COTTON STATES CHEM. CO., INC. v. Larrison Enterprises, Inc.

342 So. 2d 1212
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 14, 1977
Docket13142
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 342 So. 2d 1212 (COTTON STATES CHEM. CO., INC. v. Larrison Enterprises, Inc.) 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
COTTON STATES CHEM. CO., INC. v. Larrison Enterprises, Inc., 342 So. 2d 1212 (La. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

342 So.2d 1212 (1977)

COTTON STATES CHEMICAL CO., INC, Plaintiff,
v.
LARRISON ENTERPRISES, INC., Defendant-Third-Party Plaintiff-Plaintiff in Reconvention-Appellant,
v.
STAUFFER CHEMICAL CO., Third-Party Defendant-Defendant in Reconvention-Appellee.

No. 13142.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

February 14, 1977.

*1213 Voelker, Ragland, Brackin & Crigler by Frank Voelker, Jr., Lake Providence, for defendant-plaintiff in reconvention-third party plaintiff-appellant, Larrison Enterprises, Inc.

Sanders, Downing, Kean & Cazedessus by William R. D'Armond, Baton Rouge, for third party defendant-defendant in reconvention-appellee, Stauffer Chemical Co.

Before BOLIN, HALL and MARVIN, JJ.

MARVIN, Judge.

A purchaser was sued on an open account by a seller. The purchaser then brought against the manufacturer of the product sold, third party and reconventional demands, founded upon the implied warranty imposed on the manufacturer by the Civil Code and the case law of Louisiana. These demands were dismissed below on an exception of one-year liberative prescription. The purchaser appeals. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

The purchaser here did not contract with the manufacturer, but purchased from the seller upon representations of a distributor (other than the manufacturer) of the product (a liquid herbicide). Application of the herbicide to the purchaser's rice fields failed to produce the result allegedly represented and the purchaser claims damages for a diminished crop yield. The sale of the herbicide and the alleged failure of the result of its application occurred more than one year before this litigation arose.

Essentially, the purchaser seeks to place the manufacturer in the category of a seller who has practiced a fraud upon the buyer as contemplated by C.C. Art. 2547. This article reads in part:

"A declaration made by the seller, that the thing sold possesses some quality which he knows it does not possess, comes within the definition of fraud . . ."

The purchaser argues that the manufacturer should be placed in this category because he is legally a "bad faith seller," conclusively presumed to know the vices of the thing he makes.

With the manufacturer in the category of the seller, the argument continues, the purchaser may assert the nullity of the contract induced by fraud within the five-year liberative prescriptive period provided by C.C. Art. 3542 and may also claim damages under C.C. Art. 2547. The purchaser's astute and able counsel does not stop here, but further contends that the manufacturer "breached a special obligation contractually assumed . . ."[1] and ". . . in addition to having . . . the five year right to sue for rescission . . . [the purchaser] may very well have the ten year right to assert the breach of a special obligation." (C.C. Art. 3544). Counsel's effort to overcome the one-year prescriptive limitation is commendably ingenious, but in our opinion, paralogistic.

*1214 The rice farmer-purchaser is Larrison Enterprises, Inc. Seller is original plaintiff, Cotton States Chemical Company, Inc. Manufacturer is Stauffer Chemical Company. The herbicide is liquid Ordram. A distributor of liquid Ordram is Tide Products, Inc. Corporate designations are hereafter omitted.

The pertinent allegations of Larrison are these: Prior to June, 1973, Larrison made periodic applications during the crop year of solid Ordram in pellet form to control the growth of grass in its rice fields. On June 22, 1973, employees of the distributor represented to Larrison that liquid Ordram could be applied aerially and less frequently with similar results. Larrison purchased a quantity of liquid Ordram and used it in the suggested manner. Larrison later learned after the grass got out of control that much of liquid Ordram, when aerially sprayed, does not reach the water or soil where it is necessary for the herbicide to contract in sufficient concentration, the root growth of grass seedlings.

The diminished crop yield was caused by the representation that liquid Ordram applied aerially would successfully deter grass growth. The petition alleges in detail factual representations of employees of Tide Products to Larrison. The record (pleadings, interrogatories and answers) does not reflect any suggestion that Stauffer made any representations directly to Larrison. The petition does allege, but as a general conclusion in our opinion, that misrepresentations were made by representatives of Cotton States, Tide Products and Stauffer.[2] Larrison's factual allegations relate primarily to liquid Ordram being ineffective when aerially applied in the manner suggested by the distributor's employees. Larrison's allegations also establish it was a Cotton States representative who told Larrison that the aerial application of liquid Ordram was not effective.

Similar contentions were made in Steely v. Gerber Products Company, 299 So.2d 529 (La.App.4th Cir. 1974). Plaintiff there argued that the manufacturer of baby food, under its "obligation of warranty" of wholesomeness, was not subject to the one-year prescriptive limitation for redhibition or tort, but to the ten-year prescription applicable to quasi-contract. C.C. Art. 2293. Plaintiff there relied on Le Blanc v. Louisiana Coca Cola Bottling Company, 221 La. 919, 60 So.2d 873, 875 (1952). The court answered:

"Le Blanc's `warranty' is not an obligation but a representation, since it is a warranty one `is entitled to rely on', 60 So.2d at 875. Le Blanc does not support plaintiff's quasi-contract theory." 299 So.2d 530.

C.C. Art. 2529 reads in part, that ". . . a declaration [or representation] made in good faith by the seller, that the thing sold has some quality which it is found not to have, gives rise to a redhibition. . ." Every false representation does not fall into the category of fraud.

C.C. Art. 1847 tells us that fraud, when applied to contracts, is a material error, ". . . created or continued by artifice, with design to obtain some unjust advantages . . ." This is the fraud contemplated by C.C. Art. 2547 ("A declaration made by the seller, that the thing sold possesses some quality which he knows it does not possess . . ."). The essence of fraud is an intent or design in the mind of the one practicing the artified to defraud another or to gain some unjust advantage. Buxton v. McKendrick, 223 La. 62, 64 So.2d 844 (1953).

In the sale of any product, the implicit or explicit representation or declaration is made that the product possesses the requisite fitness or wholesomeness for the purpose it is marketed. An action for damages, whether arising from redhibitory vices (Art. 2534, Art. 2546), or arising from an offense or quasi-offense (Art. 3536), must be brought in one year. Stelly, supra, *1215 at page 532. Even in cases where the seller (and the manufacturer, by presumption) had knowledge of the redhibitory defect but failed to declare it, the consumer must bring his action within one year following his discovery of the defect. Rey v. Cuccia, 298 So.2d 840 (La.1974).

Walton v. Katz & Besthoff, Inc., 77 So.2d 563 (La.App.1955), presented express warranties in advertisements and in verbal declarations that the seller's paint was 100 percent mildew resistant. The paint proved ineffective. The court applied the one-year prescriptive limitation to a purchaser's claim for damages.

"Ordinarily, . . .

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Bluebook (online)
342 So. 2d 1212, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotton-states-chem-co-inc-v-larrison-enterprises-inc-lactapp-1977.