Mason v. Ruffin

130 So. 843, 15 La. App. 375, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 662
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 7, 1930
DocketNo. 3105
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 130 So. 843 (Mason v. Ruffin) 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
Mason v. Ruffin, 130 So. 843, 15 La. App. 375, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 662 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

DREW, J.

Plaintiff sued for $239, alleging same to be a balance due on thirty-four head of steers and one cow sold to the defendant in December, 1926.

Defendant denies any indebtedness to plaintiff, alleging that he has paid all that he contracted and agreed to pay for the said steers and cow, and further alleges that' plaintiff had agreed to sell him a total of one hundred steers; that after delivering thirty-four head, plaintiff refused to deliver the remaining sixty-six steers; [376]*376and that by reason of bis failure has caused defendant damage in the sum of $1046.10, profits he would have realized in the resale of the said steers, and the further sum of $145.40, cost of feeding the thirty-four head of steers for thirty days. In reconvention, he prays for judgment in the above stated amounts against plaintiff.

The trial in the lower court resulted in judgment rejecting the demands of plaintiff and in favor of the defendant in re-convention in the sum of $430.80, together with interest and costs. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed and defendant has answered the appeal praying that' the judgment granted to him be increased to the amount prayed for in the original pleadings.

The disagreement between plaintiff and defendant arose over the classification and the price of the steers and the number of steers sold or agreed to be sold. As to the, thirty-four steers delivered, plaintiff claims as follows:

28 Steers ..................................$37 each $1036
4 2-year-old steers ................ 20 each 80
2 stags .................................... 20 each 40
1 cow ............-..............;............. 25 25
$1181 Less amount paid ________________________________ 942
Balance claimed ....................................$ 239
Defendant claims the trade was as follows:
13 old steers _______________________$37 each $481
8 4-year old steers ................ 22 each 176
13 2 and 3-year-old steers and stags .......... 22 each 260
917 1 cow ........................................ 25 25
Total —_-----------------------------------------------------$942

Plaintiff contends that the contract was agreed upon at a basis of $37 each for all steers, three years old and above, and a price of $20 each fixed for the two-year-old steers.

Defendant contends that the agreement was on three classes of steers: first, the old class of steers or,oxen, at $37 each; second, smooth steers from four years old up to the oxen class, at $22; and the two and three-year-old steers and stags at $20 each.

There is no dispute over the price of the one cow.

The testimony on these contentions is very conflicting and the credibility of the witnesses would have much effect on the decision. The judge of the lower court heard and ' saw the witnesses testify and was better qualified to pass on their credibility than we are. He found the facts to be with the defendant, holding that the trade contemplated three classes of steers at the price contended by defendant, and rejected the demand of the plaintiff. We are not disposed, to disturb his finding in that, respect.

Defendant in reconvention claims that he purchased, or plaintiff agreed to sell and deliver to him, all the steers that he owned, and fixed a minimum number of one hundred to be delivered. He contends further that he had agreed to sell the same steers for a price of five cents per pound, all around, and that • by failure of the plaintiff to deliver the remaining sixty-six steers, ‘ he was damaged in the amount prayed for. He bases his damage on the average profit he made on the thirty-four steers delivered.'

[377]*377The lower court held that defendant had purchased or agreed to purchase one hundred steers; that there was no specific number of each grade fixed in the contract; and that plaintiff could have delivered sixty-six of the smallest class, that is, two and three-year-old steers, and complied with the contract. He fixed the average weight of the two and three-year-old steers at 600 pounds each and awarded judgment on that basis. The claim for' the cost of feeding the steers for thirty days was rejected for the reason that it was shown that defendant would have had to keep the steers at least that long in order to free them of ticks' before the sale he had made could' be , consummated. The holding as to the feeding of the steers for thirty days is, we think, correct, but we cahnot agree with the holding of the lower court in awarding damages to the defendant.

The number of steers to be delivered was never agreed upon by the parties. After the price and classification had been agreed upon, the plaintiff was asked by defendant how many steers he had, to which he replied, “125 or 150, I think, scattered here and yonder, and I want to sell them all at that price”; and defendant replied, “I will take them all.”

Defendant testified that he understood that plaintiff wanted to sell all he had and go out of the cattle business arid that he intended buying all that he had, and the only evidence regarding 100 head of steers is that defendant says he wrote on the check he gave to plaintiff at the time of the trade, “dep. on one hundred head of cattle.” The check was for $500. He does not contend that he ever mentioned 100 head of cattle to plaintiff or that there was any discussion about 100' head of Steers. Plaintiff contends that if anything was written on the check he received, that he did not see it, and that if he had seen-it, he would not have ■ accepted it. The check was introduced in evidence and if any such writing was ever on it, it had been erased. There is some evidence by the cashier of the bank that the check bore evidence of such erasure. It is clear to the court that the plaintiff intended selling to defendant all the steers he owned, whatever the amount may have been, and that defendant intended to buy all the steers owned by the plaintiff; that neither the plaintiff nor defendant knew at that time how many plaintiff owned, and the number to be sold, together with the price to be paid, was to be fixed on delivery of the steers as plaintiff could locate them and deliver them. There was never any trade for exactly 100 head of steers. It was for all the steers plaintiff had that he could get up and deliver to defendant, whether it was fifty, seventy-five or one hundred and fifty.

Article 1798 of the. Revised Civil Code reads:

“As there must be two parties at least to every contract, so there must be something proposed by one and accepted and agreed to by another to form the matter ..of such contract: the will of both parties must unite on the same point.”

Article 1805 of the Revised Civil Code:

“The acceptance to form a contract must be in all things conformable to the offer; any condition or limitation contained in the acceptance of that which formed the matter of the offer, gives him who makes the offer, the right to withdraw it.”

Plaintiff offered to sell all the steers he owned, estimating the number at 125 or [378]*378150, and defendant agreed to buy 100.

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 843, 15 La. App. 375, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mason-v-ruffin-lactapp-1930.