Moss v. Robinson

43 So. 2d 613, 216 La. 295, 1949 La. LEXIS 1047
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 9, 1949
DocketNo. 39030.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 43 So. 2d 613 (Moss v. Robinson) 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
Moss v. Robinson, 43 So. 2d 613, 216 La. 295, 1949 La. LEXIS 1047 (La. 1949).

Opinion

HAMITER, Justice.

Dr. Albert Moss is appealing 'from a judgment which rejected his demands against Robert Edward Robinson and dismissed this action.

In support of the decree the district judge assigned the following written reasons :

“This is a suit by the plaintiff against the defendant on a note for $20,000, which note was dated December 10, 1947, and was made payable on demand to the plaintiff, with the stipulated rate of interest at 4% per annum from demand. The suit was filed January 7, 1948.
“The defendant answered admitting that he signed the note sued on but denied that the plaintiff gave him any value therefor or that he received any consideration whatsoever for the note. He then set up in his answer a transaction which occurred on October IS, 1947, in which transaction he alleged that he was instrumental in buying some oil mineral interests and royalties for Dr. Moss, and that he executed the note sued on in an attempt to preserve the friendship which had existed between him and Dr. Moss for a period of several years.
“On the trial of the case the plaintiff offered in evidence the note and stipulated a credit of $871.42, and closed his case.
“The defendant then offered evidence in an attempt to show that the note had been given to Dr. Moss purely as a gesture of friendship, and a reassurance to Dr. Moss *297 that he would not lose anything by virtue of his having advanced $20,000 to be used to purchase 25 acres of royalty and mineral rights under some lands situated in Marion Comity, Texas, upon which there were seven producing oil wells. The testimony of plaintiff, defendant, and plaintiff’s attorney, show conclusively that no consideration passed at the time of the execution of the note in the office of plaintiff’s attorney. The evidence is conflicting as to just why the note was executed. Plaintiff and his attorney testified that the note was executed to evidence a pre-existing debt which was incurred by defendant when he drew a draft on plaintiff on October 15, 1947, payable to H. B. Carroll in the sum of $20,000. The draft in question was endorsed by H. B. Carroll and also by Dr. Albert Moss, plaintiff in the case. The defendant claimed that he executed the note to reassure Dr. Moss that he had not been taken advantage of in the deal of October 15th, and that Dr. Moss was to hold the note until such time as the properties in question failed .to produce revenue, or until the properties were sold, and if a loss occurred to Dr. Moss that the note would be sufficient to reimburse him up to the amount of his loss.
“There admittedly being no consideration given for the note on the day of its execution, plaintiff, by virtue of the note, can be in no better position than he was following his allleged loan to the defendant from the time of the loan to the day of the execution of the note.
“The defendant having plead lack of consideration, and having set up in his answer circumstances casting suspicion upon . the execution of the note, the burden of proving consideration shifted to the plaintiff, or the payee of the note. Columbia Restaurant v. Sadnovick, La.App., 157 So. 280.
“We are, therefore, called upon'to decide whether plaintiff has shown by a preponderance of the testimony that the defendant received consideration for the execution of the note to plaintiff.
“The evidence shows that plaintiff and defendant had been very close personal friends for several years, and visited in each other’s homes often. The plaintiff is an optometrist, practicing his profession with offices on Milam Street in Shreveport, Louisiana. The defendant is an oil operator, dealing in oil properties and handling transactions on oil properties as a broker.
“The testimony shows that on October 15, 1947, the defendant stopped by the plaintiff’s place of business, as was his daily custom to do, and in their conversation the defendant informed the plaintiff that he was about to lose a ‘good deal’. Plaintiff inquired about the deal, and after the defendant had told him what the deal was, the plaintiff agreed to put up $20,000 to purchase the deal.
“The question we are called upon to decide is whether plaintiff purchased the deal for himself- or whether he loaned the money to- Robinson and Robinson purchased the deal for his own account with the money *299 put up by Dr. Moss and 'became indebted to Dr. Moss for that amount.
“J. T. Mostyn, Jr., and J. R. Cornelius, Cornelius being an attorney at law of Jefferson, Texas, had forwarded the deeds to the mineral interests to the First National Bank of Shreveport, with a draft attached in the amount of $16,750, addressed to H. B. Carroll. These deeds constitute the deal we have referred to and shall continue to refer to as ‘the deal’ which was the deal that Robinson had told Dr. Moss that he was about to lose. Carroll had endeavored to, and was still endeavoring to, sell the deal 'for $20,000. The owners of the deal had stipulated a time limit on leaving the deal in escrow at the First National Bank, which time limit had expired but had been extended verbally by the owners to Carroll.
“After Dr. Moss had been told of the deal by Robinson he authorized Robinson to draw a draft on him for $20,000. This Robinson did, payable to the order of H. .B. Carroll. The amount involved 'being •rather substantial, the bank called Dr. Moss and Dr. Moss went to the bank and authorized the payment of the draft to Carroll by endorsing same. The bank then released the deeds which were made to Carroll as vendee. Carroll and Robinson then took the deeds to Jefferson, Texas, where Carroll executed a transfer of the mineral and royalty interests to Dr. Albert Moss in the •office of Cornelius & Cornelius, Attorneys. Cornelius & Cornelius then wrote a title opinion to Dr. Moss and mailed it to him at Shreveport.
“Mr. Robinson, on October 16, wrote to T. P. Fulton, Auditer of the Gulf Oil Corporation of Houston, Texas, in which letter he stated: ‘Dr. Albert Moss, whom I represent, has puchased from H. B. Carroll * * * ’, a copy of which letter he mailed to Dr. Moss, the letter enclosing certified copies of the deeds and the instrument evidencing the ownership of the interest in Dr. Moss, the Gulf Oil Corporation being the purchaser of the oil from the interests of Moss.
“On October 25, 1947, Robinson addressed another letter to Mr. Fulton in connection with the transfer to Dr. Moss, and mailed Dr. Moss a copy of this letter. The royalty check did not arrive as soon as Dr. Moss expected that it would so he called Mr. Fulton up by long distance telephone and inquired about the delay. After a slight delay Dr. Moss received a check for the first month’s royalty in the amount of $287.
“Mr. Ro'binson had represented to Dr. Moss that the property should pay from $700 to $900 per month, and possibly $1000' per month. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
43 So. 2d 613, 216 La. 295, 1949 La. LEXIS 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moss-v-robinson-la-1949.