Bower v. Johnson

28 La. Ann. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 15, 1876
DocketNo. 4107
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 28 La. Ann. 9 (Bower v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bower v. Johnson, 28 La. Ann. 9 (La. 1876).

Opinion

TaliaotseRO, J.

This controversy, it appears, grew out of the following state of facts:

On the thirty-first of January, 1870, the plaintiff received from Bruce, Simpson & Co., merchants of Liverpool, a telegraphic dispatch offering for sale five hundred bales of good middling cotton at 11J pence sterling per pound, and offering to hold the same if covered by a proper margin. The plaintiff thereupon communicated this dispatch to several parties, and the defendants, W. A. Johnson, Hugh Allison & Co., R. L.. Adams & Son, and L. N. Lane, severally agreed each to take one-fourth of the cotton, and each deposited in the hands of the plaintiff a margin of ten dollars per bale on his share (one hundred and twenty-five bales), amounting to twelve hundred and fifty dollars each. Plaintiff, as appears, promptly notified Bruce, Simpson & Co. of the acceptance of the offer, and remitted to them the several sums put up by the defendants as margins. The order was filled in accordance with the agreement and the cotton was held by Bruce, Simpson & Co. in the name of the plaintiff for account of defendants. In March, 1870, Lane ordered his share of the cotton to bo sold, which was done, resulting in a loss of §054 23, which he paid to plaintiff. The defendants continued to hold their cotton until July, 1870, when the price of the article had declined to a point which rendered the original margin an insufficient security. Bruce, Simpson & Co. telegraphed the plaintiff, requiring additional margin. This demand was communicated to the defendants, who refused to comply, whereupop. Braco, Simpson & Co. sold the cotton at a. loss, which, it seems, the plaintiff paid, and for this loss he now sues the defendants. Ho claimed from W. A. Johnson §1902 72, with' eight per cent interest from fourteenth November, 1870, from Hugh Allison & Co. §1857 23, with like interest from the same time, and from R. L. Adams & Son §1853, with like interest from the same time.

The answer admits that the defendants, together with plaintiff, agreed to buy the proposed lot of cotton, each to become interested to the extent of one undivided fourth part; that in a day or two after the plaintiff informed them that the offer of Bruce, Simpson & Co.' had been accepted for their and his account; that a margin of ten dollars per bale was required, and that each of the defendants paid to the plaintiff the required margin, being §1250 paid by each of them.

They allege that at the time they consented to purchase the said cotton it was understood and believed by the parties that the plaintiff was to take one-fourth of it, and that the name of Lane was never mentioned to them in connection with said purchase; nor was it ever mentioned until long after the purchase and sale of the cotton that Lane had any interest in it, and they declared they never authorized a joint purchase of the cotton with Lane.

[11]*11Tlie defendants allege they have been informed and believe the fact to be that at the time the cotton was pretended to be purchased by Bruce, Simpson & Oo. the whole lot of cotton had been bought by the plaintiff in New Orleans, and had been shipped to and was afteiward sold by Bruce, Simpson & Oo. for his account; that a portion of the cotton purporting to have been sold by them, or the whole of it, was afloat and had not been received by them, and was not in their possession at the date of the alleged purchase, but had been previously purchased by the said plaintiff, who by false representations had induced these defendants to embark in tliis adventure to save himself from any possible loss on account of his purchases.

The defendants aver that after the date of the alleged purchase E. L.. Adams instructed the plaintiff, who had assumed control and management of the adventure, to sell or order to bo sold the whole of said cotton when it was worth in Liverpool 12§ pence per pound, but that plaintiff refused to do so. They allege that plaintiff ought to have sold the cotton at that time if he had as agent or partner authority to sell:

The defendants deny any indebtedness to the plaintiff, and each claims from him in reconvontion the sum of ¡$1250, the margin in which by false representations he induced them respectively to pay to him, and the further sum of §1000, with interest on both sums from the second of January, 1870.

The plaintiff had judgment, and the defendants have appealed.

It is proper to inquire what kind of contract did these parties enter into, and what was their relative position toward each other. Brueo,. Simpson & Co. propose by telegram to Bower in these terms:

. “We can offer you, subject to your reply por cable, on the day after the receipt of our message, five hundred bales middling Orleans at 11£ pence per pound here. We will hold, if you will have us. covered for £1000.”

The answer of Bowor is: “Your cable offering of five hundred bales cotton, good middling, Orleans classification, at Ilf, and to be held covered by £1000 margin, received and accepted by my friends. I remit the, required margin. * * * You will not sell unless at a fair profit. * * * I have interested in that purchase four-parties, each 125 bales, with the privilege of disposal of Ms share whenever required to do so by cable.”'

Here is no privity between Bruce, Simpson & Oo. and these parties defendants. The latter go into the adventure at the instance of and with Bower. They paid to him their respective margins, and looked alone to him as responsible to them for any profits that might accrue to them by the operation. Bower, on tlie other hand, was the person alone with whom Bruce, Simpson & Oo. dealt, and to whom alone-they could look for losses they might sustain. The attitude in which-Bower stood [12]*12■seems to be that of the common agent of two principals, foreign as regards each other, and is therefore responsible to each. “ Upon the ground of general convenience mid the usage of trade,” said Judge Story in his Treatise on Agency, section 209, “the rule has obtained that agents or factors acting for merchants resident in a foreign country are held personally liable upon all contracts made by them for their employers; ■and this without any distinction, whether they describe themselves as agents or not in the contract. In such a case it is presumed that the ■credit is given to the agents or factors; and the ordinary presumption is, not only that credit is given to the agents, but that it is exclusively given to them to the exoneration of their employers. Still, however, this presumption is liable to be rebutted, either by proof that credit was given to both principal and agent or to the principal only.” Newcastle Manufacturing Company vs. the Red River Railroad Company, 1 Rob. 145; Thorn vs. Tait, ex., 8 An. 8. Was there a partnership, as contended by plaintiffs, between the several parties who bought the five hundred bales of •cotton from Bruce, Simpson & Co.? The evidence, wo think, does not sustain this pretension. Bowor, in his testimony, is dear and distinct that it was not a joint adventure between the parties, that each party had the right to sell, dispose of, and control his own fourth of the cotton, ■or about 124 bales, as he pleased. Allison, in Ms testimony, says: te When I agreed to take a fourth interest in it, neither R. L. Adams nor W. A. Johnson was present. I was, however, informed at that time that they had taken an interest. I put up my own margin in a check for the ■amount. I did not understand that I was responsible for the margins which wore to be put up by W. A.

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Bluebook (online)
28 La. Ann. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bower-v-johnson-la-1876.