Chaffraix v. Price, Hine & Tupper

29 La. Ann. 176
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1877
DocketNo. 4691
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 29 La. Ann. 176 (Chaffraix v. Price, Hine & Tupper) 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
Chaffraix v. Price, Hine & Tupper, 29 La. Ann. 176 (La. 1877).

Opinions

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Morgan, J.

On .the twenty-eighth of December, 1872, plaintiffs brought this suit against the defendants, Price, Hiñe & Tupper, alleging that on [177]*177tho-clay of December they sold to defendants seven hundred and eighty barrels of molasses, for the price of $19,170, payable cash on deliver}'; that tho delivery of the molasses, or a portion thereof, had been made within five days prior to the institution of their suit, and that they have a special lion and privilege on tho molasses, and that they fear the defendants will part with or dispose of it pending their suit. They prayed for a sequestration of the molasses; that Price, Hir.e & Tupper bo cited to answer their petition, and that they have judgment against them for $19,170, with special vendor’s hen and privilege on the molasses for the payment thereof. The writ issued as prayed for.

On the fourth of January following, and before issue joined, plaintiffs filed a supplemental petition, in which they alleged that, through misapprehension of counsel, it was incorrectly stated that tho delivery of the molasses, or a part thereof, had been made “ within tho last five days,” and they averred that none of the molasses in qücslion was ever delivered to the defendants. They allege that in some manner, to them unknown, the defendants, without their (the plaintiffs’) knowledge or consent, procured warehouse receipts to bo issued by the New Orleans Sugar Shed Company, and by one Kodd, for a considerable portion of the molasses, which had been removed from the levee by the wharfinger of the city because it was there in contravention of city ordinances, and placed in the charge of the said company and the said Bodd, and that as to the remainder of the molasses, for which warehouse receipts were not procured, the defendants took possession thereof without plaintiffs’ consent or authority.

On the sixth of January Price, Hine & Tupper answered. They disclaimed any ownership of or interest in the property sequestered. They averred that, long prior to tho sequestration, the molasses had been sold and delivered to Morton, Bliss & Oo., and by them paid for, through their agents, J. B. Lafitte & Oo. They prayed that Morton, Bliss & Oo. be notified of these proceedings and cited, and that they, Price, Hine & Tupper, bo dismissed.

On the seventh of January Morton, Bliss & Oo. intervened. They claim to be the owners of the sequestered molasses, and aver that they were in possession thereof when tho sequestration issued, through their agents, J. B. Lafitte & Co. <

On the thirty-first of January plaintiffs answered the intervention. In this answer they aver that Price, Hine & Tupper, J. B. Lafitte & Oo., and Morton, Bliss & Oo. were, at the date of the sale mentioned in their original petition, commercial partners, dealing in molasses on joint account; that the molasses sold by them to Price, Hino-& Tupper was for account of this commercial partnership; that Morton, Bliss & Oo. are liable, in solido, with Price, Hine & Tupper and J. B. Lafitte & Co. toward them for [178]*178the price thereof; that no delivery of the molasses was ever made by them (plaintiffs). And in this regard they substantially reiterate the allegations contained in their supplemental petition, from which we have already sufficiently drawn. They reconvene on Morton, Bliss & Co., and pray for judgment against them, in solido, for the full amount of the purchase price of the molasses.

Were Morton, Bliss & Co. commercial partners of Price, Hiño & Tupper in December, 1872, and, as such, responsible for their commercial obligations toward Chaffraix & Agar in regard to the molasses purchased from them ?

On the twenty-sixth of October, 1872, J. B. Lafitte & Co. wrote from New Orleans to Morton, Bliss & Co., at New York, the following letter:

“We have been speaking for some months past with Messrs. Price, Hiñe & Tuppor about prime and choice molasses, and we would call your attention to the inclosed letter from their Mr. Tupper.

“ Messrs. T. Tupper & Sons (father and brothers of the writer of the inclosed) were for nearly thirty years large receivers of sugar and molasses direct from the plantations of this State, and the writer recollects that Mr. Tupper mentioned, some four or five years since, that he had never known New Orleans molasses bought in December to fail to pay a handsome profit. The only grades to.operate on are prime and above, as there is no loss from leakage, and those grades never ferment. The quantity produced of those grades during the two last seasons has been about forty thousand barrels each year. The advance has nbt been stimulated in any year by any attempt to control prices by buying up largely by one or two parties, but has been the natural result of the course of trade. Wo think by controlling one-half of the whole product an additional advance might be secured. '

“ Messrs. Price, Hiñe & Tupper stand very"well in every respect, and are quite familiar with all the details of the business, as they have made sugar and molasses their specialty for a great many years.

“The proposition is to ship part of our purchases to New York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Charleston, and hold a part, say one-half, here. They can raise a portion of the amount needed, but as money is stringent here it would be impossible to carry so large a quantity in that way. If you will furnish the capital, we propose to allow you one-half of the profits upon the whole transaction, including the shipments as well as the portion held hero. Wo would, of course, hold the warehouse receipts and keep it fully covered by insurance. The total amount needed would not exceed one hundred and fifty thousand dollars, if so much, and the greater portion would probably be needed for less than thirty days, and the whole transaction would certainly be closed within sixty or ninety days. We have been considering this matter ever since the writoi’s ro[179]*179turn, and we feel fully convinced that it will pay a very handsome profit upon the investment.

“ Please inform us as soon as possible if you are disposed to take hold •of the matter.”

The letter which Lafitte & Co. inclosed t<? Morton, Bliss & Co. was a letter directed by Tupper to Lafitte & Co., and refers in no manner to Morton, Bliss & Co. It appears, however, from the testimony of Hine, a witness for Morton, Bliss & Co., that negotiations had been pending between all the parties during the summer (Mr. Tupper representing Price, Hine & Tupper) in New York, the negotiations to be consummated by Mr. Lafitte in New Orleans.

To the letter from Lafitte Morton, Bliss & Co. answered by telegraph: “ Consult French fully when you see him in- regard to proposed molasses operation.” French was an agent of Morton, Bliss & Co.

From the testimony of Hine and from the foregoing correspondence it results, we think, that a project had been started between Morton, Bliss & Co., Lafitte & Co., and Price, Hine & Tupper by which the parties were to operate in molasses here, the arrangements to be consummated by Lafitte. Their plans were arranged by Lafitte, as he tells us in his testimony, and the agreement and mode by which it was to be carried out is explained by him as follows:

“ Price, Hine & Tupper wore to buy the molasses in their own name. We (J. B.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 La. Ann. 176, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chaffraix-v-price-hine-tupper-la-1877.