Cypress Shingle & Lumber Co. v. Lorio

46 La. Ann. 441
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1894
DocketNo. 11,470
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 46 La. Ann. 441 (Cypress Shingle & Lumber Co. v. Lorio) 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
Cypress Shingle & Lumber Co. v. Lorio, 46 La. Ann. 441 (La. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Nicholls, 0. J.

On 27th September, 1892, the plaintiff fund ¡de[443]*443fendant entered into a contract which recites that “ the defendant is the owner of a certain tract of land with cyress lumber thereon to the amount of five million feet, more or less, and of o her tracts from which he also intends to get timber.” The contract contains the following stipulations: ,

1. Lorio agrees to deaden, cut and haul, on the bank of Bayou Maringouin, there to be measured and docked, then to be rafted and delivered at the mouth of the bayou to the company, lengths of timber of not less than a specified measurement.

2. The company are to measure the timber at the end of each month as it lays on the bank of Bayou Maringouin, ready to be rolled into the bayou; the timber after being measured is to. be .rolled into the bayou, rafted and run down to the mouth of the bayou.

3. Lorio agrees to deliver the timber as aforesaid at the mouth of the bayou, all necessary expenses incurred in delivering the timber At the mouth to be paid by him.

4. The timber to be delivered at the mouth of the bayou for the sum of eight dollars per one thousand feet B. M. The shingle company obligating themselves to furnish to Lorio all money needed for current expenses in deadening and hauling, etc., and also to advance money on two timber wheels, also to advance feed for oxen.

5. As the timber is measured at the end of every thirty .days, settlement is to be made at every time — one-third cash, one-third four months’ note, one-third eight-months’ note.

6. The money advanced on current expenses and for feed and timber wheels is to be deducted from the first cash payment on the timber. In the event that the cash payment is less than the money advanced, then the balance of the money due on expenses is to be deducted from the second cash payment on the timber, and- if ,.expenses still exceed the amount cash due, the money still due for Advances will then be deducted from the third cash payment. •

7. Lorio agrees to commence work at once as to deadening and -other preparations necessary in manipulating the timber.

.8. The company agree to let Lorio have five hundred dollars -in ■ the course of eight or ten days, to be deducted from the second or third cash payment, on which he is to pay interest at eight per cent.

In February, 1893, the plaintiffs brought the suit, in which they ¡prayed for a judgment against the defendant for the sum of two [444]*444thousand two hundred and thirty-four dollars and twenty-three cents, with interest, with recognition of a privilege to secure payment of the same upon certain logs and other movable property of the defendant.

In the petition filed, after referring to this contract plaintiffs declared that it was understood and agreed that the money advanc d fór current expenses, for feed and for the timber wheels was to extend no further than the third cash payment, claiming that under their construction of the contract the first cash payment was to have been on October 27, 1892, the second on the 27th of November, and the third the 27th of December. That the advances were not to extend further than the date of the third cash payment, as it was the true intent and understanding of the parties that Lorio could then by discount or otherwise realize on his notes and would be his own furnisher of supplies, and would then require but small advances if any at all.

Plaintiffs further averred that, believing defendant to be acting in good' faith, they not only advanced him the money and mater als mentioned in the contract but made him advances both in money and materials far in excess of his obligations; that from the date of the contract to the 23d of February, 1893, they advanced him in money- one thousand seven hundred and sixty-two dollars and twenty-three cents in cash, and four hundred and seventy-one dollars and fifty cents in materials.

That though defendant bound himself to haul with ox teams timber from his lands to the bank of the bayou, and to deliver same at the mouth of the bayou every thirty days, he had failed and refused to do"" so, in violation of his contract, nothwithstanding the most favorable and exceptionally fine weather.

That defendant had never exhibited to them an account of his current expenses; that although he had drawn money for the purpose Of paying his labor, he had failed to do so, and owed largely on that ' item for the same; that in violation of his co tract and in fraud of plaintiffs’ rights he had used the money advanced to under-cut timber, and to prepare to float the same during the coming spring in case of a sufficient flood so to do, when by the calls of the contract ■he was to haul the same; that to these and other purposes he had ■'fraudulently diverted the advances made him to carry on his contract.

That defendant had hauled one hundred and sixty-five thousand [445]*445feet of timber which, had been measured and rolled in the bayou, and. that he had on the banks fifty thousand feet to be measured and rolled in said bayou. That it would cost, about two hundred and fifty dollars to roll, raft and float all of said timber to the mouth of, the bayou at the point of delivery.

That defendant insisted that the plaint ffs were bound under the •contract to advance him money without limit, and declared that he would deliver timber when he was ready and when it suited his convenience. Plaintiffs claiming that they had a privilege on the timber then in and on the banks of the bayou, and on the movables advanced to Lorio, to the extent of two thousand two hundred and thirty-four dollars and twenty-three cents, and averring that they verily believed and feared that defendant would part with and dispose of said movables in his possession, and upon which they had a lien during the pendency of the suit, prayed for and obtained an order for the sequestration of the same. A claim for damages was set up by the plaintiffs, but no special reference to it is necessary, as it has been substantially abandoned in this court.

The sequestration ordered having been executed by seizure of a number of logs and other movables belonging to defendant, it was released on bond furnished by the latter.

Plaintiffs subsequently filed an amended petition, in which they prayed that the contract be set aside, annulled and avoided on account of the wrongful, tortious and illegal acts of defendant.

Defendant pleaded the general issue, but further answering admitted that he entered into the contract declared upon. He averred that soon after the same he went to work to carry out his part of the agreement; that he cut and hauled from his land to the banks of the bayou about two hundred thousand feet of timber, ready to be delivered at the mouth of the bayou as soon as the stage of water would permit of floating it; that in further compliance with his part of the agreement he caused to be deadened three thousand cypress trees on his lands for the purpose of having them cut and hauled to the bayou, to be delivered to the plaintiff as stipulated; that during the month of January and early part of February, 1898, in view of the fact that plaintiffs had ceased to make the necessary advances to enable him to carry out his contract, he made frequent demands on plaintiffs to make said advances and to furnish him with the funds required for the prosecution of the work; that the officers of the

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Related

In Re Trahan
283 F. Supp. 620 (W.D. Louisiana, 1968)
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3 La. App. 234 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 La. Ann. 441, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cypress-shingle-lumber-co-v-lorio-la-1894.