C. v. Hill & Co. v. Interstate Electric Co. of Shreveport

196 So. 396, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 78
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1940
DocketNo. 6008.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 196 So. 396 (C. v. Hill & Co. v. Interstate Electric Co. of Shreveport) 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
C. v. Hill & Co. v. Interstate Electric Co. of Shreveport, 196 So. 396, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 78 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Beginning in January, 1937, plaintiff had an arrangement with defendant whereby it shipped to defendant for sale certain goods *398 owned by plaintiff, consisting of refrigerators, show cases, meat counters, etc., to be used for industrial purposes. It was agreed that whenever defendant sold any of the goods or wares that it would pay plaintiff the agreed net price within ten days, subject to the usual discount. None of the goods or wares were to be paid for until sold by defendant.

The above arrangement continued until about August 15, 1937, at which time for reasons unexplained plaintiff substituted as its agent or factor one Harrelson, operating under the trade-name of Acme Refrigerating Company of Shreveport, Louisiana. At the time the change was made, defendant had in its possession a quantity of goods and wares which had been shipped to it by the plaintiff, all of which was delivered to Harrelson at the request of plaintiff. '

Almost all of plaintiff’s products required motors and other additional equipment when installed in order to become a completed unit. It was Harrelson’s custom to secure the motors and other equipment from defendant and to make a price on an object as completed and installed. In most instances the total price was paid partly, in cash and the remainder in notes secured by chattel mortgage.

A representative of plaintiff, together with Harrelson, made arrangements with the Commercial Credit Company, a • credit institution, to finance such sales, if the Credit Company approved them, and to send the entire amount to plaintiff which would deduct its own price and remit the balance to Harrelson, or whoever he directed. The first sale made by Harrelson was not approved by the Commercial Credit Company. They therefore refused to finance the deal. Harrelson then interviewed defendant, who had agreed to furnish the motors and other equipment necessary to complete the units, and a representative of defendant, together with Harrelson, secured the Motor Finance Company, another credit institution, to finance the sale, but only upon both Harrelson and defendant endorsing the notes. All of the funds were paid over to defendant. It deducted the price due for its products, consisting of motors, etc., which were to be put into the job, and credited Harrelson with the remainder. All sales made thereafter by Harrelson were handled in the same manner.

After four such deals were so handled, plaintiff made a demand on defendant for the net price of its equipment involved therein, consisting of goods formerly consigned to Harrelson, amounting to $2,169. After repeated demands by telephone and otherwise, defendant, on November 29, 1937, forwarded its check to plaintiff to cover the amount claimed.

Besides the first four deals above spoken of, there were two other deals made which form the basis of this suit. They were with two men named Viso and Caldwell. The Viso deal was completed October 6, 1937, and the Caldwell deal on January 29, 1938. Both were handled by the Motors Finance Company and all funds paid to defendant. Plaintiff demanded of defendant that it be paid the price of its property which went into the deals, amounting to $1,649.89. Payment was refused and this suit followed.

Plaintiff contends that its goods were in Harrelson’s possession on consignment and that title was- in plaintiff, and that defendant had full knowledge of this fact and that Harrelson was only an agent of plaintiff; that there was an agreement between Har-rcLon and defendant that defendant would retain out of the proceeds of each sale the price of Its electric motors and other parts furnished, as well as plaintiff’s part of the sale, which part it would remit directly to the petitioner and would credit Plarrelson’s account with the balance; that the arrangement was advantageous to defendant in that it constituted an outlet for the sale of its electric motors and other devices necessary to complete a job; that defendant well knew that any funds which came into Har-relson’s hands by virtue of a sale of this consigned equipment did so as an agent of plaintiff and that he was charged with the trust of transmitting it directly to plaintiff. It further alleged that defendant knew that plaintiff’s goods to the value claimed here were included in the Viso and Caldwell jobs.

Defendant denied there existed between it and plaintiff, prior to August 15, 1937, any consignment status or that it was the agent of plaintiff at that time. It denied that plaintiff’s merchandise was in possession of Harrelson on consignment or that he was plaintiff’s agent. It also denied that it had any knowledge of any limitation or lack of title in Harrelson. It contends that it dealt with Harrelson as owner of the goods and denies that it had any agreement with Harrelson to remit to plaintiff for the price of its goods.

*399 Defendant also admits that it paid plaintiff for the four jobs sold prior to the two involved here, but that it paid out of funds belonging to Harrelson and at his direction or request.

The lower court rejected the demands of plaintiff and it is now prosecuting this appeal.

It is argued in this court that the character of the transaction involved did not constitute a consignment of merchandise in the true sense, but was in the nature of “sale or return” in which title passes at once to the buyer. Defendant further contends here that if this contention is correct, further discussion of the case is unnecessary. We will "therefore pass on and dispose of this question first.

Sections 592 and 593, Corpus Jur-is, Volume 55, deals with the subject in the following language:

“Sale or Return. A sale or return, or a contract of sale or return, is in the nature of a sale with an option to return, or a sale on condition subsequent. It is to be distinguished from an option to purchase, a sale on trial or approval, and a bailment. Where property is delivered under a contract of sale or return, the title passes at once to the buyer in a majority of jurisdictions, unless it appears that the intention is that the title shall remain in the seller, as where payment of the price is made a condition precedent to the passing of title; •and while the title of the buyer will be divested by a timely exercise of the option to ■return, it remains in him less, and until, he ■exercises the option and returns or redelivers the property to the. seller. However, under the statutes of a few jurisdictions, and the construction placed thereon, the title passes at the same time as in the ■case of a sale on approval, namely, when the buyer signifies his approval or acceptance to the seller, or does any other act ■adopting the transaction, unless a different intention appears.
“Consignment for Sale. Ordinarily where ■goods are consigned by one person to another for sale by the latter, the title thereto remains in the consignor; but whether the consignee is to be considered as a buyer or agent depends on the intention of the parties, and on the real nature of the transaction rather than the language which the parties may have employed.

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Bluebook (online)
196 So. 396, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-v-hill-co-v-interstate-electric-co-of-shreveport-lactapp-1940.