Rapides Grocery Co. v. Clopton

125 So. 325, 15 La. App. 27, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 835
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 30, 1929
DocketNo. 523, and on Rehearing No. 626
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 125 So. 325 (Rapides Grocery Co. v. Clopton) 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
Rapides Grocery Co. v. Clopton, 125 So. 325, 15 La. App. 27, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 835 (La. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinions

ELLIOTT, J.

Rapides Grocery Company, Inc., claims of B. W. Clopton $208 as the balance due on a goods and merchandise account sold and delivered to him between March 13th and the 1st day of April, 1926. The sworn account sued on annexed to the petition shows that the sales consisted of cotton seed; 20 sacks of which were sold on March 13, 1926, in amount $150, and 40 sacks on April 1, 1926, in amount $300. Interest charged on account to November 1st, $8. Total $458. Credit for $250 cash was given May 5, 1926, leaving a balance of $208. Defendant admitted buying the cotton seed from plaintiff at the time and prices alleged, but denies any present indebtedness.

He alleges by way of reconvention that during the early part of 1926 he ordered from plaintiff 40 bushels of soy beans at $4.50 per bushel, under warranty expressed and implied that they would be of good sound quality and would germinate and fructify under proper planting and cultivation.

That during the month of March he planted about 100 acres of the beans in ground [29]*29suitably prepared for tbe purpose. That he observed during the month of April that the beans were not coming up and had not come up at all. That he promptly notified plaintiff of such fact and kept him informed thereof. That he then experimented with the seed and ascertained that they were rotten when received and would not germinate. That plaintiff was • notified of that fact and knew that said seed were fundamentally worthless at the time they were sold to him, and that they would not germinate or fructify. That defendant refused to pay for same on said account. That due to the bad quality of the seed, he lost the fertilization of his land and the fruit which the plants would have borne, and a further loss of 100 acres of beans which he estimated would have yielded 20 bushels to the acre, at $1 per bushel, $2,000, and 100 acres of hay which would have yielded six tons per acre, at $10 per ton, $6,000. Making an allowance for the expense of planting, cultivating, and harvesting, he estimated a net loss of $4,000 as a result of the inherently bad and rotten seed furnished him by the plaintiff. That he made payments on open account to the plaintiff before he discovered the unsound and rotten condition of said bean seed, because of his indebtedness for cotton seed, treating the account as a whole, but did not knowingly or advisedly make any payments whatever, specially on account of the said soy beans, after he discovered their worthless character.

He claims of the plaintiff in reconvention the sum of $4,000.

The plaintiff filed against defendant’s demand in reconvention a plea of prescription of one year, and urges that it is good, whether the cause of action set up against it be regarded as an act, coming under the provisions of the Civil Code, art. 2315, or as a redhibitory action under the Civil Code, art. 2546, because more than two years had elapsed since defendant’s discovery of the alleged vice. That moreover, the avoidance provided for by the Civil Code, arts. 1882, 2047, and Code of Practice,, art. 20, is restricted to suits that have been brought to enforce that particular contract. That the object of the present suit is to recover the balance due for the cotton seed only. That there is no demand before the court for the price of the soy beans.

There is no demand on the part of the plaintiff for the price of the soy beans, yet it is established, as well by its witnesses as it is by the testimony of the defendant, that it sold and delivered to defendant 40 bushels of soy beans for seed purposes at the same time it sold him the cotton seed. The plaintiff however says, through Mr. Stafford, its manager, that its account sued on is the only one it had against defendant on March 13, 1926, at which P'me defendant remitted $250 on account. His testimony is as follows:

“Q. I notice here you have given credit to Mr. Clopton on May 5th, 1926 for $250.0.0. How much was due at the time, according to your books, by Mr. Clopton to your firm, at the time you received the remittance?
“A. $450.00.
“Q. Then, when you received this remittance from Mr. Clopton was there anything in the check or in the letter covering the remittance indicating to what particular purchase of Mr. Clopton this remittance should be credited?”

The witness, after referring to the letter from Mr. Clopton to the plaintiff, which accompanied the check, answered:

“A. I presume so; yes sir.”

The evidence shows that two agents of plaintiff called together on defendant at his plantation, and he bought cotton seed from one of them and bean seed from the other; [30]*30Mr. Bogaerts being the one from whom he bought the bean seed. The order for both kinds of seed were given ac the same time, but there were two shipments of cotton seed. The evidence indicates that the sale of the bean seed took place at the first sale of cotton seed. Mr. Bogaerts, speaking of a conversation with Mr. Clopton in regard to the beans, says:

“Q. Did you make any inquiry of Mr. Clopton as to when and in what manner he had planted the beans?
“A. I asked him and he told me, in March.”

As the second shipment of cotton seed took place on April 1st, it is thus established with reasonable certainty that defendant bought the beans on March 13, 1926, that being the date of the first shipment of cotton seed. Mr. Bogaerts further said:

“Q. I wish you would give, in as near detail as possible, the conversation you had with Mr. Clopton at the time you sold him the seed.
“A. When I called on Mr. Clopton the primary object was to sell him cotton seed, and I found out that he had recently bought this plantation and that he was in the market for seed for practically the entire place; cotton seed, corn, peas, etc. And after selling him the cotton seed I naturally went over the lines that the house carried, in my department, mentioning all the seed that were listed and he bought cotton seed, corn and beans.”

This statement also indicates that the sale of the bean seed took place on his first visit to defendant for the purpose of selling him seed.

Mr. Clopton, speaking of his purchase of seed from plaintiff. and of his remittance of $250, says:

“Q. When you were placed upon the stand for the purpose of cross-examination you started to make a statement of the account you were questioned about and counsel stopped you, will you make that statement with regard to the soy beans?
“A. The soy beans did not show on his statement and I did not know why they should be left off. I bought all the seed at one time from the agent they had through here.
“Q. It was one account?
“A. Yes.
“Q. When you made the remittance of $250.00 did you send that as payment on the soy bean order, or did you send it intended as credit on the general account?
“A. Just as a credit on the general account. It would not offset any one item.”

The letter which defendant wrote accompanying the check for $250 shows that he did not specify how it was to be applied. But as 40 bushels of beans at $4.50 per bushel amounts to $180, the remittance was more than the beans amounted to.

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Related

Rapides Grocery Co. v. Clopton
131 So. 734 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 325, 15 La. App. 27, 1929 La. App. LEXIS 835, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rapides-grocery-co-v-clopton-lactapp-1929.