Cliff v. Benhard & Clopton

185 So. 673
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 11, 1939
DocketNo. 1936.
StatusPublished

This text of 185 So. 673 (Cliff v. Benhard & Clopton) 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
Cliff v. Benhard & Clopton, 185 So. 673 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

This is a suit instituted by the plaintiff, Will Cliff, against the defendants Benhard and Clopton, an ordinary partnership composed of J. H. Benhard and B. W. Clopton, for a balance of $566.59 alleged to be due by them on a certain job performed by him as a sub-contractor under them in the Atchafalaya Spillway in the Parish of St. Landry. Part of the balance due is on account of certain work which he did directly under the defendants and not under the contract referred to.

He alleges that under his contract he was to “burm”, that is cut and remove trees, stumps and roots to a depth of four inches below the surface of the ground for which he was to be paid at a stipulated price per acre and he also worked for the defendant as a machine-skidder operator by the day and at the time of the completion of his work, on December 18, 1933 there was due him the sum of $566.59, as shown by a statement prepared by the defendants’ bookkeeper at their suggestion, which statement is annexed to his petition. He avers amicable demand without avail.

There is no dispute regarding the work performed by plaintiff both as a sub-contractor and by employment and whilst it is admitted that he was given the statement on which his demand is predicated the defense is that that statement was a true and correct account as far as the items thereon shown are concerned. Defendants aver further, however, that the plaintiff well knew that the statement furnished him only included checks chargeable against him which had been returned by the Bank and were in their possession at the time, but that it did not include checks that were yet out or still at the bank and that plaintiff at the time of filing his suit well knew that the statement failed to show payments made on his account in excess of the amount due him as shown thereon. Defendants annex what they allege to be a complete statement of their account with the plaintiff and which shows that he is indebted unto them in the sum of $48.65. They do not, however, reconvene against him for that amount.

After trial, the lower court rendered judgment in favor of the defendants, dismissing the plaintiff’s suit, and the latter has appealed.

The plaintiff testified that the ’ understanding was when he went to work under the defendants that he would be paid in full once a month; that the defendants themselves were sub-contractors under the Trinity Farm Construction Company and that Benhard’s excuse for not paying him regularly was that the Construction Company did not pay him. He states that after he had completed the work on December 18, 1933 he spoke to Mr. Clopton, who prevailed upon Benhard to have Mr. W. A. Waterbury, who was engaged by them as a bookkeeper in another of their enterprises known as the Palmetto Mercantile Company, make up a statement for *674 him. He says that he secured the statement from Waterbury on that day, that he carried it to Benhard a day or two later and that Benhard gave him a check in the sum of $125 on' account of the balance due as shown on the statement, which check for some reason or other was unpaid but was substituted by another which was paid in January, 1934. He also states that at that time he informed Benhard that he owed an account of $108 to a store in Port Barre and that Benhard went personally- with him to this store and told the manager, a Mr. Resweber, that he (plaintiff) had plenty money coming to him, and later on wrote a letter to Mr. Resweber again_indicating .that Cliff’s bill would be taken care of but that they had not yet received a settlement from the Trinity Farm Construction Company for the work he had done. Plaintiff testified that at that time neither Benhard nor Waterbury said or did anything which gave him any reason to believe that the statement was subject to any correction or amendment and that his own bookkeeper at that time, a Mr. V/illiams, looked over the statement and expressed the opinion that it-was substantially correct. He admits, however, that on a certain occasion after that Benhard told him that there were outstanding checks which hadn’t come back from the bank when Mr. Waterbury made up the statement.

Mr. Waterbury’s testimony is to the effect that on or about December 18, 1933 he was asked by plaintiff and Mr. Benhard to make out a statement of the plaintiff’s account and he at that time prepared the statement on which the demand is predicated. As already stated Waterbury was bookkeeper for another business enterprise of the defendants and as we understand his testimony did not keep books for the partnership doing work on the spillway contract. He states that he obtained the figures for making the statement from the ledger account on the books of the Palmetto Mercantile Company, from a list of personal checks of J. H. Benhard, from the estimates of the engineer in charge of the spillway work and from accounts for groceries and tobacco kept by the plaintiff. The statement showed a balance in favor of the plaintiff amounting to $691.59 against which there was a subsequent payment as shown by the check in the sum of $125, leaving the new balance of $566.59, the amount sued on. He testifies as a witness for the plaintiff that at the time he completed the statement he was informed by Benhard that it was subject to revision on account of other checks he had written and which were to be charged to the plaintiff and which he did not have in his possession at the time.

Mr. A. E. Resweber, who also testified as a witness for the plaintiff, corroborated the latter’s testimony with regard to Ben-hard’s visit and conversation with him at his store. He also confirms that part regarding the letter written to him by Benhard which had been misplaced, but he produced what he says was an exact copy thereof made for him by Mr. Leon Haas, Jr., who at that time was the plaintiff’s attorney.

It would seem therefore from the testimony so far discussed, that at the time the statement was made plaintiff was convinced that he had the balance shown thereon coming to him and that Benhard felt that he still owed at least a considerable amount of that balance to the plaintiff, and whilst he and Waterbury both knew that the balance was subject to some further charges neither had any accurate idea of what the amount was. The plaintiff, an uneducated man who only signs his name mechanically, appears to have relied entirely on what was told him by Benhard, Waterbury and his own bookkeeper Williams, whom it seems he was unable to locate and produce as a witness, and from such information he became convinced that the amount shown on the statement was the true balance coming to him. Benhard on the other hand appears to have had many irons in the fire at the same time as he and his partner owned and operated the Palmetto Mercantile Company and a moss gin business, besides this spillway job on which were employed some two hundred men. It appears also that this last job was not as profitable as it might have been and consequently he had to draw at times on funds from some of his other accounts in order to meet his expenses in connection with it. It appears also that by reason of his being away on the job most of the time he gave very little personal attention to his accounts, and especially was delayed in checking up on his bank statements. The bookkeeper, Waterbury, explains that he had no personal knowledge of any checks issued, except those issued on the Palmetto Mercantile Company and charged to the account of Benhard and Clopton.

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Bluebook (online)
185 So. 673, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cliff-v-benhard-clopton-lactapp-1939.