Horstmann v. Farber
This text of 944 So. 2d 628 (Horstmann v. Farber) 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.
Opinion
Henry HORSTMANN
v.
George A. FARBER.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
F. Timothy Garlick, Folsom, for Plaintiff/Appellee, Henry Horstmann.
Paul Antoine Lapeyrouse, Chauvin, for Defendant/Appellant, George A. Farber.
*629 (Court composed of Chief Judge JOAN BERNARD ARMSTRONG, Judge PATRICIA RIVET MURRAY and Judge LEON A. CANNIZZARO, Jr., serving as judges ad hoc by special appointment of the Louisiana Supreme Court).
LEON A. CANNIZZARO, JR., Judge Ad Hoc.
This case involves a claim for payment of amounts that the plaintiff, Henry Horstmann,[1] claimed were owed to him by the defendant, George A. Farber, M.D. The trial court judge rendered a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $20,978.26. The judge also awarded attorneys' fees in the amount of $5,244.57, for a total judgment of $26,222.83 plus costs and interest from the time of judicial demand until paid. Dr. Farber is appealing the judgment.
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Mr. Horstmann filed suit against Dr. Farber to collect money allegedly owed to Mr. Horstmann by Dr. Farber in connection with an oral agreement between the two men, who had a business relationship for a number of years. Mr. Horstmann operated a horse breeding business for Dr. Farber on a farm that was owned by Dr. Farber. Mr. Horstmann was paid $3,300.00 a month for his services in connection with the breeding operation. Additionally, Dr. Farber permitted Mr. Horstmann to conduct a horse training business of his own at the farm. Mr. Horstmann trained Dr. Farber's horses, as well as horses owned by others. Mr. Horstmann billed Dr. Farber on a monthly basis for the horse training services that were rendered to Dr. Farber.
In the instant suit only the charges for training Dr. Farber's horses were at issue. Mr. Horstmann claimed that Dr. Farber owed him $24,620.00. Included in this amount were Mr. Horstmann's charges for training Dr. Farber's horses and an invoice from The Ponchatoula Feed & Seed Store (the "Feed Store") in the amount of $3,353.30 for feed that Mr. Horstmann had purchased to feed Dr. Farber's horses.
Dr. Farber responded to Mr. Horstmann's lawsuit by filing an answer denying that he owed any money to Mr. Horstmann. Dr. Farber also asserted that Mr. Horstmann overcharged him for the training services and that Mr. Horstmann used Dr. Farber's money to maintain horses other than those owned by Dr. Farber.
At the trial only two witnesses testified. Mr. Horstmann testified, and his wife, Colleen Horstmann, testified.
Mrs. Horstmann testified that she prepared the bills for her husband's horse training business. She identified the invoices that Mr. Horstmann claimed had not been paid by Dr. Farber. She explained that the monthly invoices contained the training charges for each horse whose name was listed, the number of days each horse was trained, and the daily charge for training each horse. Additionally, the invoice included an itemized list of expenses that were to be paid by Dr. Farber.
Ms. Horstmann further explained that there were two barns that housed horses on Dr. Farber's farm. One barn held broodmares and their young. The other barn housed the horses that Mr. Horstmann was training. The food for all of the horses on the farm was purchased in bulk using Dr. Farber's funds, but under Mr. *630 Horstmann's agreement with Dr. Farber, Mr. Horstmann assumed the cost of the food that was consumed by the horses in the training barn. Therefore, Dr. Farber was given a credit on the monthly invoices for the cost of any food that was eaten by the horses in the training barn.
Mr. Horstmann testified at the trial regarding the services that he performed for Dr. Farber. He said that he ran a horse breeding operation for Dr. Farber and generally operated Dr. Farber's farm where the breeding operation was conducted. Mr. Horstmann was paid a set amount each month for this work. Mr. Horstmann also trained some of Dr. Farber's horses, and he charged Dr. Farber a daily rate for each horse he trained. The daily rate for training a horse depended on what was involved in training that particular horse. Mr. Horstmann maintained training charts showing what was done with each horse on a daily basis. The training charts were used to prepare the monthly invoices.
In addition to seeking payment of the $20,978.26 reflected on the unpaid invoices, Mr. Horstmann also sought reimbursement from Dr. Farber for a bill from the Feed Store. Mr. Horstmann explained that Dr. Farber declared bankruptcy and that Dr. Farber could no longer purchase feed on credit from his usual supplier. Therefore, because the horses on the farm had to be fed, Mr. Horstmann opened an account in his name at the Feed Store so that he could buy feed for the horses. Mr. Horstmann testified that the feed for which the Feed Store had billed him $3,533.30 was used to feed Dr. Farber's horses. Additionally, he said that Dr. Farber was given a credit on the applicable monthly invoices for any of the feed that was given to horses in the training barn. Thus, Mr. Horstmann contended that he was owed reimbursement in the amount of $3,533.30 for the feed that he had purchased from the Feed Store.
Finally, Mr. Horstmann testified that he charged Dr. Farber $5.00 a day for taking care of the yearlings that were housed in the training barn, even though they were not being trained. Mr. Horstmann explained that the reason the yearlings were in the training barn was that once they had been weaned, they had to be separated from their mothers.
The yearlings were relocated to the training barn, where they could not see their mothers, because if they were anywhere near the mares, "the babies would stall walk themselves to death, break through a fence, do whatever they had to do." Because it was Mr. Horstmann's responsibility to assume the cost of feeding and maintaining the horses in the training barn, he charged Dr. Farber $5.00 a day to cover the expenses attributable to each yearling housed in that barn.
After Mr. and Mrs. Horstmann had testified, the trial court judge ruled that Mr. Horstmann had proved that he was entitled $20.978.26, the unpaid amount on the invoices that Mr. Horstmann had submitted to Dr. Farber. The judge also awarded attorneys' fees in the amount of twenty-five percent of the invoice amount, because she found that the payment sought by Mr. Horstmann was payment on an open account.[2] With respect to the Feed Store bill, the judge found that Mr. Horstmann had not carried his burden of proof, because *631 he did not show how much of the feed that he purchased from the Feed Store was consumed by the horses in the training barn and how much was consumed by the horses in the other barn. Therefore, Mr. Horstmann failed to prove that he was entitled to reimbursement from Dr. Farber on this amount.
DISCUSSION
Standard of Review
In Rosell v. ESCO, 549 So.2d 840 (La. 1989), the Louisiana Supreme Court stated that it is well settled that an appellate court may set aside a factual finding of a trial court or jury only where the finding was based on a "manifest error" or was "clearly wrong". Id. at 844. Further, where there is conflict in the testimony, a trial court's or a jury's reasonable evaluations of credibility and reasonable inference of fact should not be disturbed on appeal, even though the appellate court may feel that its own evaluations and inferences are as reasonable as those of the trial court or jury. Id.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
944 So. 2d 628, 2006 WL 2763276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horstmann-v-farber-lactapp-2006.