Fullerton v. Kennedy

6 La. Ann. 312
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 15, 1851
StatusPublished

This text of 6 La. Ann. 312 (Fullerton v. Kennedy) 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
Fullerton v. Kennedy, 6 La. Ann. 312 (La. 1851).

Opinion

The judgment of the court was pronounced by

Eüstis, C. J.

This is an appeal taken by the defendants from a judgment rendered against them in the Third District Court of New Orleans. The learned judge kept the case for a long time under advisement, under the hope, as he states in his opinion, that his researches would lead him to some legal ground on which relief might be extended to the defendants, as he considered it essential to the security of commercial dealings and to the protection of good faith. In his researches, however, he came to the conclusion that the defendants could not be relieved, and gave, though with great reluctance, judgment against them.

[313]*313Fullerton, the plaintiff, was, at the time of the transactions which gave rise to the present suit, in the steamboat business; he had his office in the building, No. 93 Tehoupitoulas street in the Second Municipality. He was in New Orleans during the whole month of February, March, and up to the 15th of April, 1847, when he purchased a plantation, and passed most of his time there. Fullerton's office was up stairs. Below was the counting-house of William A. Bennett, who was doing business on his own account, as a merchant. He had been doing business as a merchant in New Orleans for several years, and was engaged in buying and selling. He was known as a produce commission merchant and a dealer in western produce. There was an intimacy between Fullerton and Bennett, such as exists between persons in the same house.

The defendants, Kennedy and Foster, are,merchants in New Orleans, doing a general commission business, making advances on consignments, &c. They were in the habit of making advances also on.produce deposited in warehouse.

On the 12th of March, 1847, Kennedy and Foster made an advance to Bennett of five thousand dollars in their notes on 778 barrels of whiskey stored at Orr’s warehouse, for which Bennett then transferred to them the warehouse receipt. Kennedy and Foster paid their notes; and after a delay, the cause of which it is not material to notice, they sold the whiskey, with the exception of a few barrels, and applied the proceeds to the payment of their advance.

Bennett in the mean time had failed, and left the city in the latter part of May. Bennett’s clerk gave Fullerton’s clerk in the month of June an order for the barrels of whiskey, which were still in the warehouse of Or, but the latter made no demands of the defendants for them, considering it unnecessary to insist on the delivery of so small a quantity; and as the counsel in argument have made no distinction between these and the rest of the lot, the case will be considered on the obligations and rights of the parties to the whole lot.

In the month of February, 1847, at three different times, the plaintiff gave Bennett money amounting in all to the sum of sixteen thousand dollars, for the purpose of purchasing whiskey for him, and shortly afterwards, under date of the 15th of February, Bennett rendered an account to the following effect: Memorandum of 1920 barrels of whiskey purchased by Wm. A. Bennett for account of S. W. Fullerton. The dates, the names of the sellers, the number of barrels and quantity, the price of each lot, and the aggregate are then given, together with the total cost, ^16,021 64. The warehouses in which the whiskey is stored, in four several lots, are then named and the memorandum is signed by Bennett.

The present action is instituted to recover from the defendants one of the lots of whiskey, 778 barrels stored in Orr’s’ warehouse, or its value. The ground of the action alleged is, that the whiskey was, at the time of the advance made by the defendants, the sole property of the plaintiff, and that the defendants knew the fact; that Bennett had no right to pledge the whiskey, as it is charged he did, to the defendants; and that they acquired no rights under their contract with Bennett in relation to it, except such as were subordinate to the right of property of the plaintiff.

There is no evidence that the defendants had any knowledge or notice of the interest of the plaintiff in the whiskey until the demand for the remnant of the lot was made on the warehouseman by the plaintiff’s clerk, as before stated : indeed, we find nothing in the evidence impugning in the slightest degree their good faith. The plaintiff’s case stands before us on the payment of the money by him to Bennett to be laid out in whiskey, an'd on the account or memorandum [314]*314before recited; and t.he defence rests upon the bona fide advance, the delivery of the property, and the sale made by the defendants for the purpose of reimbursing themselves. At the time of these transactions, Bennett was a dealer in whiskey, and bought largely on speculation. The defendants in February had advanced the sum of ten thousand dollars to him on two lots of the article, one of which corresponds in number — 778 barrels — to that which is the subject of the present suit. Witnesses have been examined from whom in that season Bennett made purchases of whiskey. They were all made in his name, nor does it appear that the purchases made by Bennett, which it is alleged were paid for with the plaintiff’s money, were made differently or could be distinguished in any one particular from those conceded to be made by Bennett on his own account. No difference is attempted to be established by the evidence.

On the subject of the relations between Fullerton and Bennett, which, from the general aspect of the case we think ought to have been explained, the testimony is meagre and unsatisfactory. It is in evidence that subsequent to the purchase of the whiskey there were business transactions between them. The plaintiff’s principal witness states that he is not aware that Bennett paid over any money to Fullerton after this transaction, unless it were for some previous transaction. It does not appear that the accounts between them were ever settled, and as to what is their state there is no evidence before us. In a case of this kind, as the plaintiff alone can be in possession of the facts, it is but natural to look to him for the information, or for some proper reason for its not haying been given. But giving to this omission no other consequence than one of the facts of the case, they present a state of things which we think brings it within pripciples which we have on several instances been called upon to enforce.

No change of the possession of the whiskey was made by Bennett until its delivery to the defendants. It remained in his name in the warehouse on storage. The plaintiff, under the evidence, appears knowingly to have enabled Bennett, who was known in the market as a dealer and speculator at that time in the article, to appear in the market with his, the plaintiff’s, property as his own, with possession and the muniments of title in his own name, and without the public having any possible means of discriminating between the plaintiff’s property and that in which he was speculating on his own account. Suppose the defendants to have been put on their inquiry. The different sellers of the ar icle from whom Bennett had purchased, and the warehouse books would have corroborated the warehouse receipts and the assurance of Bennett that the property was his own.

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Bluebook (online)
6 La. Ann. 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fullerton-v-kennedy-la-1851.