General Supply Co. v. Barth

124 So. 602, 11 La. App. 669, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 306
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 18, 1929
DocketNo. 11,397
StatusPublished

This text of 124 So. 602 (General Supply Co. v. Barth) 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
General Supply Co. v. Barth, 124 So. 602, 11 La. App. 669, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 306 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

JANVIER, J.

Plaintiff was engaged in the business of selling paints and painter’s materials. Defendants were engaged in the painting of houses. For something over a year defendants had been dealing with plaintiff and had purchased from them paints and other supplies. This suit is for the collection of an alleged open account balance of $685.65. The defense is in effect a general denial.

Plaintiff, through its officer, testified positively to the delivery of all of the articles set forth in the statement attached to the petition and the defendants’ denial that they received the articles is most evasive and vague. In fact, the attitude of defendants appears to us to be most unreasonable. One of them, William Barth, testified that he would never pay for any article unless the vendor could produce his signed receipt. In an attempt to substantiate their defense the defendants produced as a witness one W. F. McCabe. The purpose of putting him on the stand was, apparently, to prove that defendants never accepted deliveries of goods without executing receipts therefor. The effect of Mc-Cabe’s testimony is very much weakened by the showing that the defendants are now contending that they did not receive several articles which had been sold to them by McCabe when he was working for plaintiffs. He identified invoices covering goods sold by him to defendants which they deny having received. The effect of this is, [670]*670in our judgment, proof that those goods at least were sold and delivered, although defendants deny receiving them.

The record is voluminous, consisting of nearly two hundred pages of testimony. Nothing but questions of fact are involved and in our judgment the principle that an appellate court should not overturn the finding of a trial court on a question of fact, unless it is manifestly erroneous, is particularly applicable here. The judgment rendered by the lower court was in favor of plaintiff for $685.65, with legal interest from judicial demand, and as we think that judgment is correct, it is affirmed.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 602, 11 La. App. 669, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/general-supply-co-v-barth-lactapp-1929.