Dixon v. Watson

143 So. 683
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 5, 1932
DocketNo. 1040.
StatusPublished

This text of 143 So. 683 (Dixon v. Watson) 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
Dixon v. Watson, 143 So. 683 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

Ellis Watson" leased from Christopher C. Dixon a farm on the share system for the crop year of 1931 described as: “3 acres in the northern corner of headright 41; 233¾00 acres, lot 3 of Section 10; 275%00 acres, or lot 5 and 39i%00 acres, being N. W. ½ of S. W. ½ of Section 11, all in T. 1 S., R. 9 E„” situated in Washington parish.

Dixon, the owner, undertook to furnish the fertilizer, mules, plows, land and house for Watson and his family to live-in, and was to receive half the crop.

Watson was to perform all the labor of planting, cultivating, and gathering the crop, feed himself, and receive the other half.

The plaintiff alleges:

That he advanced Watson the sum of $133 on his share of the crop.

That said Watson has started his crop and purchased so many groceries and supplies in making the crop that he has apparently become discouraged and has quit working his crop, and now refuses to gather the cotton and is eating up and selling the corn, potatoes, and other parts of the crop without giving to petitioner the half that is due him.

That said Watson is working for other people instead of gathering his own cotton, and has permitted it to become a total loss in the field, and that a writ of sequestration is necessary to protect the parties herein.

That said Watson refuses to gather the crop of cotton that now needs to be picked; says he will pick it when he gets ready, but continues to gather the corn and use it and eat it and feed it, all to the prejudice of petitioner. That, unless the court orders the crop to be gathered and conserved by the sheriff, your petitioner will lose his entire half of the crop and debt which he claims against the defendant, for which he has a lien on the other half.

That said Watson, having violated his agreement and refused to gather the crop, should be ordered to vacate the premises.

A writ of sequestration issued as prayed for, and the crop was seized.

The defendant -Watson, in a preliminary appearance filed September 15, 1931, moved to dissolve the sequestration, the gist and substance of his motion being that the suit was prematurely filed; that plaintiff’s averment that he had quit working his crop and was eating and selling the corn, potatoes, and other parts of the crop without giving the plaintiff the part due him was false and without foundation; that the sequestration was actuated by malice and spite on the part of said' Dixon toward the mover, and without just cause or grounds therefor.

He alleges damages on account of attor *684 ney’s fees employed to dissolve the writ, in amount $50, four trips to Franklinton to consult attorneys and to see the sheriff in regard to. gathering the vegetables to live on, $30, and damages to crop, $30' — a total of $110. He prayed that the sequestration be dissolved and for judgment in reconvention against the plaintiff for $110 on account of the wrongful issuance of said writ.

This motion to dissolve was not acted on preliminarily.

Upon October 9,1931, defendant filed an exception urging the prematurity of the suit and at the same time, under reserve of all his rights under the exception and motion to dissolve he filed an answer to the merits.

He admits in his answer that plaintiff advanced him supplies on his crop to the amount alleged in the petition, but denied that the amount was due at the time the suit was filed.

He alleges that he worked his crop in a good workmanlike manner, but that plaintiff violated his contract, refused to furnish him further supplies to enable him to complete the crop; that he was thereby forced to make arrangements with Ott Bros, to furnish him the necessary supplies to enable him to finish the crop; that plaintiff tried by force to compel him to abandon his crop, which was in good shape, and leave the place in order that he might obtain possession of the crop without paying him a just price therefor. He alleged damages in reconvention against thd plaintiff to the extent of $210; prayed that the sequestration be dissolved, that plaintiff’s demand be rejected, and that he have judgment against plaintiff in reconvention for $210.

There was judgment in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for. Defendant has appealed.

The note of testimony opens with a statement by the parties in which it is agreed that defendant’s answer was filed without prejudice to his rights under his rule to dissolve the sequestration and to recover damages on account of the wrongful issuance of the same.

It was agreed that the court pass on the rule to dissolve the sequestration and on the merits and on the rule to vacate pra^d for by plaintiff against defendant, all at the same time.

The grounds urged by the defendant for the dissolution of the writ are so involved with each other, intricately connected and blended together by the evidence, that we will consider them all at the same time. Defendant alleges that plaintiff’s charge that he (defendant) “is eating up and selling the corn, potatoes and other parts of the crop without giving to your petitioner the one half that is due him,” that “he continues to gather the corn and use it and eat ⅛ up and feed it up, all to the prejudice of your petitioner,” is untrue.

The plaintiff, testifying on this subject and referring to the contemplated seizure, says that he did not know how much corn would be left in the field; they (referring to defendant) were toting it out all the time; said he would tote it out as long as it was in the .field, and he would not pick the cotton. In another •place he says:

“Q. How was the corn which he did gather, how was it gathered out of the field — was it in the usual way? A. How was the com gathered? They toted 290 ears from one place in the field and 23 ears from another, getting an ear here and over yonder.
“Q. Did he gather a row and leave a row for you? A. No, Sir. He gathered two rows and took it out and later his wife came and gathered them rows out.
“Q. He gathered two rows of corn? A. He gathered two rows and 290 ears.
“Q. Where did he gather the 290 ears? A. ' He gathered it all in that patch in different places.
“Q. When he gathered in another place, did he gather one row and leave one row for you? A. No, Sir. He got it side by side.”

Defendant says: “I just got a milling or two of corn out of the field and carried it out and had meal made out of it. That’s all. I wouldn’t take much to the mill at a time. I suppose I carried a bushel altogether.”

There is no evidence that defendant sold any corn, dug or disposed of any of the potatoes or any other part of the crop.

Defendant owned half of the corn and stood at the time in need of bread for his family. The small quantity which he pulled and had made into new meal does not, in our opinion, justify plaintiff’s charge of eating up and selling, etc. We are satisfied that defendant, in doing as he did, had no intent or .desire to take any corn that he did not consider he had a right to use for the purpose stated.

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Related

City Inv. Co. v. Williams
132 So. 367 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1931)
Dixon v. Alford
143 So. 679 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
State National Bank v. New Orleans Brewing Ass'n
22 So. 48 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1897)

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 683, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-watson-lactapp-1932.