barrels in 30 and 60 days delivered? If interested, please advise us at once.
“Yours truly, ■

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Related

William Whitman Co., Inc. v. Solomon
144 So. 292 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
Wrenn v. Lafayette Furniture Co.
151 So. 148 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
Huntington v. Lowe
3 La. Ann. 377 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1848)
C. S. Burt Co. v. Laplace
46 La. Ann. 722 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1894)
Goode-Cage Drug Co. v. Ives
133 So. 813 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1931)

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Bluebook (online)
159 So. 457, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bates-v-lilly-brokerage-co-lactapp-1935.