Gilmore & Maginnis v. Meeker

40 So. 244, 115 La. 850, 1905 La. LEXIS 747
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 18, 1905
DocketNo. 15,595
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 40 So. 244 (Gilmore & Maginnis v. Meeker) 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
Gilmore & Maginnis v. Meeker, 40 So. 244, 115 La. 850, 1905 La. LEXIS 747 (La. 1905).

Opinions

Motion to Dismiss.

BREAUX, C. J.

Defendant and appellee has moved to dismiss the appeal, urging as ground for dismissal that the bond is insufficient for a suspensive appeal.

The amount of the bond is $3,500.34, less than one-half over and above’ the amount of the judgment rendered. It should have exceeded the judgment by one-half.

[439]*439This question has been carefully considered recently. It was held that the rule “de minimis” did not have any application to appeal bonds. Pelletier v. State National Bank, 112 La. 563, 36 South. 592.

The suspensive appeal, therefore, is dismissed. The order of appeal was given in the alternative. The amount for the devolutive appeal was fixed at $225. The amount of the suspensive appeal bond exceeded that amount. The appeal is, therefore, good as a devolutive appeal.

The case is before us on a devolutive appeal.

The motion is, therefore, to the extent' that it includes a demand to dismiss the devolutive appeal, overruled.

On the Merits.

The defendant agreed to buy the sugar cane of plaintiff’s crop of 1895, which would be, it was stated, about 8,500 tons.

The contract was in writing. The defendant was the owner of a large central factory, and ground cane of his own and cane cultivated on farms and plantations other than his own. His mill for grinding the cane was a double six-roller mill. The daily capacity of the factory was large, and consisted of many tons — 30,000 in capacity in a season of 70 days.

The plaintiffs were to deliver the cane at defendant’s refinery.

The price agreed upon for the cane was 80 cents a ton for each cent of value that prime yellow clarified sugar would be worth in the New Orleans market. The cane juice not to be less than' 9 degrees sucrose.

Whenever over 12 there were to be added 4 cents to the price, and whenever it was less than 12 degrees then there was to be deducted 6 cents for each degree. Oane from which the juice showed less than 9 degrees sucrose was to be rejected. This contract provided that the cane was to be sufficiently matured to grind; to be topped in the first red joint, to be free of shucks and dust, and tbe frozen, soured, or damaged part off. The juice was to be daily subjected to thepolariseope test. If not satisfactory to plaintiffs, they reserved the right of resorting to a chemical test by any reliable chemist that plaintiffs might select, who would make-test with defendant’s chemist.

The quantity of cane to be delivered each day was to be prorated with the entire amount to be ground by defendant’s factory.

One hundred and ten tons were to be delivered by plaintiffs each day.

The succession of the late. Joseph H. Meeker, who died since this suit was tried in the-lower court, is represented by his daughter, Mrs. Drouet, as sole heir and universal legatee of her late father.

Defendant’s stoppages of refinery work, because of broken machinery, were not to continue over 7 days. The defendant was to-begin work on or about October 15th, and continue about 70 days, as before mentioned. Plaintiff’s complaint is that the late Joseph. H. Meeker, defendant, did not comply with this contract, and, in consequence, they lost 51 acres of cane, worth $3,500. In addition, plaintiffs set forth that they delivered to defendant at his refinery 596,555 tons of cane, worth $1,800; that, although the defendant had the right of rejecting all cane testing less than 9 per cent, sucrose, instead of rejecting the cane, if there was any of that test, he used it and converted it into-sugar.

There is very little law in the case. The-issues are nearly all of fact.

The case was tried before the judge ad hoc, the judge of the district court having recused himself.

The trial judge held, as to plaintiffs’ claim for $3,500 damages for lost cane, in substance, that the cane was not lost by defendant’s fpult, that the delay was due to* [440]*440plaintiffs’ shortage of labor, that plaintiffs continued to deliver cane after the asserted violation of the contract, and that they, -in consequence, were without right to recover for damages.

On the other branch — i. e., the claim involving the price for cane delivered — the court sustained plaintiffs’ demand to the amount of $1,193.11 and interest.

From this judgment, defendant prosecutes this appeal.

They (plaintiffs) met this appeal by answer in which they ask that the judgment be amended so as to allow the first item claimed by them for damages, viz., $3,500.

The managing agent of the plaintiffs, of their plantation known as the “May Place,” testified that he had the general superintendence of the planting and cultivating of the cane with the assistance of an overseer. He, during the grinding season, had charge of cutting down the cane and delivering it to defendant’s refinery. Here again he had an assistant manager to see to this work. He averred that one of the principal violations of the contract was that plaintiffs’ cane cars would be delivered' loaded and that they were not unloaded in time at the factory to enable plaintiffs to load them again and forward them to the factory in time to deliver the quantity of tons they agreed to deliver daily; that they could not deliver the quantity of tons per day unless the cars were promptly unloaded and permitted to return without great delay; that he at times had cane cut down in the field which he could not deliver as he had no empty cars. He says he complained of this to one of defendant’s representatives, in vain.

He saw an accumulation of cane at the refinery. The length of time it would take the refinery to work off the accumulation of cane he did not know, as he did not know the capacity of the mill nor the quantity of the cane in the yard.

This witness (manager of plaintiffs) states that after the killing freeze he wind-rowed plaintiffs’ cane, and left in the field not windrowed such a number of acres of cane as he thought he could cut down and deliver in 15 days. Fifty-one acres approximately is the number of windrowed and standing acres which he says were lost. Witness owned that he did not havé sufficient labor to have saved the cane lost, even if the empty cars had been promptly sent back from the refinery.

The answer at this point is: “Not entirely, no, sir; but I would have saved a great proportion of it.” And he further says: “Nearly three-fourths of it.”

This witness also states that there was delay in weighing the cars. There was some time a congestion of loaded cars on the track to the extent that it greatly impeded the movement of the cars. On cross-examination this witness admits that prior to the 15th of November labor on the May (plaintiffs’ ) plantation was short; that it was not sufficient to deliver 110 tons of cane a day. He could deliver only 60 or 70 tons.

After that he could deliver the 110 tons.

Other evidence shows that the quantity of cane lost was 40 or 50 acres. The witnesses for plaintiffs corroborate plaintiffs’ testimony on certain points and not on others. The assistant manager of the May plantation greatly differs in statement from the manager, and if his statement be correct it relieves defendant entirely from the charge of his delay in the work he had undertaken to do for plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 So. 244, 115 La. 850, 1905 La. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilmore-maginnis-v-meeker-la-1905.