Louisiana State Rice Milling Co. v. Lawrence

155 So. 494, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 798
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 11, 1934
DocketNo. 1351.
StatusPublished

This text of 155 So. 494 (Louisiana State Rice Milling Co. v. Lawrence) 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
Louisiana State Rice Milling Co. v. Lawrence, 155 So. 494, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 798 (La. Ct. App. 1934).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Louisiana State Rice Milling Company, Inc., alleges that it purchased from W. D. Jones, broker, 850 bags of Blue Rose rice for $1.65 a barrel, belonging to Clarence Lawrence, covered by bonded warehouse receipts ■held by, S. Goldsmith; that said purchase was made on or about April 13, 1933, and that said Lawrence and said Goldsmith both verbally confirmed the sale; that petitioner has been ready and willing át all times to carry out the contract, accept and pay for the rice as weighed and delivered in accordance with the custom and practice of the trade, and had so notified the defendants; that defendants refused and declined to consummate the deal or deliver the rice or specifically perform the contract, for thd sole reason that the rice market had improved and the price had advanced practically a dollar on the barrel. In a supplemental petition alleging ’’fear that defendants will dispose of the property or place it beyond the reach of petitioner or out of the' jurisdiction of the court,” plaintiff caused the rice to be sequestered and taken in custody by the sheriff.

Plaintiff prays for judgment against Lawrence and Goldsmith ordering specific performance of the contract, and, in default of performance, for judgment against them in solido for $1,050.

Defendants appeared and moved the dissolution of the sequestration on the ground that the plaintiff did not purchase the rice and is not entitled thereto; that the rice belonged to defendant Lawrence, but bonded warehouse receipts covering same were held by defendant Goldsmith; that plaintiff’s averments upon which it had obtained the sequestration were false and untrue. A few days later they filed as an exception against plaintiff’s petition that it disclosed no right or cause of action.

The court, after hearing evidence on the motion to dissolve, giving written reasons, refused to dissolve the writ. The plaintiff then filed a second amended and supplemental petition alleging that since the institution of the suit defendants had bonded the sequestration and sold the rice. It prayed for judgment against them in solido for $1,050.

Defendants then filed an answer to plaintiff’s original and first and second amended and supplemental petitions in which they denied that plaintiff had bought the rice- from them and denied that they had confirmed any sale made to plaintiff or anybody else. They allege that,®. D. Shipp solicited S. Goldsmith for an option on said rice for 48 hours for the purpose of putting it in a pool of 25,000 bags; that S. Goldsmith made a conditional agreement to place the rice in the pool, conditioned upon consulting bis client Clarence Lawrence; that thereafter Shipp sought confirmation of his alleged option from Lawrence by representing to him that Goldsmith was going to sell the rice, whether he agreed to the sale or not; that Lawrence at no time gave his consent to the sale; that neither Lawrence nor Goldsmith were notified at the expiration of the forty-eight hour period that the option would be exercised and the rice was wanted for the pool; that no consideration was offered or paid for the option; that said contract, if any was entered into, was therefore null and void. In the event, however, it should be held that the contract amounted to a sale, then in that event they alleged that it was a conditional sale, condi *496 tioned upon the consent of Lawrence, which, consent was never obtained, or, if obtained, it was done through fraud and misrepresentation on the part of plaintiff’s agent. They charge plaintiff with attempting to compel them to deliver rice which they had not sold.

Plaintiff moved to strike out this answer on the ground that defendants’ motion to dissolve the sequestration was an answer to the merits, and prayed for judgments on the merits without hearing further evidence. The court overruled this motion, and, acting on the merits, held that a conditional sale had been agreed to between Goldsmith and plaintiff’s agent, but that, plaintiff not having paid anything on account of the rice, its obligation to pay the price was exactly offset by the amount due the defendant on that account; that there had been no increase in price at the time plaintiff was entitled to delivery, and that plaintiff had therefore suffered no damage. Plaintiff’s demand for damages was therefore rejected, but defendants were condemned to pay the cost.

The plaintiff has appealed.

The defendants answering the appeal, allege that the finding of the lower court that they had entered into a contract with the plaintiff for the sale of their rice was erroneous ; that easting them for the cost was further error. They prayed that the judgment appealed from be amended and corrected in the matters mentioned. The exception of no right or cause of action filed by defendants is not urged and may be looked on as abandoned.

The plaintiff in its brief alleges three errors committed by the lower court as follows:

First. “The court erred in holding that the pleading filed by defendants on May 16th 1933 which denied every material allegation in plaintiff’s petition, was not an answer, but truly a rule or motion to dissolve the writ.” We do not see the propriety of acting on this refusal to order the motion to dissolve to stand as an answer to the merits. The question of ownership was necessarily entered into on , the trial of the motion. Under Act No. 190 of 1912, all that plaintiff had to do on the trial of the motion in order to justify the issuance of the writ was to show that it was within the power of defendants to dispose of the property, and that fact appeared from the averments of the motion to dissolve. The lower court, in acting on the motion, did not act on the merits. It seems to us that this ruling has passed out of the case and is not reviewable on this appeal.

Second. The brief urges that the court erred in holding that, even if the merits were gone into, in acting on the motion to dissolve, and even though the motion to dissolve disposed of the case on the merits, the defendants had the paramount right to have the question of dissolution of the writ tested out in a summary manner. The contention is in effect substantially the same as the first one, clothed in different language. It has also passed out of the case. But suppose otherwise, the motion to dissolve was an incidental question of the kind contemplated by the Code of Practice, art. 756, which provides that: “Judgment shall be pronounced summarily on all incidental questions arising in the course of a civil trial.”

Third. It is urged that the court erred in holding, after a trial of the case for the second time on the merits, that plaintiff suffered no damage, etc., although it had purchased the rice from the defendants. It is from this judgment that the present appeal was taken and the alleged error will receive our consideration; but, in connection therewith, in fact before entering into the question of plaintiff’s right to recover damages, we must first take into account defendants’ answer to the appeal and their prayer therein contained.

The sale from W. D. Jones to plaintiff set up in its petition is evidenced by a purchasing report on a printed form used by Louisiana State Rice Milling Company, Inc. It bears date April 13, 1933, and calls for 1,864 sacks of rice from Monk & Lawrence, which is about twice the quantity claimed in the suit. It is signed Monk & Lawrence by W. D. Jones. It names R. H. Oertling as the buyer. S.

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155 So. 494, 1934 La. App. LEXIS 798, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/louisiana-state-rice-milling-co-v-lawrence-lactapp-1934.