Gray v. Lowe

7 La. Ann. 465
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 15, 1852
StatusPublished

This text of 7 La. Ann. 465 (Gray v. Lowe) 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
Gray v. Lowe, 7 La. Ann. 465 (La. 1852).

Opinion

By the court:

Etjstis, C. J.

The manner in which this case is presented to the court, it is immaterial to state or consider. It turns exclusively on the decision of the point on which the district judge decided it. It is thus stated by him:

“ Did Gray, Macmurdo 8f Co. acquire the draft sued on, from W. B. Partee §• Co., in full ownership, or was it placed in the hands of the former, by the latter, as collateral security for the repayment of a loan ? If the former be the fact, the contract, as to the draft, was a sale; if the latter, a pledge.”

The article 3125 of the code, provided, that in order to give effect to a pawn of movables, against third persons, the contract must be by authentic act, or under private signature, recorded before a notary, besides requiring certain other matters of form, in order to give it validity. This article was extended to promissory notes. Art- 3225.

These articles prevented the circulation and use of negotiable paper, by way of pledge or security, and limited its negotiability to cases of sale or discount, in which the property in the paper was absolutely transferred, unless the forms, required by the code, were observed in the contract. These forms, men of business, in their transactions, had neither time nor inclination to observe, and the copsequence was, of necessity, a resort to some other legal mode, in which negotiable paper could be made available for the ordinary purposes of trade and exchange. Hence, for the purpose of raising money on a note, which was not to be transferred absolutely, it was sold with a privilege reserved by the owner to redeem it within a certain time.

These articles of the code, after having long been a most serious incumbrance to commerce, were, by common consent, repealed at the last session of the Legislature.

The transactions which give rise to this case, took place before the repeal of those articles, which are to regulate the rights of the respective parties, and the question is stated, whether the facts constitute a pledge or a sale of the draft of $5000.

Greenland acted as the agent of Partee S¡- Co., and Bell as the agent of Gray, Macmurdo Sf Co. The testimony of both was taken at great length, and under a very scrutinizing cross-examination,

[466]*466Greenland, a witness for Lowe and Pattison, gives this account of the business: “ In the months of August and September, in the first instance, in August, on the part of W. B. Partee 4* Co., having been appointed as the person to attend to their business, it became necessary from time to time to raise money; amongst other persons, application was made to Messrs. Gray, Macmurdo 4" CO., and in the first transaction we had with them, we received an amount of money, I think, about $7000, as near as my memory serves me; for this $7000, we agreed to sell a certain amount of paper, reserving the right of repurchasing this paper at a stipulated price on a given day; several transactions of this kind took place between the middle of August and the middle oí September; we had always repurchased the paper at the stated price, on or about the given day, except in two instances; in consequence of the embarrassment of the firm of Partee 8f Co., it became impracticable to repurchase the paper, and that paper is now held, or was held, by Messrs. Gray, Macmurdo 4* Co.; there was no paper signed in the two last transáctions with Gray, Macmurdo 4* Co., and I believe, in those transactions, the paper sued on in this case was included; when I gave the draft of $5000 in question, I think it was given to Mr. Bell; there was no written agreement made, and I do not, at this time, recollect any conversation in regard to it; the draft sued on, was given to Gray, Macmurdo 4* Co., on the same terms and conditions that other paper had been given to them; that is, that W. B. Partee Sf Co., had the privilege of repurchasing the same by a given day; the mode in which these negotiations were made was this: A certain amount was received from Messrs. Gray, Macmurdo 4" Co., for which a certain amount of paper was transferred to them; they agreed that W. B. Partee 4* Co., should have the privilege or right, on a given day, for the amount of money so received of Gray, Macmurdo 8f Co., and a stipulated amount of commission and interests, of receiving back the paper so transferred. When this paper passed from my hands into those of Mr. Bell, there was a tacit understanding, as in former transactions, that Partee Sf Co. had the right of reclaiming the same; Gray, Macmurdo Co. sent, after the stipulated time for paying the amount, to ask of Partee 4* Co., if the money stipulated was to be paid. Tn the previous transactions which W. B. Partee 4* Co. had had with Gray, Macmurdo 8f Co., a sale had been drawn and signed; it was, as I understood, a similar sale which Gray, Macmurdo 4* Co. desired should be signed; if the signatura to that paper had been asked, at the time of making the loan, it would most unquestionably have been given; as near as my memory serves me, it was in. the beginning of October, that a call was made on me for the signature of such a paper; it was perhaps ten days or two weeks after the time the money for the purchase was to have been returned, that the call was made on me for the signing of the paper; I did not sign the paper at the time the draft sued on was given to Gray, Macmurdo Sf Co. I received money from them, and the paper was to be returned in about five or seven days after, on the payment of the amount advanced, and with the gommission and interest; when this paper, the draft sued on, was taken to Gray, Macmurdo 4- Co., the understanding was either expressed or implied, that the paper was to be returned to Partee 4* Co., in five or seven days, on the amount being repaid,” &c.

On being examined by the defendants, he stated: “ The first transaction between the parties, took place on the 28th of August, at which time $7500 were received by Partee &f Co. This sum was returned on the 1st of Septem[467]*467ber; there was a written condition of the sale of the paper, made to them; on the 2d September, there was the same kind of transaction made with them, and $4500 received, and this was returned on the 6th September; on the 6th September, there was the same amount, $4500, received of Gray, Macmurdo Sf Co.; that was returned on the 12th September; on'the 8th September, there was another similar transaction, in which $7500 was received, and returned on the 9th September; on the 10th September, there was another transaction of $9000, which has never yet been returned; on the 15th September, there was a similar transaction, and $8800 received, which was returned on the next day, the 16th September; on the 16th, there was another transaction of $4000, which was returned on the 20th September; on the 18th September, there was another amount of $6000, which has never yet been returned to Gray, Macmurdo 8f Co.; that for the two amounts of $9000 and $6000, above referred to, Gray, Macmurdo 8f Co., had the paper which figures on the bilan of Partee. When the money was returned, the paper which had been placed in Gray, Macmurdo Co.’s hands, was returned to Partee Sf Co.

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Bluebook (online)
7 La. Ann. 465, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-lowe-la-1852.