Ledoux v. Armor

4 Rob. 381
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 15, 1843
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 Rob. 381 (Ledoux v. Armor) 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
Ledoux v. Armor, 4 Rob. 381 (La. 1843).

Opinion

Morphy, J.

The petitioners seek to rescind the sale of 401 coils of bale rope, which they bought of the defendant on the 2d of September, 1840, at the rate of twelve and one-half cents per pound, making a sum of $5,872 62, for which they gave their two promissory notes of $2,936 31 each, payable four months after [383]*383date. They represent, in substance, that the rope was bought upon a sample of it left by the defendant at the’store of Layet &c Amelung, his agents. That shortly after their purchase, they sent a few coils of this rope to some of their friends and customers in the country, but that the same was immediately returned to them as being of bad quality, and too defective for the purpose for which it was intended, to wit, the baling of cotton. That they then had some of this rope tried in various cotton presses, after giving the defendant notice thereof, and that it was found, both by the trial at the cotton presses, and by separately opening and examining many coils, that notwithstanding its deceptive appearance, nearly the whole of this rope was either twice laid, rotten, or otherwise damaged, and so packed as to conceal as much as possible its defects. They further represent, that the defects of this rope were not apparent, and that owing to the nature of the article, and the manner of packing it, it is neither customary nor practicable, to institute such a minute inquiry on the purchase of a large lot of bale rope, as will bring such defects to light, and that by the mercantile custom of New Orleans, the sale of a parcel of that article is considered as null and void, if a large proportion, though not the whole of it, be of bad quality ; that in September last, they offered to return the whole lot of this rope to the defendant, and claimed of him the restitution of their notes, but that he refused so to do ; and that since then, to wit, on the 5th of January ensuing, they were obliged to pay one of their notes which had been negotiated by the defendant, but that the other one is still under protest in his hands. They pray that the sale of the rope may be rescinded, and that Armor be decreed to return to them their unpaid note of $2,936 31, and to reimburse to them an equal amount for the note paid by them, with interest, &c. The defendant admitted the sale, but denied all the other allegations of the petition. He further averred that he had himself, purchased the rope from Samuel Bell and A. H. Wallace & Co., and called them in warranty. He moreover claimed in re-convention, the payment of the note of $2936 31, still in his possession. The warrantors pleaded the general issue. The Judge below being of opinion that the petitioners were not entitled to a rescission of the whole contract, and not finding the evidence such [384]*384as to enable him to pronounce' satisfactorily upon their rights, decreed that the plaintiffs should pay to the defendant, the sum claimed in reconvention, but reserved to them their claim for a rescission of the contract, or a diminution of the price on such portion of the rope as may be proved to be unmerchantable. A motion for a new trial was made by the plaintiffs, during the pendency of which they caused all the rope, which they had kept until then in their store, to be sold at auction, after giving notice of the sale to the defendant, and warrantors. The parties then appear to have submitted the cause anew to the judge, to be finally adjudicated upon, after having introduced some additional evidence in relation to the sale which had taken place. The judge, thereupon, allowed the plaintiffs a reduction of the price, which being found insufficient, this appeal was taken.

The evidence adduced, on the first hearing of this cause below, clearly established that a considerable portion of the rope which the plaintiffs had purchased, was of bad quality, and some of it altogether unfit for the purpose for which it was intended; but it also showed that the lot. contained a quantity, not exactly ascertained, of good and merchantable rope. Had the plaintiffs separated the sound rope from that which was defective, and confined their claim for redhibition, or a reduction of the price, to that portion of the goods which as unmerchantable, they would have had no difficulty in their way. The record even shows, that had they not misconceived the extent of their legal rights, they might have obtained justice, without engaging in the long and unprofitable litigation which has brought them before us. Upon their first complaint to the defendant, Samuel Bell, who had sold to the latter 268 coils of the rope, offered to exchange good rope for an equal quantity of any sold by him that would be pronounced by a competent judge of the article, not to be sound rope. But the plaintiffs, conceiving that they had a right to insist upon a rescission of the whole purchase, instituted in the Parish Court, in September, 1840, a redhibitory suit which they discontinued several months after; and then brought the present action, in which they again contend for the rescission of the sale in toto. The main question then, and perhaps the only one which this case presents, is, whether in consequence of the bad quality of a certain number [385]*385of the coils of rope by them purchased, they are entitled to have the whole contract annulled. Our law is explicit on this subject. It provides, (Civil Code, art. 2518,) that “ the redhibitory vice of one of several things sold together gives rise to the redhibition of all, if the things were matched, as a pair of horses, or a yoke of oxen.” From this provision the inference is clear that if the several things sold together are independent of each other, and do not form a whole, and if the value of each thing is not increased by its union with the rest, a redhibitory action can be maintained only for those things which are found defective, and that the contract must stand and be carried into effect in relation to the others. 6 Mart. 696. 3 Ib. N. S. 100. Pothier, De la Vente, Nos. 226, 227, 228. But it is said, that there exists a custom, or commercial usage in New Orleans, which authorizes the purchaser of a large quantity of rope to return the whole parcel to the seller and receive back his money, if he discovers that a part of it is defective. In the absence of any expression of legislative will on the subject, such a custom or usage would have been entitled to some weight, provided it had existed a sufficient length of time to have become generally known, and to warrant the presumption that contracts were made in relation to it. But where the law is express, no man or set of men can create a custom for their own benefit or convenience, and give to that custom a force paramount to that of the law. 12 Mart. 26. 6 Ib. N. S. 528. 567. 3 La. 394. 7 La. 528. The Judge, therefore, properly refused to hear testimony tending to show the prevalence of any such commercial usage. The custom is said to have sprung from the impossibility of distinguishing the good from the bad. rope in the purchase of a large lot, by reason of the deceptive appearance of the article. This may be true, on the cursory examination usually made at the lime of a sale, especially when samples are exhibited. But if, after the purchase it is discovered, that there are in the lot some portions defective and unmerchantable, we cannot believe it impossible, or even very difficult, upon a close inspection., to separate the good rope from the bad; and the testimony in this very case shows that it is in no wise impracticable. More than one year after the sale to the plaintiffs, Taylor and Jonau, two of their witnesses, examined every coil of the rope separately, and found that there was rope of three quali[386]

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Bluebook (online)
4 Rob. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ledoux-v-armor-la-1843.