Gueydan v. T. P. Ranch Co.

100 So. 541, 156 La. 397, 1924 La. LEXIS 2032
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 12, 1924
DocketNo. 24524
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 100 So. 541 (Gueydan v. T. P. Ranch 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
Gueydan v. T. P. Ranch Co., 100 So. 541, 156 La. 397, 1924 La. LEXIS 2032 (La. 1924).

Opinion

LECHE, J.

Plaintiff is a commission merchant and is engaged in business at Gueydan in the parish of Vermilion. The defendant, a corporation domiciled at Lake Arthur in the parish of Jefferson Davis, was organized for the purpose of owning, leasing, and operating farms and numerous other and kindred purposes unnecessary to mention, as that is not an issue in the ease. On February 7, 1919, defendant contracted a loan from plaintiff for the purpose of planting and growing, during the year 1919, a crop of rice upon lands situated in the parish of Cameron. In representation of said loan, defendant executed its promissory note for $2,456, with 8 per cent, interest from date, together with 10 per cent, for attorney’s fees, if placed in the hands of an attorney for collection, and payable on or before December 1, 1919. In order to secure the note, defendant recognized tlie privilege accorded by law in favor of the furnisher of supplies and, in addition, pledged and pawned 819 sacks of rice to be grown, in favor of plaintiff, and gave plaintiff the right to take possession of said rice and dispose of it as his own and to apply the proceeds to the customary charges for insurance and storage, and to the advances made in pursuance of the contract of loan.

On July 31, 1919, an additional loan was contracted by defendant from plaintiff, in [399]*399the same manner and under the same terms and. conditions; but out of this loan defendant actually received only $91.82.

There is no question that when the present suit was instituted, plaintiff’s claims for advances on the two contracts aforementioned, for the year 1919, amounted to $2,547.82.

In addition to his claim for advances for the year 1919, plaintiff’s demand in the present suit includes various other claims for 'advances made to defendant for its own use, in the years 1917 and 1918, and for advances made to defendant for the use and benefit of its tenants, totaling over $7,000, for all of which plaintiff prays for judgment. At the same time plaintiff prayed for and obtained a writ- of sequestration under which was seized -a quantity of rice already threshed and bagged, as well as the ungathered crop in defendant’s field.

The trial judge, in an elaborate opinion, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff, recognized plaintiff’s lien, privilege, and right of pledge on the crop of rice sequestered and seized, for the advances of 1919, amounting to $2,547.82, and ordered the seized rice sold to satisfy the amount of said advances by privilege and preference. He further rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the various sums claimed in suifi, deducting, however, interest that had been capitalized by plaintiff, all of which findings, so far as the amounts thereof are concerned, are not seriously disputed or contested in this court.

1. Defendant’s first complaint is that the trial judge clearly erred when he considered that the writ of sequestration had not issued on any other indebtedness than the crop pledges amounting to $2,547.82 for the yeár 1919.

The prayer of plaintiff’s original petition is for recognition of his lien, privilege, and right of pledge on defendant’s rice crop for advances in the sum of $2,547.82, made during. the year 1919, together with interest and attorney’s fees, for a writ of sequestration and for an order that said rice be sold to satisfy said indebtedness by preference. Plaintiff’s other claims, itemized under the 10 following paragraphs of the prayer of his petition, are not alleged to be secured by lien or privilege, nor does plaintiff pray that any writ of sequestration be issued in aid of their collection.

Under the prayer of this petition, the judge ordered the issuance of a writ of sequestration on December 5, 1919. That'writ was evidently ordered and issued'in accordance with the prayer of plaintiff’s petition as ancilliary to his demand for recognition of his privilege and pledge amounting to $2,-547.82.

Plaintiff subsequently filed two supplemental petitions. The first was 'for an alias writ of sequestration ■ directed to the sheriff of the parish of Jefferson Davis, where part of the rice had been removed, the original writ having been sent to the sheriff of the parish of Cameron where the rice was grown and located; and the second was a demand for an additional claim of $935.13.

We therefore see no error on the part of the trial judge in holding that the writ of sequestration was issued on plaintiff’s demand for $2,547.82, advances made to plant and grow the crop of 1919, which crop was thereafter actually seized and sequestered in obedience to said order and writ.

2. Defendant’s next complaint seems to be based on the ground that plaintiff had not sufficient or legal reason to obtain the writ of sequestration.

The contract under which defendant obtained the loans from plaintiff for the year 1919 distinctly stipulates:

“I (defendant) agree to deliver to said advancer (plaintiff) at Gulf Coast warehouse, Gueydan, La., just as fast as my rice is being threshed, eight hundred and nineteen (819) sacks of rice out of my share raised on the above-described land, and as a consideration [401]*401of said advances, -without which the same would not have been made, said advancer is hereby accorded the right as part of this contract, to take possession of the rice as if it was his own, at any time, and sell same at the highest market price without my consent.”

Another stipulation in the contract is to the effect that the note which on its face is made payable December 1, 1919, should become due and exigible as soon as the crop or crops of the borrower should be marketed.

The evidence shows that, instead of delivering in accordance with the contract, defendant shipped his rice to a rice mill, at Lake Arthur, with a view of marketing the same elsewhere. This shipment is said to have been made about November 13, 1919, and its effect was to correspondingly advance the maturity of the note and to justify plaintiff in resorting to the order of sequestration. Defendant attempted to show that the shipment it made to the Lake Arthur mill was consented to by plaintiff, but the evidence which it offered for that purpose is not convincing and is certainly insufficient to show the waiver on the part of plaintiff of a stipulation which is expressly made an essential condition in the contract. Nor was defendant justified in failing to carry out that stipulation on the ground that in former years, and under different circumstances, plaintiff may have been indulgent enough to condone an occasional violation of the same.

According to the provisions of Act No. 190, p. 336, of 1912, it was not necessary that plaintiff should have had reasonable grounds to believe that defendant intended to conceal, part with, or dispose of the rice, and plaintiff was entitled to a sequestration upon the bare fact that it was within the power of defendant to conceal, part with, or dispose of the same.

We therefore believe that the trial' judge properly maintained the sequestration.

3. Defendant also complains that no | itemized account was furnished to it by' plaintiff,' and that there was no derhand for payment -made prior to the institution of the suit. In other words, defendant complains that it was not put in default.

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Bluebook (online)
100 So. 541, 156 La. 397, 1924 La. LEXIS 2032, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gueydan-v-t-p-ranch-co-la-1924.