Exchange Bank v. E. B. Williams & Co.

45 So. 935, 120 La. 901, 1907 La. LEXIS 674
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 21, 1907
DocketNo. 16,607
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 45 So. 935 (Exchange Bank v. E. B. Williams & Co.) 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
Exchange Bank v. E. B. Williams & Co., 45 So. 935, 120 La. 901, 1907 La. LEXIS 674 (La. 1907).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, J.

The plaintiff in this suit in its petition against the defendants, instituted in the civil district court for the parish of Orleans, asked for judgment in the sum of $1,436.95 with 10 per cent, interest from March 4, 1902, until paid. It alleged that:

“On or about February 13, 1902, E. B. Williams & Co., for value received, assigned, transferred, and set over unto the Exchange Bank of Friar’s Point, Miss., all their certain claims and demands of every kind and description whatever against H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co., and also transferred, assigned, and set over and delivered unto said Exchange Bank all lumber owned by said E. B. Williams & Co. purchased of H. C. Buck, Jr., then at Bpyle, Miss., all of which will more fully appear from said contract annexed and made part hereof, marked ‘Exhibit A.’
“That in consideration of said transfer petitioner paid said E. B. Williams & Co., twenty-two hundred and forty-nine S6/ioo dollars ($2,-249.35), being $2,500 less certain agreed deductions.
“That further, on or about February 13, 1902, said Eugene B. Williams and Schuyler B. Coleman — copartner under the firm name of E. B. Williams & Co., New Orleans, La. — for value received, assigned, transferred, and made over unto the Exchange Bank of Friar’s Point, Miss., petitioner herein, all the rights, title, and interest in and to all the cypress timber on a certain tract of land consisting of 160 acres, and described as S. W. % of section 5, township 20, range 5, and lying north of Porter’s Bayou in Sunflower county, Miss., and being the same standing timber purchased by H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co., of G. W. Faison, Sr., by deed dated October 28, 1901, and by H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co. transferred to E. B. Williams and Schuyler B. Coleman and E. B. Williams & Co., by deed dated November 1, 1901, said several deeds being recorded in the office of .the clerk of the chancery court of said Sunflower county, in [903]*903Book J 2, page 149. And they further trans-feri-ed,' assigned,' and made over to petitioner ail rights of way and privileges to which said Eugene B. Williams and Schuyler B. Coleman and E. B. Williams & Oo. were entitled under and by virtue of said .several deeds; that said transfer was signed by said E. B. Williams & Co., by said Eugene B. Williams, and by said Schuyler B. Coleman, and acknowledged on, say, February 13, 1902, before Charles T. Soniat, Notary Public, in the parish of Orleans, state of Louisiana, all of which will more fully appear from said transfer hereto annexed and made part hereof, marked ‘Exhibit B.’
“That, in consideration of said transfer, petitioner delivered to said E. B. Williams & Co. a promissory note, held and owned by petitioner, dated November 5, 1901, and drawn by said E. B. Williams & Co. in the full sum of two thousand dollars ($2,000) to the order of H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co., or bearer; maturing March 4th, 1902, and with 10% interest from maturity on account of which said note five hundred and sixty-three og/100 dollars ($563.05) had been paid, leaving fourteen hundred and thirty-six 95/ioo dollars ($1,436.95) due and owing at that time of said transfer.
“That on or about July 30, 1902, when petitioner attempted to move said standing timber out of brake, they were stopped by a deputy sheriff, and for the'first time learned that said timber had been seized as the property of, and under attachment against, said H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co., and on investigation petitioner found that said E. B. Williams & Co. had not recorded the deed of sale of the said Faison brake from H. C. Buck, Jr., and Co., as required by the laws of Mississippi, until, say, January 17, 1902; almost three months after the deed of sale was made to E. B. Williams & Co., and that said attachment was levied on or about January 1, 1902, and that in due course said standing timber on the Faison land, purchased as stated by petitioner, on, say, February 13, 1902, was sold under the attachment some time in August, 1902; and in consequence there was no consideration on the part of E. B. Williams & Co., for the transfer and delivery of said note by petitioner to said E. B. Williams & Co.; that their only consideration of the transfer to E. B. Williams & Co., of said note was the standing timber on said Faison property, transferred to petitioner by said E. B. Williams & Co., under deed of February- 13, 1902.
“That the fact that said E. B. Williams & Co., through their own fault, were not in a position, and could not deliver to petitioner said standing timber on said Faison property, was not known to petitioner; and that the fact that there was no consideration was due solely to the fault of said B. B. Williams & Co., and not to any fault on the part of petitioner; and that petitioner is entitled to the return of said note, but that, as said note is past due, petitioner is entitled to the amount of said .note, fourteen hundred and thirty-six 95/ioo dollars ($1,436.95) together with 10% interest from maturity of said note March 4, 1902.
“That as soon as petitioner learned of the attachment and that said attachment seizing said standing timber on the Faison property sold by H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co. to E. B. Williams & Co. was good as against the said sale under the laws of Mississippi, by reason of the fact that the attachment was made before E. B. Williams & Co. recorded this deed of purchase, petitioner notified said E. B. Williams & Co., and made demand upon defendant to place petitioner in possession of said standing timber, or to pay petitioner the amount due on said note, together with interest, but that defendants refused to do either.”

Defendants answered, first pleading the general issue. They then alleged that they admitted that they executed the assignments and relinquishments about February 13, 1902, annexed to the plaintiff’s petition, but expressly denied that the surrender of the alleged note for $2,000 to them by said plaintiff formed or was any separate consideration, or the alleged assignment of the cypress timber by defendants to said plaintiff, but to the contrary, “the two assignments set forth are component parts of a single settlement and transaction, said transfer of said cypress timber was but the relinquishment by defendants of their rights and claims against H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co. to the plaintiff in settlement made through the plaintiff with H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co., under the contract of September 28, 1901, copy of which is annexed hereto and made part hereof, and .of which contract the said plaintiff took cognizance and had notice from its inception.”

Defendants show: That the said $2,000 note was executed by them pursuant to said annexed contract as an advance to H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co. on the price stipulated to he paid for the lumber in accordance with the stipulations of said contract, and upon the conditions, therein expressed, that said cypress timber should be transferred to defendants as collateral security against loss on ac- . count of the issuance of said note, all of which said plaintiff at the time took cognizance and had notice of. That said bank, by correspondence with defendants, co-operated [905]*905with and assisted said H. C. Buck, Jr., & Co. in the obtention of said $2,000 note from defendants, and co-operated with and assisted said Buck & Co.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 So. 935, 120 La. 901, 1907 La. LEXIS 674, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/exchange-bank-v-e-b-williams-co-la-1907.