Caldwell v. Laurel Grove Co.

144 So. 718, 175 La. 928, 1932 La. LEXIS 1920
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 31, 1932
DocketNo. 31896.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 144 So. 718 (Caldwell v. Laurel Grove Co.) 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
Caldwell v. Laurel Grove Co., 144 So. 718, 175 La. 928, 1932 La. LEXIS 1920 (La. 1932).

Opinion

ROGERS, J.

The plaintiff foreclosed a mortgage which he held on the Laurel Grove plantation owned by the defendant. Relator intervened in the proceeding, and by third opposition asserted its vendor’s lien on a certain lot of railroad materials sold to defendant, obtaining an order for the separate appraisement and sale of the materials with recognition of its privilege on the proceeds.

The judgment of the'district court was in relator’s favor, recognizing its lien and privilege. This judgment was reversed by the Court of Appeal for the First Circuit. See Caldwell v. Laurel Grove Co., Inc., 140 So. page 68. The case is now before us on a writ of review granted upon the application of the intervener and opponent.

The record reveals that in October, 1926, the defendant Laurel Grove Company, Inc., owner and operator of. the Laurel Grove plantation, purchased from the Morgan’s Louisiana & Texas Railroad & Steamship Company a lot of secondhand rails, switches, and other related railroad supplies for the price of ?1>-851.25, represented by the vendor’s promissory note.

The Laurel Grove Company, Inc., had previously constructed a roadbed for two switch tracks on its plantation by throwing up a dump and placing cross-ties thereon. Upon this completed roadbed the defendant company laid the rails, installed the switches, and placed the other materials bought from the railroad and steamship company.

The roadbed constructed by defendant extended from its sugar refinery to a building used for the storage of bagasse, and the switch tracks laid thereon connected with the railroad line operated by opponent. The total length of the switch tracks was something less than 2,000 feet, and when completed, they were mainly used by the Celotex Company, the purchaser under contract of the bagasse produced by the defendant’s refinery, in hauling the bagasse from the refinery to its baling plant. Prior to the sale of the bagasse to the Celotex Company, the defendant plantation company had used it for fuel at its mill.

The plaintiff, as seizing creditor, urges in opposition to the claim of the opponent railroad company that the switches when completed became by nature and destination part of defendant’s plantation, and that the vendor’s privilege claimed by opponent, if it ever existed, was thereby extinguished.

The following facts, stated by the intervener and third opponent, were accepted as correct by the Court of Appeal, viz.:

“The identity of the property seized with that sold by the railroad company on a credit, was conclusively established. And it was fur *931 ther shown that this property could be removed from the roadbed (ties and dump) very easily and without appreciable cost, as compared with its value. That it was secondhand rail when sold; that it would not be junk if removed from the ties on Laurel Grove Plantation, but would be substantially the same as when it was bought from the railroad company. That the dump or roadbed on which the rail had been placed had been built prior to the purchase of the rail and was a separate and distinct thing. That if the rails were removed from the ties, the plantation would suffer no material injury and that Laurel Grove Plantation would in fact be in identically the same condition after such removal of the rails as it was when the rails and switch material was bought. That the switches were in no sense a necessary part of the plantation, the plantation having operated its sugar house for many years without them and having installed them purely as convenience for a third person who was buying its bagasse.” 140 So. page 69.

In this state the vendor of movables is accorded a privilege for the unpaid price of the property sold, so long as the property remains in the possession of the vendee and can be identified. Oiv. Code, arts. 3227 and 3231.

Relator argues that the rule is applicable even though the movable property be incorporated in immovable property, if the movable property can be reclaimed in substantially the same condition it was when sold and without working material injury to the immovable to which it is attached. Per contra, plaintiff argues that the vendor’s privilege is destroyed whenever the' movable property ceases to be movable property by becoming merged in immovable property. Both parties cite numerous decisions of this court in support of their respective positions.

Relator refers to the following cases, viz.: Lapene & Jacks v. MeCan & Son, 28 La. Ann. 749; Carlin v. Gordy, 32 La. Ann. 1285; Shelly et al. v. Winder, 36 La. Ann. 182; Baldwin v. Young, 47 La. Ann. 1466, 17 So. 883; Walburn-Swenson Co. v. Darrell, 49 La. Ann. 1044, 22 So. 310; Hall et al. v. Hawley & Co., 49 La. Ann. 1046, 22 So. 205; In re Receivership of Augusta Sugar Co., 134 La. 971, 64 So. 870; Pratt E. & M. Co. v. Cecelia Sugar Co., 135 La. 179, 65 So. 100; Succession of Sussman, 168 La. 349, 122 So. 62.

Respondent refers to the following cases, viz.: Swoop v. St. Martin, 110 La. 237, 34 So. 426; Hibernia Bank & Trust Co. v. C. F. Knoll Planting & Mfg. Co., 133 La. 697, 63 So. 288, 294; Milliken & Farwell v. Roger, 138 La. 823, 70 So. 848; Morgan’s Louisiana & T. R. R. & S. S. Co. v. Himalaya Planting & Mfg. Co., 143 La. 460, 78 So. 735.

Lapene & Jacks v. McCan & Son was a case in which McCan & Son obtained judgment against plaintiffs for the unpaid purchase price, with recognition of their vendors’ lien, on four boilers used bn plaintiffs’ plantation. It does not appear from the report of the case whether the claim for the vendors’ privilege was resisted or whether it was admitted as being correct by the parties litigant. The seizure and sale of the boilers under execution was enjoined on the ground, among others, that, being attached to the plaintiffs’ sugar house by bricks and mortar, they were exempt from the vendors’ privilege. Although this court remarked, in its opinion, that the question was settled by the judgment enjoined, it also stated that the judgment did not *933 provide the method of execution. The court found from the evidence that the boilers could he removed without damage to the sugar-house, and therefore held that it was not necessary that the whole property should be sold under a separate appraisement of the boilers.

The case has some pertinence, as showing that, even though it was only by a district court, the vendors’ privilege on the boilers was judicially recognized, and that a movable subject to a vendor’s lien may be detached in the enforcement of the lien from an immovable to which it has been attached by bricks’ and mortar.

Moreover, Justice Wyly filed a concurring opinion in the case, in which he expressed the view that movables attached to a plantation and which could be detached without, damage to the structures in which they are-contained or with which they are connected are subject to the vendor’s privilege, and might be separately sold in enforcing the privilege. Justice Wyly’s view was expressly ap-. proved by this court in Carlin v. Gordy.

Carlin v.

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Bluebook (online)
144 So. 718, 175 La. 928, 1932 La. LEXIS 1920, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-v-laurel-grove-co-la-1932.