Henderson v. Shaffer

34 So. 644, 110 La. 481, 1903 La. LEXIS 659
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1903
DocketNo. 14,554
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 So. 644 (Henderson v. Shaffer) 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
Henderson v. Shaffer, 34 So. 644, 110 La. 481, 1903 La. LEXIS 659 (La. 1903).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, C. J.

We copy herein the written judgment rendered in this case by the district court from which this appeal is taken, as it sets out fully the facts and the issues raised between the parties:

“The Morrison-Madison Company, Limited,, on August 2, 1900, purchased from Thomas-J. Henderson a certain sugar plantation known as the ‘Delogny,’ situated in the parish of St. James. The consideration was-$100,000, $20,000 of which was paid cash, and in representation of the balance of the purchase price the purchasers furnished one promissory note of $15,000, payable January 1, 1901, and five others, each for $13,000, payable annually thereafter, all secured by vendor’s lien and mortgage on said plantation.
“On the 6th day of January, 1902, Mrs. A. C. Shaffer, alleging herself to be the owner and holder in good faith and for valuable consideration of the first above described note of $15,000, and averring the nonpayment thereof, obtained from this court the issuance of executory process under which the Delogny plantation was seized and ordered to be sold in satisfaction of the payment of said note. Thereupon ensued the present suit. T. J, Henderson obtained a writ enjoining the foreclosure by Mrs. Shaffer on the grounds that the aforesaid note of $15,000 had been paid by the officers of the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited, and that the mortgage secur[484]*484ing the same had been extinguished; that the writ of seizure and sale in favor of Mrs. Shaffer had been illegally and wrongfully issued, and was absolutely null and void, being predicated upon a debt which had been paid and extinguished; and on the further grounds that no notice to pay issued, and that the writ ordered the property to be sold for cash, and not, as the law required, for cash to pay the matured installments of the debts, and on the terms of credit granted to debtor by the original act of sale and mortgage, and that the sheriff of this parish, in compliance with the terms of said writ, had advertised said property to be sold for cash, without regard to the fact that several of the notes representing said debt had not yet matured. Plaintiff finally prays that his writ of injunction be maintained and perpetuated, with costs, and that his right to claim damages be reserved. Defendant’s answer admits the sale to the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited; denies that the $15,000 note was ever paid by -the purchasers, but that the same was purchased by her, with her individual check, from plaintiff, before maturity, and in good faith. She further charges that, if plaintiff did not intend to sell said note, he was guilty of gross negligence in not informing her agent who negotiated the purchase thereof, and in surrendering the same uncaneeled.
“That she cannot legally or equitably be charged with the loss caused by plaintiff’s negligence, and that plaintiff is estopped by his acts from claiming against an innocent third holder for value that the same was paid when it left his possession. In the alternative she pleads that, if the court should hold there was no sale, the execution and delivery •of her check to Henderson was an error both •of fact and of law, that he received the same without consideration, that the consideration was null and void, and that she is entitled to reconvene and obtain the return of her $15,-000, with legal interest from date of payment.
“It appears from the evidence that the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited, was composed of three stockholders — Charles B. Morrison, Charles T. Madison, and Mrs. Amanda C. Shaffer, who is defendant in this suit; that this corporation was organized with a capital of $20,000 for the purpose of purchasing the Delogny plantation from Henderson, and to cultivate the same in sugar cane and other crops. The capital was contributed as follows: $100 by Mrs. Shaffer, $9,900 by Morrison, and $10,000 by Madison. That Morrison and Madison, not having means of their own, discounted their note with Mrs. Shaffer, in order to raise the $19,-900 of stock subscribed by them. That all three constituted a board of directors, of which Morrison was president and Madison secretary and treasurer. A resolution was then adopted by this board of directors empowering the president to purchase the Delogny plantation on the same terms under which the sale was eventually passed, except that the resolution provided that the $15,000 note (the subject of this suit) was to be paid out of the crops then on the place, the stipulation not being contained in the act of sale and mortgage. The crops growing on the plantation at the time of its sale were harvested by the purchaser, the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited, and shipped to Henderson. Morrison and Madison both testify that this was done simply as an act of courtesy to Henderson, but other parts of their testimony, taken in connection with that of Henderson, give me the contrary impression. Morrison says that he went'at one time previous to the taking up of the $15,000 note to Henderson, who, notwithstanding the fact that he had money to the credit of the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited, refused to furnish the company money to pay off the grinding expenses. By what right could Henderson have given any such refusal unless it was that he had the right to retain out of the proceeds a sufficient amount to cover his $15,000 note? And the fact that the company did not resent this refusal impresses me as an admission that there was an obligation on their part to ship this crop to Henderson in order that he might retain out of the proceeds the amount called for by the note in this suit.
“Henderson swears positively that at the time he had about $8,500 belonging to the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited, and that he positively refused to allow them to draw the same unless he was paid his note of $15,000. It was then, on the 17th of December, 1900, that Morrison and Madison went to Henderson’s office, handed him a cheek of $15,000 on the Canal Bank, by Mrs. [486]*486Shaffer, 'and received from Mm the note in controversy. All the witnesses agree that at the interview where the check and note ■changed hands nothing was said as to whether the note was being paid or purchased. Madison swears that Henderson had agreed to part with the note; that, being a good investment, he advised Mrs. Shaffer, as her attorney, to buy it; and that she had given him her check for that purpose; and that Henderson parted with the note and delivered it to him as agent and attorney of Mrs. ¡Shaffer, and not as secretary and treasurer of the Morrison-Madison Company, Limited.
“The main and only issue in this case is whether the delivery of the $15,000 check to Henderson and the delivery of the $15,000 note to Morrison was a payment or a sale of the note. When this exchange of check and note was made, there were present Morrison, president of the company, Madison, secretary-treasurer, and Henderson, the plaintiff. Nothing was said at that time to indicate the intention of the participants to this transaction, and the only means of ascertaining what really took place is to look into and carefully weigh all the surrounding facts and circumstances preceding the transaction and the situation of the parties at the time.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 644, 110 La. 481, 1903 La. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/henderson-v-shaffer-la-1903.