Continental Supply Co. v. Browder

124 So. 580, 11 La. App. 631, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 292
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1929
DocketNo. 3408
StatusPublished

This text of 124 So. 580 (Continental Supply Co. v. Browder) 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
Continental Supply Co. v. Browder, 124 So. 580, 11 La. App. 631, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 292 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

By this suit plaintiff seeks to recover of the defendant $200 balance due on a promissory note, dated May 16, 1927, together with attorney’s fees and interest, and the sum of $250, alleged to be due for storage on a drilling rig, at $25 per month, this being the amount of storage due up to the date of filing of this suit, and for the further sum of $25 per month, as storage on said rig for such additional time as the rig may be stored with plaintiff.

Defendant answered admitting the execution of the note and admitting further that it was due plaintiff the sum of $225 storage on the drilling rig; but specially denied its liability to plaintiff in any sum whatsoever for the reasons and causes set up in a suit which he had previously instituted against this plaintiff in which it was alleged that plaintiff was due him a large sum as damages for its unlawful detention of the drilling rig; and set up specifically that plaintiff had unlawfully caused on several occasions the drilling rig to be seized and advertised for .sale and had unlawfully and without right repeatedly refused to deliver the drilling rig, to him, notwithstanding he had offered to pay plaintiff whatever amount he was due on the rig as storage. In an amended and supplemental answer, defendant, in reconvention, asked for judgment against plaintiff in a large sum.

There was judgment in the district court rejecting plaintiff’s demands and in favor of defendant on his reconventional demand in the sum of $400; from this judgment, both plaintiff and defendant have appealed.

As the pleadings and issues in this case are somewhat involved, it is necessary . to give a brief history of this controversy:

On July 1, 1926, John L. Anderson, who owned the drilling rig over which this litigation arises, placed the same in the warehouse belonging to the plaintiff company for storage at an agreed monthly rental of $50. Anderson failed to pay the monthly rentals and on March 26, 1927, the plaintiff company obtained judgment against him by default for the sum of $450.

On April 16, thereafter, the plaintiff company had the drilling rig seized under a writ of fieri facias and advertised for sale. However, before the date of sale, the present defendant, J. R. Browder, having previously purchased the rig from Anderson, entered into an agreement with the plaintiff company, evidenced by a document •which reads as follows:

“May 16th, 1927.
“Mr. J. R. Browder,
“Shreveport, La.
“Dear Sir:
“Confirming agreement of this date, in connection with our judgment against Jno. L. Anderson, covering rental on a Rotary Drilling Rig now located in our yard on the Mansfield road, we agree to a compromise total, including attorney fees and court costs, of $600.00 up to June 1st, 1927. If the rig remains on this location after that date, you are to pay us at the rate of $25.00 per month, rental in advance.
“Payment is to be as follows:
“$300.00 cash as represented by American National Bank Cashier’s check #69325, of this date.
“$300.00 on June 15th, 1927, represented by promissory note of this date.
[633]*633“It is further agreed that, at your request, we will assign to you our judgment against Anderson, on payment of the above described note.
“Yours very truly,
“THE CONTINENTAL SUPPLY CO.
“H. C. Elder
“District Manager.”

On making this agreement with Browder, the plaintiff company ordered the sale discontinued and had the property released from seizure. The defendant, Browder, failed to pay the note of $300 when due and the plaintiff company again had the drilling rig seized and advertised for sale under an alias fi. fa. But, before the date of the sale, it seems that Anderson, as the agent of Browder, paid to the plaintiff company the sum of $100 on the note and the plaintiff again discontinued the sale and ordered the property released.

After considerable delay and without having received further payment on the amount due, the plaintiff company again had the property seized and advertised for sale. The property, having been appraised at something over $3,000, and the sheriff, having failed to receive a bid equal to two-thirds of the appraisement, had the property re-advertised to be sold for what it would bring, on twelve months’ bond, and W. Y. Lunn became, the purchaser at $1,000. However, previous to the date on which the property was to be sold, J. L. Anderson made affidavit that the property under seizure belonged to the defendant, J. R. Browder, which affidavit was filed with the sheriff. Lunn, after having bid the property in, declined to accept title thereto on account of this affidavit, and the sheriff, according to his returns, returned the writ to the clerk’s office and released the property from seizure. But, between the date on which Lunn bid the property in and the date oh which the sheriff made his return, the plaintiff company ruled Anderson, Browder and Lunn to show cause why the sale should not be perfected and the amount of the bid paid into court. The rule against Anderson and Browder was dismissed by the court on some technical ground, but the rule as to Lunn has not been disposed of.

It will be noted that the plaintiff company by having the drilling rig seized under the various writs was proceeding all along upon the theory that it owned the judgment obtained against John L. Anderson in 1926, which judgment recognized plaintiff’s privilege as warehouseman on the property in its possession. It is contended by counsel for defendant, as we understand it, that the transaction which took place between Browder and the plaintiff company on May 16, 1927, as evidenced by the document copied above, was a novation of the debt evidenced by the judgment and that the judgment was in effect paid, and that plaintiff’s subsequent seizures of the property under said judgment were illegal. The judge of the district court found and held that the above q/uoted document did not evidence a sale of the judgment, but only a promise to sell. We do not find it necessary to pass upon the question as to whether the document evidences a sale of the judgment or whether it was merely an agreement to sell, because we find that the parties themselves seem to have understood that it was merely an agreement to sell and that plaintiff still had a right to execute the judgment. This is evidenced by the fact that subsequent to the date on which that agreement was entered into, the plaintiff again seized the drilling rig, and defendant, either personally or through- his agent, Anderson, came in and paid $100 on the note and secured the release of the property from seizure. [634]*634So both plaintiff and defendant seem to have understood that plaintiff was still entitled to execute on that judgment. That being true, it cannot be said that the seizures which, plaintiff caused to be made of this machinery in an effort to collect its debt were unlawful.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 580, 11 La. App. 631, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-supply-co-v-browder-lactapp-1929.