Hargrave v. T. E. Mixon Lumber Co.

143 So. 2d 264, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2153
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 5, 1962
DocketNo. 592
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 143 So. 2d 264 (Hargrave v. T. E. Mixon Lumber Co.) 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
Hargrave v. T. E. Mixon Lumber Co., 143 So. 2d 264, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2153 (La. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinions

HOOD, Judge.

This action was instituted by plaintiff, Roy Joseph Hargrave, to recover from defendants, T. E. Mixon Lumber Company, Inc., Teche Concrete, Inc., and Oubre Floor Covering, Inc., sums of money allegedly paid to said defendants through mistake. Defendants filed an answer denying liability, and after trial of the case judgment was rendered by the district court in favor of defendants rejecting plaintiff’s demands. Plaintiff has appealed from that judgment.

After the appeal had been perfected, defendants filed in this court a peremptory exception of no right and no cause of action, and that exception also is before us .for determination.

The evidence establishes that during the month of May, 1961, plaintiff entered into an agreement with Ossay J. Boutte under the terms of which Boutte was to construct a house for plaintiff on a lot owned by the latter, and plaintiff was to pay to Boutte the sum of $11,500.00 for this job. Plaintiff paid $2,500.00 in cash to Boutte at the time the contract was entered into, and in order to obtain funds with which to pay the balance of the contract price plaintiff borrowed $9,000.00 from the Iberia Savings and Loan Association, executing a mortgage on the lot and the proposed house as security for the loan. At the time this loan was made Hargrave agreed with the Savings and Loan Association that the association would not advance the full amount of the loan to him, but instead it would disburse directly to materialmen the amounts due for materials used in the house, and directly to Boutte the amounts due for labor on such house, as accounts became due and payable. Proof of the amounts due for materials and labor were to be submitted to the association before payment was made. Boutte was aware of this arrangement, and it apparently was agreeable with him that payments under his contract with plaintiff would become due and would be paid in that manner.

On or shortly before June 16, 1961, the Savings and Loan Association was furnished with an affidavit executed by Boutte, in which Boutte requested that the association disburse $2,500.00 from the proceeds of the loan as partial payment for the construction of the Hargrave house, and he stated in this affidavit that the money so disbursed would be used to pay the following bills or claims “which have been or will be incurred against said construction,” to-wit:

T. E. Mixon Lumber Co. $1,066.92
Teche Concrete, Inc. $ 500.00
Oubre Floor Company $ 500.00
Labor $ 433.08

Pursuant to the request contained in the above described affidavit, and considering the payments to be in line with the agreed method of disbursing the loan funds, the Savings and Loan Association issued four checks, all of which are dated June 16, 1961, and are described as follows:

(1) Check for $1,066.92, payable to the order of Hargrave, Boutte and T. E. Mixon Lumber Company;

(2) Check for $500.00, payable to the order of Hargrave, Boutte and Teche Concrete, Inc.;

(3) Check for $500.00, payable to the order of Hargrave, Boutte and Oubre Floor Company; and

(4) Check for $433.08, payable to the order of Hargrave and Boutte.

No question is raised in this suit as to the last of the four checks hereinabove listed. Serious issues are presented, however, with reference to the payments represented by the first three of those checks.

After the first three of said checks had been endorsed by Hargrave and by Boutte, each defendant received from Boutte the check in which it was named as one of the payees, and each defendant cashed the check which it received and imputed the payment to other accounts owed to it by [267]*267Boutte. The evidence shows, however, that none of the defendants ever furnished any materials or labor for the construction of the Hargrave house, and Hargrave was not indebted to any of said defendants. Boutte was indebted to each of the defendants for a sum which was in excess of the amount of the check received by it, but Boutte’s indebtedness to these defendants had no relation to the Hargrave job. The evidence also establishes that the officers at the Savings and Loan Association relied on the affidavit of Boutte in issuing the checks, and that Hargrave relied on the representations made by Boutte in endorsing those checks. Neither the officers of the association nor Hargrave had any apparent reason to question Boutte’s statement that the defendants had furnished materials for this job.

Since the checks were delivered to and were cashed by defendants, they must be charged with having knowledge of the fact that the checks were issued by the Savings and Loan Association and that Hargrave and Boutte were named as joint payees. The evidence also shows that the defendants knew that Boutte was engaged in the construction business, and each defendant obviously knew that it had furnished no materials in connection with the Hargrave job. The affidavit executed by Boutte, of course, was not attached to the checks, and none of the defendants had any knowledge of the fact that Boutte had executed such an affidavit erroneously stating, in effect, that these defendants had furnished materials for that job.

Boutte apparently was having some financial difficulties about the time these checks were issued. The Mixon Lumber Company intended to file a lien on another construction job which Boutte was performing unless a payment of $1,066.92 was made on that account within a day or two after June 16, 1961. Teche Concrete held a $500.00 check which had been issued by Boutte and upon which payment had been refused because of insufficient funds, and the payment to that defendant was made to satisfy that check. Oubre Floor Covering had already placed its claim against Boutte, arising out of another construction, job, in the hands of an attorney for collection. In order to obtain money to pay these urgent claims, Boutte falsely certified that these defendants had furnished materials for the Hargrave job.

After these and a number of other payments had been made from the proceeds of the Hargrave loan, Boutte defaulted in the performance of his contract to construct the house, and he subsequently went into bankruptcy. It was necessary for Hargrave to make other arrangements to have the house completed, and the total cost of completing the construction, including the amounts which had been paid to Boutte and to materialmen over and above the payments here in dispute, exceeded the contract price for that job. A number of affidavits have been filed in the mortgage records of Iberia Parish purporting to evidence and preserve liens and' privileges on the Har-grave property for materials and labor furnished in connection with this construction.

The Savings and Loan Association made disbursements from the loan proceeds amounting to the aggregate sum of $5,775.-32, including the payments made to defendants here, leaving a balance of $3,224.68 which has not been disbursed from such funds. The record shows, however, that plaintiff has incurred additional expenses amounting to more than $6,000.00 in completing the construction.

Plaintiff demands judgment in his favor and against each of the three defendants respectively for the amount which each such defendant was paid by means of these checks. He contends that these payments were made to defendants through mistake, plaintiff believing himself to be a debtor, and that under those circumstances he is entitled to reclaim what he has paid.

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Related

T. E. Mixon Lumber Co. v. Boutte
191 So. 2d 165 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1966)

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Bluebook (online)
143 So. 2d 264, 1962 La. App. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hargrave-v-t-e-mixon-lumber-co-lactapp-1962.