Boulet v. Le Blanc

159 So. 623, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 171
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 4, 1935
DocketNo. 1429.
StatusPublished

This text of 159 So. 623 (Boulet v. Le Blanc) 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
Boulet v. Le Blanc, 159 So. 623, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 171 (La. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Dr. Irwin J. Boulet claims of Charles B. Le Blanc the sum of $1,313.70 with interest. The total amount is made up of sums claimed for services rendered as practicing physician and for medicine, but the principal part is on ac.counf of an alleged breach of contract concerning the pasturage of plaintiff’s cattle on a tract of land in the rear of Edna Plantation, held by defendant under a lease from Allen T. Dusenbury.

Defendant excepted to the petition on the ground that it was vague, indefinite, and set forth no right or cause of action. The plaintiff amended his petition by consent, and the exceptions passed, out of the case.

The defendant answering denies owing plaintiff anything. He admits that the plaintiff rendered him service as a physician, but alleges that he had paid in full the amount due on that account.

As for the alleged breach of contract, he enters into a lengthy justifying explanation in which he denies that he breached the contract, and alleges that plaintiff himself violated it in several ways. He alleges that the plaintiff obtained a lease of the land over which passed the only road leading to the cattle pasture in question, then entered into a contract with defendant for the pasture of his cattle, and afterwards forbade defendant using the road, making it in that way impossible for defendant to carry out the contract. That plaintiff in addition sent men into the pasture to look after his cattle, in violation of his contract with defendant, and refused to pay the rent when due.

Defendant prays that plaintiff’s demand >be rejected, and in conclusion sets up a demand in reconvention against him for $200 on account of unpaid rents.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff against defendant for $130 with interest on account of services rendered by plaintiff to defendant as practicing physician. The item of $2 claimed by plaintiff on account of medicine furnished was not mentioned. Plaintiff’s demand against defendant for damages was refused, and defendant’s demand in reconvention against the plaintiff was also refused. The plaintiff has appealed. Defendant has not answered the appeal.

He does not complain of the judgment rejecting his demand in reconvention, nor of the judgment against him for $130 on account of services rendered him by plaintiff as practicing physician. He does not discuss the item of $2, but urges that the judgment rejecting plaintiff’s demand against him on account of damages for breach of contract be affirmed.

The plaintiff testifying on the subject of his claim for $2 on account of medicine sold and delivered to defendant says that his charge against defendant is for visits made to him; that he always required that the medicine be paid for. This statement is repeated, hut in another part of his testimony he says that the item of $2 was not paid for. After considering the testimony on the subject, we think the judgment appealed from should, in that respect, be left as it is.

The serious controversy in the ease is in regard to the alleged breach of contract concerning pasture rights on the prairie used for grazing cattle situated in the rear of the Edna Plantation. The defendant Le Blanc had leased this land from the owner and had been using it as a pasture for a good many years before he had any business relations with the plaintiff on the subject. Two or three years before this suit was filed he entered into an agreement with plaintiff whereby plaintiff was permitted to put his cattle in the pasture to graze at a consideration of $2 a year per head for grown cattle, payable every six months in advance. The estimate of the parties fixed $200 payable every six months, or $400 a year, thus indicating that plaintiff had 200 head of grown cattle in the pasture. It seems that only plaintiff’s and defendant’s cattle were to be admitted to the pasture. The business relations of the parties were amicable until a disagreement came about concerning the amount of rent agreed on for the year 1-933 and as to the duration of the lease. The plaintiff contends that he leased from defendant for two years, commencing January 1, 1933, while defendant contends that it was for six months, commencing January 1, 1933. The matter controverted is involved in uncertainty and doubt.

The plaintiff in one part of his testimony says that he and the defendant entered into *625 an oral agreement in the early part of December, 1932, concerning the rent for 1933 and 1934 under which the amount was to be $300 per year payable $150 every six months in advance, and was to last for two years from January 1,-1933; but in another part he says that this agreement was in the latter part of December. Only plaintiff and defendant were present at this first meeting. The plaintiff then arranged a subsequent meeting at the store of Isidore Leche. The exact date of this meeting is uncertain, but facts and circumstances show that it was in December, 1932, and likely within a week or ten days after the first meeting.

At this second meeting, besides plaintiff and defendant, there were present Mr. and Mrs. Isidore Leche. Plaintiff testifies that at this second meeting he reaffirmed the agreement which had been entered into between the two a few days before. The testimony of the plaintiff and defendant on the subject is in conflict. Plaintiff contends that Isidore Leche and wife support his version as to what took place. Mr. Leche, closely questioned about the result of the meeting, says twice that the parties “almost agreed.” Questioned about his meaning, when he says that the parties almost agreed, he explained that the language was a slang expression; that the parties really agreed as claimed 'by plaintiff.

The evidence shows that Mr. Leche was half owner with plaintiff of a lease acquired from the owner of the Edna Plantation which gave them control of the road which afforded the only access to and from the pasture situated in the rear of the plantation on which plaintiff’s cattle were at pasture, and the evidence impresses us that Mr. Leche in giving his testimony had a friendly interest in the controversy as the friend of the plaintiff. Giving to his statement the effect which we think it should have, that “they almost agreed,” his testimony operates against the plaintiff and supports defendant’s version as to same. Mrs. Leche in one part of her testimony supports plaintiff, but admits that she was not present all the time and did not hear all that was said.

Defendant testifies that at the first meeting which took plaee between him. and plaintiff in the first part of December, 1932, as well as at the second meeting during the same month-at the store of Isidore Leche, the parties simply reaffirmed the agreement that had existed between them previously, on the usual terms of $2 a head for grown cattle, that the period of time was six months, the rent was to be paid in advance, and that the number of cattle belonging to plaintiff admitted to the pasture made $200 due on January 1, 1933. He testifies that six-month periods of time were the terms under which he held the property from Allen T. Dusenbury, the owner, but anticipated a renewal of his own right, and he intended to extend the same right to plaintiff, which would have given plaintiff a right of pasture for one year, to be counted from January 1, 1933. Defendant, in connection with his testimony on this subject, produced and filed in evidence the contract he had entered into with Dusenbury for the year 1933.

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159 So. 623, 1935 La. App. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boulet-v-le-blanc-lactapp-1935.