E. B. Williams & Co. v. Bienvenue

34 So. 63, 109 La. 1023, 1903 La. LEXIS 464
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 2, 1903
DocketNo. 14,331
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 So. 63 (E. B. Williams & Co. v. Bienvenue) 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
E. B. Williams & Co. v. Bienvenue, 34 So. 63, 109 La. 1023, 1903 La. LEXIS 464 (La. 1903).

Opinion

BLANCHARD, J.

Defendant, a married woman, separate in property from her husband, owned a saw mill, which she operated, through the agency of her husband. This-mill was in the Parish of Point Coupée.

Plaintiffs were wholesale and retail dealers in lumber, buying and selling same under contract and exporting lumber abroad. Their place of business was the City of New Orleans.

On the 31st of May, 1899, these parties entered into a contract, under the terms of which defendant was to sell and deliver, at her cost, at a landing or place of shipment on the Mississippi river, her mill’s entire output, of cypress lumber.

■ She engaged that this output would not be less than seventy-five thousand feet per month.

The term of the contract was twelve months, so that the obligation undertaken by the defendant was the delivery of nine hundred thousand feet of lumber, all told, in installments of not less than seventy-five thousand feet per month.

The grades of lumber stipulated for were based upon the grading of the Southern Cypress Lumber Association, a copy of which was attached to and made part of the contract.

The kinds of lumber the contract called for were:—

First and second grade, .constituting one classification.

Selects................... “ another “

Cross-ties................ “ the third “

The weight of the first and second grade and that of the select grade was not to exceed three pounds per foot, board measure. The cross-ties could be green.

Plaintiffs were to pay for one inch lumber of the first and second grade $18.00 per M. feet B. M.; for inch and a quarter and inch and a half lumber of the first and second grade, $19.00 per M. feet; for two inch, two and a half and three inch lumber of the first and second grade $20.00 per M. feet.

They were to pay for inch lumber of the “select” grade $12.00 per M. feet; for inch and a quarter and inch and a half lumber of the same grade $13.00 per M. feet; for two inch, two and a half inch and three inch lumber of the same grade $14.00 per M. feet.

For cross-ties they were to pay $9.00 per M. feet, B. M.

Payments made in pursuance of the con[1025]*1025tract were to be subject to a cash discount of two per cent.

Tbe purchasers (plaintiffs) were to send an inspector to inspect the lumber whenever fifty thousand feet or more of lumber of either of the grades should be at the river landing ready for delivery.

Not less than forty per cent, of all the lumber engaged was to classify as first and second grade.

Not more than thirty per cent, was to class as “select” grade.

This left thirty per cent, of the lumber to class as cross-ties.

On June 12th following, the contract was modified by an agreement on part of plaintiffs to receive the lumber at any landing on Old river (a tributary at that point of the Mississippi river) whenever the stage of water in Old river permitted boats and barges to navigate that stream. Otherwise the delivery was to be made on the banks of the Mississippi river.

At the same time the contract was further modified in this respect, viz.—

Williams & Co. agreed to waive the percentages of lumber to be furnished as set forth in the original contract to the extent of ten per cent., to be divided equally among the three grades named, to-wit: — First and Second, Select and Cross-ties.

A further modification took place later, the purport of which was that the obligation of Williams & Oo. to send an inspector to inspect the lumber whenever fifty thousand feet or more should be at the landing ready for delivery, was eliminated from the contract, and, in lieu thereof, defendant agreed to deliver the lumber under the contract on the batture at Williamsport, a landing on Old river, and were to construct a ramp there and other necessary appliances for placing the lumber, and were to pile the lumber on the batture as directed by the plaintiffs.

And the lumber so piled was to be taken up every thirty days by the plaintiffs, who were to advance fifty per cent, of the contract price on same — the remainder to be paid when the lumber was shipped out. Williams & Oo. were to have a representative in the locality of the mill who was to direct the piling and classing of the lumber. This delivery of lumber at Williamsport as above, instead of at Smithland on the Mississippi river, a few miles away, was to continue only so long as the stage of water in Old river permitted the shipment of lumber by barge from that stream.

A further modification is claimed by plaintiffs in this, to-wit: — that defendant was to provide and deliver shop grade of lumber at an agreed price of ten dollars per M. feet, instead of cross-ties at $9.00 per M. feet— this modification taking place after delivery of a considerable quantity of cross-ties had been made and accepted, and the shop grade of lumber to be in lieu of further delivery of cross-ties.

Defendant disputes entirely the modification thus claimed as to substitution of shop grade lumber for cross-ties.

Over the execution of the contract as made' and modified, trouble arose between the parties, resulting in this litigation.

The contention of plaintiffs is that they,, themselves, complied fully with their obligations under the contract, but that defendant did not, and her violations of the same-have caused them damages, which they figure,, all told, at the sum of $3,393.93.

Their complaint against the defendant is-that she failed to furnish the quantity of lumber called for by the contract; that she was put in default in respect to same; that she delivered only 565,759 feet of lumber instead of 900,000 feet; that by her failure in this regard she caused plaintiffs a loss in profits of $3,125.04; that in loading one of the barges she furnished lumber not of the grade called for by the contract and short in quantity, causing plaintiffs a loss under this head of $203.00; and that on another occasion she failed to supply the quantity of lumber requisite to load a barge, which was at the landing under a contract limited as to time with the owners, by 'which plaintiffs agreed to pay freight for the use of the barge on 220,-000 feet of lumber at $3.50 per M. feet, whether that much lumber was actually loaded on the barge or not, and that in this way plaintiffs suffered a loss of $65.89.

Defendant pleaded the general issue; specially denied any default on her part in the matter of the execution of the contract; and claimed in reconvention against plaintiffs $300.37 as per itemized statement annexed to her answer.

There was judgment for plaintiffs for $520.-[1027]*102785, with interest, on the main demand, and for defendant, on her reeonventional demand, for $222.83, with interest.

Plaintiffs appeal and in this Court defendant asks amendment of the judgment rejecting in toto plaintiffs’ demands.

Ruling — -The issue is one of fact.

The evidence sustains plaintiffs’ contentions in the main.

The defendant did not live up to her contract, even from its very inception.

She (her husband acting for her) evinced no proper appreciation of the obligations she had assumed, nor of the legal effect of the agreement she had entered into.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 63, 109 La. 1023, 1903 La. LEXIS 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/e-b-williams-co-v-bienvenue-la-1903.