Louisiana Farm Bureau Cotton Growers' Co-Op. Ass'n v. Bacon

105 So. 278, 159 La. 169, 1925 La. LEXIS 2213
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 22, 1925
DocketNo. 27276.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 105 So. 278 (Louisiana Farm Bureau Cotton Growers' Co-Op. Ass'n v. Bacon) 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
Louisiana Farm Bureau Cotton Growers' Co-Op. Ass'n v. Bacon, 105 So. 278, 159 La. 169, 1925 La. LEXIS 2213 (La. 1925).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The relator is a nonprofit co-operative marketing association „with no capital stock. If is composed exclusively of cotton growers of- Louisiana. It was incorporated under the provisions of Act 57 of .1922, known as the Co-operative Marketing Act. « j

The articles of incorporation were filed in the clerk’s office of East Baton- Rouge parish and with the secretary of state in February, 1923. The city of Baton Rouge is the legal domicile, but the association maintains branch offices in the cities of New Orleans and Shreveport.

The declared object and purpose of the association is to promote, foster, and encourage the business of marketing cotton under a co-operative plan by cotton growers with the hope and expectation of stabilizing the cotton market, and as far as possible to reduce vicious speculation and manipulation of prices of that agricultural product.

In anticipation of effectuating such an organization, a number of cotton growers met in the early part of 1922 and selected an organization committee composed of 32 cotton growers which was charged with the duty of formulating a plan for such an. organization and securing membership therein. The committee prepared--and, through solicitors, circulated for signature a printed form ■ of agreement called “marketing agreement,” some of the pertinent stipulations of which are:

That the cotton growers will become members of the association to be organized under the Go-operative Marketing Act when finally enacted or _ under other appropriate laws.

That the association as organized agrees to buy, and the growers agree to sell and deliver to the asspciation, all the cotton produced or acquired, by or for the growers and signers in Louisiana during the years 1923, 1924, 1925; 1926, and 1927. That if by January 1, 1923, signatures of cotton- growers to at least 75,000 bales of cotton of the 1921 crop shall not have been secured for the agreement, the organization committee shall notify every subscriber prior to January 15, 1923, and cancel his signature and the agreement signed by him. If. signatures of the growers of 75,000 bales shall be secured by said date, January 1, 1923, then the agreement shall be binding upon all the subscribers in all its terms and there shall be no right of withdrawal whatever.

It was stipulated that in all matters of contract or signatures, and for all statements of fact in connection therewith, the written statement of the organization committee signed by its chairman shall be absolutely conclusive, with or without notice to the subscriber.

It was further agreed by the cotton grower that his signature to the association contract and to the marketing agreement and to the application for membership shall be irrevocable, except as provided in the paragraph which fixed the minimum number of bales required to be signed up.

It was agreed that should the grower fail to sell and deliver all his cotton to the association he was to pay to the association five cents per pound middling cotton for all cotton he so.failed to deliver, as liquidated damages for’the breach of his contract.

*173 The grower .also agreed that in event of his breach of the contract in failing to deliver his cotton, or on the threatened breach thereof, the association should have the right to sue out an injunction to prevent the sale and delivery of his cotton otherwise than as provided in the contract.

In the event any legal action became necessary to enforce the terms of the agreement, the signer agreed to pay all costs and ex-penseg, including a reasonable attorney fee.

The defendant, J. E. Bacon, executed and signed one of the printed forms of agreement and delivered the same to the organization committee, and thereby became a member of the association on its incorporation, conditioned, of course, on the committee’s securing contracts of growers of the crop of 1921 amounting at least to 75,000 bales.

The defendant delivered his cottton of 1923 crop to the association, but failed to deliver any of the crop of 1924, shipping the same instead to W. B. Thompson of this city.

The association thereupon in November, 1924, instituted suit in the district "court of St. Landry parish, the domicile of said Bacon, to recover the stipulated damage of five cents per pound on 100 bales of the average weight of 500 pounds, and for $700 attorney fees.

An injunction was obtained after preliminary hearing against the defendant and W. B. Thompson, to whom the said cotton had been shipped.

The petition alleges that the association had performed all the conditions of its agreement with the cotton growers; that by .January 1, 1923, the signatures of cotton growers covering over 75,000 bales of the crop of 1921 were secured by the organization committee and were delivered to said committee prior to that date.

It is further alleged that on March 7, 1923, petitioner accepted the application of the said Bacon and ratified said agreement; and on the same day mailed a notice of such acceptance and of his membership in the said, association, all as provided for in the association agreement.

In answer to the petition, the defendant, among other defenses, alleged that the promoters and organizers of the plaintiff association made an illegal attempted organization thereof in violation of the conditions contained in the preliminary applications for membership and in the form of the contract.

He avers that he is informed and believes, and so believing alleges that said association commenced business at. the instance of its promoters before contracts had been entered into with bona fide growers of cotton who then actually controlled 75,000 bales, or who had controlled that quantity of cotton of the 1921 crop; that said association commenced business in direct violation of the suspensive condition contained in the contract which stipulated that all signed preliminary-agreements would be canceled and the signatures thereon erased, if the organization committee of said association failed to secure by January 1, 1923, the signatures of growers covering at least 75,000 bales of cotton; • that said condition of the preliminary contracts and applications for membership, and particularly respondent’s, application and preliminary contract, was a susr pensive condition which was-of the essence of the contract, and that failure to perform said contract during the term fixed ipso facto released respondent from said contract, and that said contract never obtained force and effect as against respondent, and accordingly respondent now pleads the nullity of said contract. ,

It is further alleged that defendant did not learn of the violation of this condition of the contract until the fall of 1924, long after he had shipped his 1923 cotton to said, association.

It is further alleged .that the. defendant is informed and believes that the promoters *175 ancl solicitors of plaintiff corporation, either through mistake and error, or through fraudulent intent, 'entered false returns and reports so as to make it appear on the records of said association that it had obtained control of the marketing of 75,000 bales of cotton, when as a matter of fact said condition had not been complied with.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Carter Oil Co. v. State Board of Equalization
1935 OK 482 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1935)
Ascension Red Cypress Co. v. New River Drainage Dist.
125 So. 730 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1929)
Rawlings v. Schwartz
118 So. 692 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)
Keiffe v. La Salle Realty Co.
112 So. 799 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1927)
Rayne State Bank v. Mouton
110 So. 340 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
105 So. 278, 159 La. 169, 1925 La. LEXIS 2213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-farm-bureau-cotton-growers-co-op-assn-v-bacon-la-1925.