Brown v. Duplantier

1 Mart. (N.S.) 312
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1823
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Mart. (N.S.) 312 (Brown v. Duplantier) 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
Brown v. Duplantier, 1 Mart. (N.S.) 312 (La. 1823).

Opinion

Martin, J.

delivered the opinion of the court. The plaintiffs allege they purchased from the defendant several bales of cotton, and particularly thirty-three bales, numbered from 107 to 139, weighing 11,829 pounds, as good and merchantable, and equal in quality to the portion of said cotton on the exterior parts of said bales; whereas, in fact, they were plated with a thin plating of good cotton, while the interior parts were filled with blue and inferior cotton, a deception that could not be discovered by the plaintiffs or their agents, at the time of the sale.

[313]*313There is an averment that the exterior cotton was worth in Liverpool, the port to which the bales were shipped, 11 3-4d sterl. per pound, while the interior was only worth 9d. 2 farthings; so that, if the whole cotton had been equal to the sample shown, which was of the kind in the exterior of the bales, it would have been sold in Liverpool for £555, 17s 10d. sterling, or §2470 50 cents; while it only sold for £490, 12s. 2d. or $2220. They paid 14 cents per pound for said cotton to the defendant, while, had they not been deceived, they would not have paid more than 11 cents.

The defendant pleaded the general issue.

There was judgment for the defendant, the district court being of opinion, that “as the plaintiffs had parted with the cotton before the institution of the suit, they thereby lost their right to the action quanti minoris.” The judgment refers generally to the Civil Code. The plaintiffs appealed.

The testimony, taken in Liverpool, fully establishes the unfair packing; but the overseer of the defendant testified, that all the crop was ginned and packed under his immediate inspection, and no fraud was committed.

[314]*314The appellants’ counsel urges, that

1. The latent defect in the bales, left to the plaintiffs the choice of insisting on a rescision of the sale, on return of the cotton, or of requiring a reduction of the price. Civil Code, 356, art. 67, 68, 70. Casaregis, 176, n. 1-10. Cur. Phil. Commer. Terr. 1, 13, n. 8, 29.

2. The right of demanding a reduction is not destroyed or affected by the sale, Cur. Phil. id. c. 13, n. 27. D. 21, 1, 46.

3. Prescription was not, and must be, pleaded, 10 Martin, 184.

The appellee’s counsel insists, that

1. This case must be determined according to the law merchant, and according to the Civil Code. 2 Martin, 326, 462. 4 id. 92. 12 id. 498, 500. Civil Code, 260, art 7.

2. The action cannot be maintained, as there is no allegation of fraud, or a warranty, 12 Johnson.

3. The plaintiffs were bound to have instituted their action, within six months from the discovery of the defect. Civil Code 358, art. 75. 11 Martin, 11, 16.

4. The sale of the cotton before the institution of the suit, while a loss on the sale is nei[315]*315ther alleged nor proved, prevents the plaintiffs’ recovery, Civil Code, 356, art. 70.

5. The plea of prescription is not necessary, as the plaintiffs put the time of the discovery of the defect in issue, by one of the facts, he submitted to the jury.

6. As the suit was not instituted till six months after the sale, an averment of the discovery within that time was essential, and the absence of it dispenses with the plea of prescription. Id. 358, art. 75.

I. It is incorrect to say, as a general principle, that the provisions of the Civil Code are inapplicable to commercial transactions. It is true indeed that the rules peculiar to commercial transactions are established by the laws relating to commerce, Civil Code, 260, art. 170, art. 7; but it does not follow from these rules, that a great many of the provisions of the Code are not common to commercial and other transactions.

It was the evident intention of the makers of the Code, that its provisions relating to the contract of sale, should regulate commercial sales as well as others. They speak of the sale of goods, merchandise, produce or other [316]*316objects; when we are referred to the laws relating to commerce, it is only in regard to provisions peculiar to commercial transactions.

Now the obligation of a seller to explain himself clearly, to deliver the thing sold, and to warrant it to a certain extent, are equally applicable to commercial as to other sales. This court has held so in a variety of cases, as to the delivery of cotton or other merchandise, between merchants.

A planter who sells his produce to a merchant, is bound to act with that good faith, which he might insist upon in the purchase of a slave from one of his neighbors.

He has a right to require a declaration of the hidden defects of the negro, and may demand damages, if he was imposed upon. So he is bound to indemnify the merchant, to whom he sells his cotton, if his agent (even without his knowledge) have plated it, or placed a heap of cotton seed or other trash in the middle of the bale, as he would himself require indemnification, from a goldsmith, who would sell him a vase as wholly of the precious metal, if any part of it was of a baser one.

II. When once the apparent defect is esta[317]*317blished, the remedy is independent from the existence of fraud, or a special warranty or the vendor’s knowledge; for it is clear, that the price of a vessel of one of the precious metals would not be given, had it been known that the vessel purchased was not wholly, but partially so, only of pure meta, Id. 356, art. 67—69.

III. The sale of the thing may be objected to a plaintiff who seeks a rescision; for he cannot demand the whole price paid, while he has disabled himself from returning the thing; otherwise when a diminution of the price only is sought for.

IV. Every period within which a party must or is directed to institute his action, is established for the benefit of the defendant, who is conscientiously bound not to avail himself unrighteously, of this legal advantage provided for him. It is his duty to abstain from the use of it, while his just defence does not require it. When, therefore, a defendant answers the plaintiff’s petition, without urging that the suit was not brought within the time fixed by law, the court is bound to conclude that the defendant, yielding to the obligations of morality, [318]*318declines a legal advantage, which justice reproves.

The prayer of the petition is for damages, to indemnify the plaintiff, for the injury sustained, by a return of part of the price; and we think the district court erred in concluding that the plaintiffs lost their right of action, by disposing of the cotton. Whether a vendor, who has a deceit practised on him in the sale, gain or lose by the subsequent sale of the thing, his right to the action quanti minoris remains perfectly the same. This subsequent sale is his own act: it could not place his vendor in a worse situation; neither do we think it may place him in a better.

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Related

Hill v. Martin
10 Mart. 177 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1822)

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Bluebook (online)
1 Mart. (N.S.) 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-duplantier-la-1823.