Lockhart v. Jones

9 Rob. 381
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 15, 1844
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Rob. 381 (Lockhart v. Jones) 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
Lockhart v. Jones, 9 Rob. 381 (La. 1844).

Opinion

Garland, J.

The plaintiffs sue Jones for the sum of #3,000, “ as an advance, to be repaid by consignments of cotton” during the season, and for commissions and interest. The defendant being a non-resident, an attachment was taken out and levied on 134 bales of cotton, marked with the initial letters of Jones’ name. Jacob Wilcox gave a bond, with security, to satisfy said judgment as might be rendered, and the cotton was delivered to him.

The attorney appointed to represent Jones, answered by a general denial. About ten months after the bonding of the cotton, Wilcox, Anderson, & Co. claimed the cotton, alleging that it is their property, and not Jones’, for this, that Jones, being indebted to them in the sum of about #456 86, they employed Mr. Trezvant, a lawyer at Memphis, to collect or settle the same. That their attorney, being so authorized, employed one Moon as a special agent to receive the cotton, which, by an agreement between Trezvant and Jones, was to be received by said intervenors, as far as the same might go, in payment of said debt. They aver that the cotton was actually delivered into the hands of Moon, their agent, and by him shipped for the purpose aforesaid, consigned to Jacob Willcox, one of the intervenors, and formed a part payment upon the aforesaid debt; wherefore it is not liable to be seized or sold to pay the plaintiffs’ debt.

On the trial the deposition of Trezvant was permitted to be [383]*383read, notwithstanding the objections of the plaintiffs’ counsel. He swore that in the year 1838, Allens, Clark, & Co., obtained a judgment against Jones and others, for upwards of $4,000. This judgment “ was soon after transferred or assigned, as witness thinks, to Willcox, Anderson & Co., at least he was informed that Mr. Willcox of that house had the control of it,’’ and he was instructed to account to him for it. He further says, that Jones, being desirous of' getting further indulgence, a correspondence was opened through him (witness) with Willcox, which resulted in an agreement, that if Jones would ship to Willcox by the 31st of January, 1840, cotton or other produce, and permit him to pay himself out of the proceeds, that then he (Willcox) would stay the execution until that date, which was done. The witness says, that he believes Jones was first bound to pay Willcox by accepted draft on New Orleans, and that on the 1st January, 1840, Willcox was informed by the acceptors that Jones had not furnished them with means to pay the bill or draft, whereupon he was instructed to have all Jones’ property seized, if he did not at once send down cotton. This he agreed to do, and sometime in the month of February, 1840, two flat boats, were sent down loaded with cotton to Willcox. One of the boats was perhaps sent in January, 1840. He says that he paid Albert Moon $40 to go and attend to the shipping of the cotton, and this he did, sending down, as he informed witness, bills of lading, &c. One boat carried between sixty and seventy bales, and the other between seventy and eighty bales. The first arrived, and was sold by Willcox, and the amount credited on the debt of Jones. The other load was, as witness was informed by Willcox, attached in this action. The cotton •was considered by all parties as the means of liquidating that particular debt, and the execution was then in the hands of the sheriff, and virtually bound the cotton before it was shipped. The witness says that Jones told him, that he purchased most of the cotton for the purpose of paying this debt.

The testimony of Moon was also received, who says he was employed at Memphis, to go to Jones’ to receive some cotton for the intervenors ; that upon his arrival he told his business, [384]*384when Jones delivered the bills of lading, one ©f which he recognised when produced in court; and that he understood him to say that he wished the proceeds of the cotton to go to the payment of the debt claimed by the intervenors. The cotton was not at Jones’ when the witness went there, and he never saw it. He gave a receipt for the bills of lading, but it was not produced, nor its contents proved. The intervenors also proved by their clerk, the contents of the letter from Jones, said to have been lost; also that he was indebted in the manner before stated, and that the bills of lading were in the hands of Will-cox, before the cotton was attached. The bill filed in the record shows, that the cotton was “ shipped by James Bond for Robert B. Jones,” with the initials of his name marked on it, consigned to Willcox. The bill not produced, is admitted to be in the same form.

The intervenors had a judgment in their favor, and the plaintiffs have appealed.

■ Our attention has been called to various bills of exception, which are all that it will be necessary to notice, as our opinion upon them makes it necessary to reverse the judgment, and remand the case; and, as it may prevent future difficulty, we notice all the bills, although somewhat different from the usual practice.

The first is, to the opinion of the court receiving in evidence, “the statement of A. G. Moon, that in a conversation with Jones, he stated that he wished the cotton to go in payment of a debt due to Willcox, Anderson & Co.,” which was objected to by the counsel for the plaintiff. In this we think the court did not err. Moon was sent as the agent of the intervenors, to receive the cotton. He says that he never saw it, but that the bills of lading were delivered to him, and that he gave a receipt for them. If that should be considered a delivery of the cotton, it is right that the purpose for which it was delivered should be stated. It is a part of the res gestee, and the interveners are entitled to the full benefit of it.

The next exception taken by the plaintiffs, is to so much of the depositiou of Trezvant, “ as states that a judgment was obtained by Allens, Clarke & Co. against Jones, and that the [385]*385same was assigned to Willcox, Anderson & Co., because the judgment and assignment were the best evidence of the facts, which were not produced.” The court below, we think, erred in admitting this evidence. It was not the best of which the nature of the case admitted. The plaintiffs had a right to insist on the production of the record of the suit of Allens, Clarke <£■ Co. v. Jones, and of the written assignment of it to the intervenors, if one ever existed. The plaintiffs, also, object to so much of the deposition of Trezvant, “ as states an agreement between Willcox and Jones, because the witness does not state it of his own knowledge, or from any other legal source of information.” This seems to us a very general kind of exception, and well calculated to place the judge in a false position ; and it is somewhat surprising that he should have signed it, without some remark or explanation. If the witness did state any fact not within his own knowledge, or not derived from any legal source of information, then it was certainly wrong in the judge to permit it, when objection was made. We suppose the objection was intended to apply to the statement of the witness, that a correspondence had been opened, through him, between Willcox and Jones, which resulted in an agreement as to the disposition of the proceeds of the cotton. If so, we think that correspondence ought to have been produced, as the agreement must have been in writing ; and the witness should not have been permitted to give his impression, or opinion of its contents. The agreement should have been produced, or accounted for in some legal manner.

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Bluebook (online)
9 Rob. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lockhart-v-jones-la-1844.