Holland v. Holland

140 So. 117
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 16, 1932
DocketNo. 4158
StatusPublished

This text of 140 So. 117 (Holland v. Holland) 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
Holland v. Holland, 140 So. 117 (La. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, J.

Plaintiff, a son of defendant, brings this suit for an accounting and settlement of the business affairs and .transactions arising from their relation as landlord and tenant, on the half cropper basis, for the years 1929 and 1930. Defendant owns farm lands in Bossier parish. He secured parole of plaintiff from the Arkansas Penitentiary, where he was serving a sentence for manslaughter, on or about February 1, 1928, and leased him some land for that year. Plaintiff lived with his father until December 24th, at which time he married. During the year 1928, defendant furnished plaintiff with cash money, clothes, shoes, etc., and boarded him; and during the years 1929 and 1930 furnished him with cash money, groceries, etc., to enable him to live and make crops. Crops of cotton were produced and gathered for each of these years and some corn and potatoes for the year 1930. After the cotton was ginned, defendant handled it, shipping and selling at will. He rendered no accounts to plaintiff for either year’s business. After the crops of 1930 had been gathered and cotton turned over to defendant, their relations became strained and defendant moved from the leased premises. This suit was filed in following January. He and his wife testify that defendant ordered them away and refused to allow them to remove their part of the corn and potatoes and household effects. There is other evidence and many circumstances in the case to support this charge.

Plaintiff sets up various and sundry instances of mistreatment of, and acts of injustice towards, him by his father, but these need not be further mentioned in a discussion of their business affairs which this suit was brought to finally determine. He prays for judgment for such amount as the evidence shall establish defendant is due him on accounts; that his half ownership in and of the undisposed of crops of 1929 and 1930 be recognized; that same be sold according to law, and one-half of the proceeds of sale be paid over to him.

On suggestion of plaintiff, a judicial sequestration issued, and the undisposed of crops of 1930 and one 'bale of cotton of the crop of 1929 were seized by the sheriff.

Defendant prays that plaintiff’s demands be rejected and his suit dismissed; but, in the alternative, prays for judgment against him for alleged balance due on accounts of years 1928, 1929, and 1930, amounting to $536.15, subject to be credited with plaintiff’s interest in the cotton, cotton seed and corn sequestered herein when sold. He attaches to his answer what purports to be an itemized account against plaintiff for the years 1928, 1929, and 1930. These show that for the year 1928 plaintiff was in arrear to the extent of $2S3.65; for the year 1929 he wa s ahead $61.05, and for the year 1930 he was behind with defendant to the extent of $208.

The district court found that defendant was due plaintiff $132.27 on account for the three years involved, and recognized plaintiff as owner of undivided half interest in the 7 bales of cotton and the cotton seed sequestered, and in the four bales of cotton in hands of the Farm Bureau at New Orleans, and ordered same sold, according to law, and the proceeds divided between plaintiff and defendant. Defendant was cast for all costs of suit except those to be incurred in selling the jointly owned property, which were ordered to be paid equally by the parties by charging same against the proceeds of sale.

Defendant has appealed from this judgment.

It will be observed that plaintiff confined his action for accounting to the years 1929 and 1930, but defendant undertook to extend the controversy to the year 1928. Evidence by defendant touching the 1928 account was objected to by plaintiff but overruled by the court. Both sides were permitted to go into the 1928 account as fully as they did the accounts for 1929 and 1930. Plaintiff elicited testimony concerning the 1928 account without reservation, and in his brief makes no reference to his objection to the evidence of defendant about this account, nor of the courts ruling thereon. We assume the point has been abandoned. It is better, perhaps, that this has been done, as the evidence before us is sufficient to enable us to adjudicate the rights of both sides for the three years.

It is regrettable that a controversy of this kind, between father and son, should find its way to court. To add to the unpleasantness of the matter, the testimony is often very conflicting, and, where records are used as evidence, they are generally crude and unskillfully kept. And so we find it in this case. Defendant kept no books of account covering his dealings with defendant, and defendant’s wife, untrained in such matters, acted as his •bookkeeper.

The account for the year 1928 has been proven by defendant’s wife, who produced the record of same contained in a small notebook. Her testimony is corroborated in a 'general way by that of defendant. The total debit against plaintiff is $466.50, which includes $350 paid to attorneys for plaintiff’s benefit. In addition to said account, defendant undertook to charge plaintiff with board [119]*119for entire year 1928 at rate of 50 cents per day, and for his washing at rate of 25 cents per week for that year. Plaintiff challenges the charge for board, and says that his father agreed to board him without compensation in return for work to be done by him on the farm. The lower court did not think the testimony sustained defendant’s contention on this score and rejected the charge. We agree with this ruling. It is shown that plaintiff began to live with his father on February 1; that he was absent during the summer for three weeks and married on December 24th. He is charged with board for 365 days or $182.50. Obviously this charge is an afterthought. If the record had been kept during the year, the month of January and the periods of plaintiff’s absence would not have been charged for.

Plaintiff says there was no understanding about the charge for his-washing; that it was not mentioned. He does not deny that this service was done for him. The lower court allowed $13 for the service, being 25 cents per week for the entire year 1928. This should have 'been restricted to not more than eleven months, as plaintiff was not at his father’s place at all during the month of January.

Plaintiff contends he produced and gathered 14 bales of cotton in Í928. We think he is in error to the extent of 2 bales. The evidence otherwise accounts for only 12 bales for this year. One bale was sold and price divided between plaintiff and defendant. Another bale sold for $100.31 all of which plaintiff received. The other 10 bales netted $957.53, one-half of which amount, or $478.76, belonged to plaintiff. His interest in the sale of the seed from this year’s crop was $66.60. Defendant received proceeds of sale of the seed and of the 10 bales of cotton. Plaintiff is also entitled to be credited with price of one horse of his sold to or by defendant.

The account between the parties for 1928, in view of the foregoing, should be:

“Plaintiff’s credits:
Half of net proceeds of sale of 10 b/c $478.76 Half of net proceeds of sale of cotton seed . 66.60
Price of horse. 50.00
Total .⅜.$595.36 $595.36
Plaintiff’s debits:
Half of price of one b/c sold.$ 50.15
Account . 466.50
Washing 11 mos. 12.00
Total .

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Bluebook (online)
140 So. 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-v-holland-lactapp-1932.