Bujac v. Williamson

22 La. Ann. 538
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJuly 15, 1870
DocketNo. 147
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 22 La. Ann. 538 (Bujac v. Williamson) 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
Bujac v. Williamson, 22 La. Ann. 538 (La. 1870).

Opinion

Taliaferro, J.

The plaintiffs sue on a promissory note executed in their favor by the defendant for the sum of $3800, dated March 2,1867, due September 1, the same year, and stipulating interest at eight per cent, per annum from date, and $3 75 cost of protest. The defendant’s .answer avers failure of consideration for which the note was given, [539]*539arising ,from, fraudulent practices and misrepresentations of M. J. Bujac, one of the plaintiffs. In an amended answer the defendant sets out more specifically the acts and misrepresentations complained of. The case was-put before a jury and a verdict in favor of the defendant was returned. The judgment was rendered accordingly, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

It seems that in January, 1866, a company was organized at Shreveport for the purpose of manufacturing ice. The defendant took stock to the amount of $1000, which was afterwards increased to $5000. The plaintiffs appear to have encouraged and promoted the undertaking. They furnished the machines and appliances necessary in the manufacturing of ice. They procured for the company engineers and persons skilled iu the working- of the machines necessary in the process of ice making, and liad such repairs made as were required to be done in New Orleans. Early in March they sold a machine to the company, and in July following another. ■ In September, 1866, the company amended their charter and increased their stock. After this the company purchased the patent for ice making in Harrison and Marion counties, Texas.

The enterprise proved to be a failure. Operations it appears were continued during the years 1866 and 1867 at intervals, under the management of the company. In 1868, during part of the year, the ice works were leased out. Subsequently, during the same year, the company was' dissolved and its assets sold by the sheriff. The consideration of the note sued on was thirty-eight shares of the stock of the company.

The defendant avers that he was induced to embark in the undertaking by the representations of the plaintiff, Bujac, who spoke in. terms of the highest commendation of the machines which he induced the company to purchase, by stating that they were in successful operation in Europe, where ice was made by them at a profit even when it was sold at a cent per pound. That the machines were capable, each, of producing four thousand pounds of ice per day of twenty-four hours. That the machines were new or at least had been but little used.

The defendant avers that being entirely unacquainted with the new business he was about to engage in he relied upon the statements of Bujac, in regard to the character and capacity of the machines, which were purchased upon his advice. That the plaintiffs held out to him that the large dividends to be divided by the company could b.e applied to the payment of the note sued upon. That the value of the stock depended upon the efficiency of the machinery.

The defendant shows that Bujac was very urgent that the company-should buy the second machine and the patent right for the counties of Marion and Harrison, in Texas, representing that he could sell to Dther parties, and recommended that the company should purchase.

[540]*540The defendant alleges that none of these representations were true. He charges that the machines were old and to a great extent worthless. That worked to their greatest capacity and by skillful men, they fell far short of making four thousand pounds of ice, each, per day. That frequent and costly repairs were necessary, and that the making of these repairs necessarily .produced injurious delays in business. He states in his own testimony that as president of the company ho endeavored to sell the patent right for the two counties in Texas, but failed to receive an offer, after giving publicity to the proposition by advertisement and otherwise, and after great efforts to make the sale.

We find in the record several bills of exceptions. The first is to the admission of the amended answer of the defendant on the ground,

First — That it came too late, being dilatory in its character.

Second, — That it changes the issue, setting up new facts, and takes plaintiffs by surprise.

Third — That the allegations of the amended answer are irrelevant to the issue.

The objections were overruled by the judge a quo for the reason that the amended answer merely particularized the fraudulent practices and misrepresentations charged in the original answer, and that this might be done at any time before the case was set down for trial. We think, from reading the answers of the defendant, that the objections were properly overruled for the reasons stated by the judge. The second and third bills of exceptions were taken by plaintiffs to the admission of evidence on the ground of irrelevancy. We think they were properly overruled.

The fourth was taken by the defendant to the refusal of the court to admit evidence to show that other parties claimed the patent right which Bujac & Girardy professed to own, and that suit had been instituted for infringement of it.

This ruling we think correct, and that the plaintiffs’ objections were properly sustained, for the reason that the testimony was irrelevant, and that there was no allegation in the answer that warranted such proof.

The fifth bill of exceptions was taken by the plaintiffs to the admission of the defendant’s own testimony to show that, before the note sued on was executed, defendant told plaintiffs that he had already invested $5000 in stock, and did not wish to give cash for more until he could be assured of the success of the enterprise, and that' if it proved a failure the defendant should not be bound for the whole, and that the note should not be negotiated. The objection was, that it was the admission of parol testimony to contradict a written obligation. We think the judge a quo properly overruled the objection. The defendant had charged directly fraud, misrepresentation, and general bad faith in the plaintiffs, and error on his own part. The testimony was admissible under these allegations.

[541]*541This is a case presenting mainly questions of fact. The record is voluminous, embracing a great array of testimony, both written and oral, and to a considerable extent the evidence is conflicting. Two of the defendant’s witnesses, Beckwith and Cooper, who were in charge of the works and ran the machines, swear that there were frequent “projections” occurring during.their operations, which caused stoppages of three .or four hours each. By projections they meant the heating of the ammonia too much, causing it in its fluid state to overflow and pass through other portions of the machinery.

Beckwith states that the first machine purchased by the company, designated as the “ Bed ” one, broke down in the. summer of 1866, when there was the greatest demand for ice, and that the company lost the whole of the remainder of that season. The second or “Blade'’ machine, the same witness states, was put up in September, 1866; that he thought it an old one, and that it did not do so well as the old machine. Says the machines did not produce more than two thousand pounds of ice per day. States that Putz instructed him and other employes in the management and manufacture of ice. That the Bed machine appeared to him to be good; when brought to Shreveport it had been recently painted, which gave it the appearance of being new.

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Bluebook (online)
22 La. Ann. 538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bujac-v-williamson-la-1870.