Lynn v. Lafitte

177 So. 83
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 29, 1937
DocketNo. 5493.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 177 So. 83 (Lynn v. Lafitte) 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
Lynn v. Lafitte, 177 So. 83 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

DREW, Judge.

Plaintiff in this suit claims the ownership of two bales of cotton. He alleged the cotton was raised by him and after it was picked was stolen by one Willie Laijtte and ginned by him at the Belcher Gin Company, under the name of “John Taylor”; that Lafitte sold the cotton to T. M. May who stored it in the American Warehouse & Compress Company at- Shreveport, La., and warehouse receipts were issued to T. S. McDavitt, of Hope, Ark. He prayed that the cotton be sequestered and that after trial he be decreed the owner of same and that it be delivered to his possession. He made defendants Lafitte, T. May, and T. S. McDavitt.

E. N. May and T. S. McDavitt answered admitting the cotton was ginned, sold, and stored as alleged, but denying that plaintiff was the owner of same. All other material allegations of the petition are denied and, further answering, alleged that E. N. May purchased the two bales of cotton from Willie Lafitte who was acting as agent for John Taylor; that he purchased it in good faith and that he is the owner of the cotton.

*84 Willie Lafitte answered denying the principal allegations of plaintiff’s petition and, further answering, alleged he was employed by Booker T. Player and James Player to haul the two bales of cotton from John Taylor’s place to the Belcher Gin 'Company and that he hauled same under the instructions of the two Players. He further alleged the cotton was raised and picked on the place owned by John Taylor and was not hauled from plaintiff’s place and was not plaintiff’s property; that he had no interest in the cotton and merely hauled it for the Players.

On these issues the case was tried below resulting in judgments for defendants.

• The lower court’s decision is based upon equitable estoppel. Estoppel was not pleaded below but in this court defendants have filed such a plea.

The lower court’s opinion is as follows:

“Plaintiff relies upon the testimony of his overseer to make out his case. This man says that between the dates of October 10th and 18th, 1936, he missed from a remote section of plaintiff’s plantation between two and three bales of cotton which had been picked and left in the fields over night; that during the alleged period he would see the cotton each night and estimate the amount taken next morning; that after the first shortage he continued to leave the cotton in the field knowing and intending that it be stolen in the hope of catching the thief. He admits that he took no 'steps to catch the thief or stop the thefts and that he did not report the losses to his employer. He says that he suspected Lafitte when he learned that he had ginned the two bales at the Belcher Gin Company in the name of Johnny Taylor, whereas he ginned the cotton that he raised at the gin of Mb Lynn, upon whose place he lived.
“Mr. Lynn says that all cotton picked should have been brought each night to the gin where it was protected by watchmen and that he did not know his foreman was 'derelict in his duty and disobeying his instructions by leaving the cotton in the field. That he did not know whether the cotton seized was his or not, as the matter was not reported to him until the first of November.
“Without reviewing all of the testimony, we are satisfied from it and the confession of Lafitte that he stole the cotton seized from the Lynn place and sold it to defendant May, who did not make the purchase until he had satisfied himself from inquiries made of the local ginner that the purchase was all right. Lafitte repudiates his confession and, as is always the case, claims that it was made under the duress of a brutal beating. The deputies concerned are men of proven probity, having served this court for many years. We put more faith in their denial than in Lafitte’s accusation. We then find that the cotton was stolen and sold as alleged.
“The equitable rule that where one of two innocent parties must suffer loss through the wrongdoing of another, the burden of loss should be imposed on him whose act or omission enabled the wrongdoer to commit the fraud, has been frequently approved by our Supreme Court.
“It is recognized in Overland Texarkana Company v. Bickley, 152 La. 622, 94 So. 138, but not applied because" the owner, having parted with his possession under a valid conditional sale, was not at fault.
“It is both recognized and applied in Thompson v. Hibernia Bank & Trust Company, 148 La. 57, 86 So. 652; Young v. Gretna Trust & Savings Bank, 184 La. 872, 168 So. 85; and Haley v. Woods, 163 La. 911, 113 So. 144.
“In the present case, the plaintiff’s overseer, for whose acts he was responsible, was grossly negligent in leaving the cotton in the field after being instructed to put it each night in a safe and guarded place. He was even more grossly negligent in continuing to leave it out after becoming aware that it was being stolen and in not taking some steps to catch the thief. His actions go much further than mere laches in that he left it out knowing that it would be stolen and ‘intending’ that it be stolen in the hope of catching the thief. Under such circumstances, to throw the loss upon an innocent third purchaser would be a grave injustice perpetuated in direct defiance of the above quoted rule approved by our highest court. He did not even take the precaution of warning the ginner in the vicinity.
“The prayer of the petition asking only recognition of the ownership of the cotton and the restoration of its possession to plaintiff, there is no judgment we' can render against Lafitte, though we find him culpable.
*85 “For the reasons above assigned, the writ of sequestration issued herein is dissolved and plaintiff’s demands rejected at his cost.
“E. P. Mills,
“District Judge.”

We concur in the facts as found by the lower court but disagree with its application of the law to these facts. We would like to go further with the facts than did the lower court. >

The cotton was stolen by Lafitte at different intervals between the dates of October 10th, and 19th, 1936. It was near the last of that month that plaintiff acquired the knowledge that Lafitte was the thief and what disposition had been made of the cotton. Soon after gaining this information, Lafitte was arrested and finally admitted his guilt. On November 1.8th following, this suit was filed. It can be readily seen from the above facts that plaintiff acted as quickly as possible in an effort to recover his cotton. Another fact not discussed by the lower court, which we aré of the opinion shows negligence and lack of precaution on the part of Mr. May when he purchased the cotton, is that Lafitte, an ordinary negro plantation hand, ginned the cotton in the name of John Taylor,' a negro farmer who lived in the vicinity of the gin and who was farming the place owned by his mother and on which he and his mother both resided. Lafitte also sold the cotton, in the name of John Taylor, altho.ugh Mr. May knew at the time that Lafitte was not John Taylor. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
177 So. 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lynn-v-lafitte-lactapp-1937.