Morris N. Palmer Ranch Company, Cross-Appellee v. Ross J. Campesi, Cross-Appellant

647 F.2d 608, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12353
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 1981
Docket80-3313
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 647 F.2d 608 (Morris N. Palmer Ranch Company, Cross-Appellee v. Ross J. Campesi, Cross-Appellant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris N. Palmer Ranch Company, Cross-Appellee v. Ross J. Campesi, Cross-Appellant, 647 F.2d 608, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12353 (5th Cir. 1981).

Opinion

WISDOM, Circuit Judge:

This is a diversity case to be decided under Louisiana law. It involves a branch of the cattle industry that has experienced strong growth in recent years — the breeding of exotic breeds. Because the market for exotic breeds declined significantly in 1975, the defendant was unable to pay the plaintiff for over 500 head of Maine-Anjou cattle he had purchased just before the decline. The plaintiff sued. The district court reduced the purchase price because the bloodlines of some of the cattle were not what they were represented to be, but otherwise substantially enforced the obligations the defendant had undertaken. M.D. La.1980, 487 F.Supp. 1062. We affirm in most respects, but modify the district court’s judgment concerning the amount of prejudgment interest owed to the plaintiff.

I.

The plaintiff, Morris N. Palmer Ranch Company, breeds and raises cattle in Alberta, Canada. The defendant, Ross J. Campe-si, is a Louisiana cattle rancher. In December 1974, Campesi purchased from Palmer a herd of 476 Maine-Anjou cattle, a breed with French bloodlines. He received all but fifteen of those cattle at that time. The purchase price was $604,500. Campesi paid ten percent of the total purchase price as a down payment and executed six promissory notes, each representing one-sixth of the balance. The maturity dates of the notes were set at six-month intervals so that the payout scheme amounted to six semiannual installments; the first was due in July 1975. The notes were secured by a $1,000,000 collateral chattel mortgage on the cattle.

Campesi failed to pay any of the notes as they came due. In December 1976, Palmer and Campesi entered into an agreement (1976 Agreement) designed to replace the payout schedule represented by the six promissory notes. The 1976 Agreement called for an immediate payment of $200,- *611 000. The balance of the amount still due on the original price was to be paid yearly out of the proceeds Campesi earned from the sale of the herd’s progeny. The six promissory notes as well as the chattel mortgage were cancelled.

Campesi tendered the $200,000 called for in the 1976 Agreement, but Palmer refused to accept it, contending that an audit was an implied condition of the 1976 Agreement. When Campesi refused to pay for an audit, Palmer initiated this suit in January 1977 seeking the purchase price of the 476 cattle, the unpaid balance on two other smaller cattle purchases made by Campesi, the purchase price of semen used for breeding, and incidental expenses connected with transportation of the cattle from Canada to Louisiana.

Campesi’s liability for the purchase price of the largest herd was the focus of the litigation. Campesi alleged that the herd suffered from several redhibitory defects: some of the cattle did not have the blood lineage they were represented to have, the identification markings on many of the cattle were poor, and a number of cattle sold as pregnant heifers failed to bear offspring. On the basis of these redhibitory defects, Campesi counterclaimed for rescission of the sale or, alternatively, a reduction of the purchase price. He also sought lost profits, maintenance expenses, and attorneys’ fees.

The district court, in a carefully reasoned opinion, found that the 1976 Agreement went into effect notwithstanding Palmer’s refusal to accept the $200,000 Campesi tendered. The court further found that 24.4 percent of the herd had bloodline problems and that fifteen cattle had never been delivered, but rejected all of Campesi’s counterclaims except the claim for a reduction of the price. The court concluded that Campesi owed Palmer $453,066.36 plus interest commencing on the date of judgment. That figure represented the sum of the unpaid amounts Campesi owed on all the contracts of sale between the parties, together with incidental expenses, less a reduction in price for the undelivered cattle and the cattle having defective bloodlines in the. large herd. The plaintiff appealed from the court’s decision to reduce the price and the court’s failure to award him prejudgment interest; the defendant cross-appealed from the court’s refusal to rescind the entire sale and the court’s denial of recovery for lost profits and maintenance expenses.

II.

Both Palmer and Campesi wish us to review the district court’s rulings concerning Campesi’s defenses and claims in redhi-bition. Redhibition and its close ally, the action for reduction of the price (the action in quanti minoris), are governed by Louisiana Civil Code articles 2520 to 2548. Redhi-bition is defined as “the avoidance of a sale on account of some vice or defect in the thing sold, which renders it either absolutely useless, or its use so inconvenient and imperfect that it must be supposed that the buyer would not have purchased it, had he known of the vice”. La.Civ.Code art. 2520. A seller who is unaware of the defect is bound to repair the defect, but if he is unable to repair it, he must return the purchase price and reimburse the buyer for any maintenance expenses incurred. Id. art. 2531. Where the defects complained of do not rise to the level necessary to sustain redhibition, the buyer may seek a reduction in the price, id. art. 2541, and this action is governed by the same rules as the action for redhibition. Id. art. 2544. See generally Barham, Redhibition: A Comparative Comment, 49 Tul.L.Rev. 376 (1975); Comment, A Comparison of Redhibition in Louisiana And the Uniform Commercial Code, 19 La.L.Rev. 165 (1958); Comment, Warranty of Quality in Louisiana: Nature and Proof of the Implied-In-Law Warranty, 23 Tul.L.Rev. 96 (1948).

A.

Campesi first challenges the district court’s conclusion that the problems with the identification markings (tatoos, brands, and tags) on one-fourth of the herd did not constitute a redhibitory defect. The court offered two bases for its conclusion. It *612 found that the problems, if any, could have been discovered by simple inspection at the time of the sale and therefore could not serve as defects justifying either redhibition or a reduction in price. La.Civ.Code arts. 2521, 2544; 1 Magee Motors, Inc. v. Guerdon Industries, Inc., 1976 La.App., 328 So.2d 761. In addition, the court found that Campesi had failed to prove the existence of a redhibitory defect in the identification markings. Although some of the markings were illegible, this was in large part attributable to Campesi’s failure to maintain the markings during the three years between the date of delivery and the date when his expert inspected the cattle. Even Campe-si’s expert witness admitted that markings become illegible with the passage of time. Furthermore, Campesi failed to establish that even a single cow with an illegible marking could not be identified and matched with its registration papers by some alternative markings. We have examined the record and find ample support for both of the court’s conclusions with respect to the identification markings.

Campesi also contends that the court erred in failing to reduce the price of the sale because about 60 cattle sold as bred heifers never bore offspring.

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647 F.2d 608, 1981 U.S. App. LEXIS 12353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-n-palmer-ranch-company-cross-appellee-v-ross-j-campesi-ca5-1981.