Bertrand v. Taylor

32 Ark. 470
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 32 Ark. 470 (Bertrand v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bertrand v. Taylor, 32 Ark. 470 (Ark. 1877).

Opinion

Habbison, J.:

The appellee sued the appellant before a justice of the peace on the following account:

R. C. Bertrand to Ctesar Taylor, Du.

December 1st, 1874.

To ^ proceeds of 27 bales of cotton as per contract of labor, say....................... $700 00

Cb.

By cash paid Oseear................................ $175 00

By cash paid Henry................................ 40 00

By order for goods to Henry.................... 10 00

By | cost of bagging and ties.................. 81 00

By amount paid for picking..................... 100 00

--- 406 00

$294 00

The complaint alleged that the twenty-seven bales of cotton mentioned in the account were the common property of the plaintiff and the defendant, and that the same had been shipped and sold by the defendant, and the proceeds received by him. No demand upon the defendant for the balance alleged to have been due the plaintiff was averred.

The defendant’s answer admitted that the cotton was the common property of the plaintiff and the defendant, and that it had been shipped by himself, and twenty-six bales had been sold, one-half,. or the plaintiff’s share of the proceeds of which was $759.33; and denied that the other bale had been sold; and he claimed and filed a set-off of $732.60 for supplies and advances to the plaintiff and Henry Taylor.

The charges for supplies furnished Henry Taylor amounted to $91.83, one item of which was cash $40, November 9, 1874; another, order to Cleveland $.10, November 11, 1874, and another, cash to Jack Taylor on note $25, November 27,1874, and his account contained charges for money paid for cotton picking amounting to $233.47.

The suit was commenced on the 27th of March, 1875.

The plaintiff recovered before the justice of the peace, judgment for $231.59, and the defendant appealed to the Circuit Court when the plaintiff obtained a verdict and judgment for $99.18.

The plaintiff* read to the jury a contract in writing executed on the 2d of March, 1874, by the defendant, and the plaintiff and Henry Taylor, by which they agreed to cultivate together that year, 100 acres of the defendant’s plantation in cotton and corn, the defendant, besides the land, to furnish the necessary teams, feed for the teams, and farming implements, and the plaintiff and said Henry Taylor to do the work and labor in making and gathering the crop and ginning and baling the cotton, and to furnish one-half the bagging and ties; and the defendant to have one-half the crop and they the other. It was further agreed that if, at any time it became necessary, the defendant might employ other hands, and should be reimbursed what he paid on that account out of their part of the crop, and their part of the crop was not to be mortgaged, sold or removed from the place until the defendant was paid for all supplies and advances which he should make or furnish them.

He then introduced Henry Taylor, who testified that he was one of the parties to the contract, and a son of the plaintiff, and worked as one of the hands in the crop. That there were besides the plaintiff employed in making the crop seven hands, who, after it was made, assisted in picking the cotton, except the witness’ brothers Dick and Jack Taylor, who, after nineteen of the twenty-seven bales had been picked, quit and left the place, but, in about two weeks, returned and continued at work through the season, and the plaintiff was absent from the place three or four days. That only about one-third of the twenty-seven bales was picked by hired hands. And he said the charges in the set-off for advances and supplies to him, had been paid out of six bales of cotton, picked after the twenty-seven bales were shipped.

Jack Taylor testified for the plaintiff that he was a son of the plaintiff, and worked with him in making the crop and also assisted in picking part of the cotton. After about nineteen of the twenty-seven were picked, he left the place and remained away about two weeks. After his return he assisted in gathering the remainder of the crop, and worked for wages, which was to be paid, when the plaintiff should sell his part of it. That the defendant never paid him anything for his labor, but he paid him $25 for Henry Taylor.

Eranlc Taylor also testified for the plaintiff that only about one-third of the twenty-seven bales was picked by hands hired by the defendant.

The defendant testified in his own behalf that twenty-seven bales of cotton were ready for shipment on the 23d day of November, 1874, and the plaintiff wished to ship them to New Orleans, through Cleveland, Boyd <fe Co., of Pine Bluff, and to have them held for some time for an advance in price. The defendant would not consent to the removal of the cotton unless account for supplies and advances were paid, whereupon it was agreed and arranged between the plaintiff and him, that the defendant, who was then shipping to New Orleans seventy-four bales of his own cotton through the house of Cleveland, Boyd & Co., should also ship the twenty-seven bales along with it, and that when the same were sold, the account should be paid out of the proceeds by Cleveland, Boyd &Co. The defendant’s account, which is filed as his set-off, was at the time examined by the plaintiff, and he made no objection to it, and it was with his consent and concurrence, handed to J. T. Cleveland, of Cleveland, Boyd & Co., to be paid according to the agreement, and the cotton was accordingly shipped. The cotton, the 101 bales, except one bale which was rejected, was sold on the 4th day of March, 1875, but he did not receive the account of sales, or know what it brought, until after the commencement of the suit, and the last bale or that which was rejected, was not sold until after the trial in the Justice’s Court. The cotton was sold together and the twenty-seven bales Avere included in the account of sales Avith the defendant’s own cotton, and he Avould not identify any part of it. The hales Avere of average weight with the others,, but tiie quality was not as good. That his account, filed as a set-off, Avas correct and just and that the plaintiff had never, that he kneAV, denied or disputed its correctness until after the suit was brought. The payments charged therein for picking cotton were made by the direct instructions of the plaintiff, and in his presence or upon his order. That after the witnesses, Dick and Jack Taylor, returned, he paid them every Saturday morning for the cotton they picked for the plaintiff, during the week, and that during the picking of the twenty-seven bales Avas absent about two Aveeks. The wages he paid for picking Avas seventy-five cents per 100.

J. T. Cleveland testified for the defendant, in substance, the same as he did in regard to the shipment and sale of the cotton, and he further testified that it Avas agreed between the plaintiff and the defendant, that the latter’s account-should be paid by Avitness out of the defendant’s part of the proceeds, and the account or a statement of its amount was handed to him for that purpose. The defendant, after the suit was brought, called upon him for the account of sales of the cotton.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Barnhardt v. State
275 S.W. 909 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1925)
Teter v. Moore
93 S.E. 342 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1917)
Mine LaMotte Lead & Smelting Co. v. Consolidated Anthracite Coal Co.
107 S.W. 174 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1907)
Dunavant v. Fields
60 S.W. 420 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1901)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
32 Ark. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bertrand-v-taylor-ark-1877.