Sevin v. Caillouet

30 La. Ann. 528
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 15, 1878
DocketNo. 6923
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 30 La. Ann. 528 (Sevin v. Caillouet) 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
Sevin v. Caillouet, 30 La. Ann. 528 (La. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Egan, J.

The plaintiffs were commission merchants in' the city of New Orleans. The defendant resided in the parish of Lafourche, where [529]*529he was engaged in the year 1871 in planting, in partnership with J. K. Gourdain, a member of plaintiffs’ firm at the time. It appears that the defendant had been furnishing the money used by his partnership, but that in the month of May it became necessary to arrange for advances of money and supplies for the year; that Gourdain was unable to furnish them, and that an arrangement was made by which his New Orleans firm agreed to make the necessary advances; but in order to enable them to do so that Oaillouet gave his draft on them to his own order and by him indorsed for five thousand five hundred dollars payable on the first of January, 1872, with eight per cent interest from maturity, and at the same time, to secure the same to plaintiffs or any-holder, executed a public act by which he declared that he did “pledge and give as collateral security a certain conventional-mortgage, with vendor’s lien and privilege, resulting from the sale by him to other parties of a certain sugar plantation in the parish of Lafourche, by act passed before J. K. Gourdain, the parish recorder, in January, 1860.”

'This draft was taken by the plaintiffs’ firm, as was customary among commission merchants, with a view to its negotiation or use as a pledge or collateral security, in order to raise money with which to make the advances stipulated for. It was accepted and so used by them, and at its maturity, as they allege, was paid.- They allege that the defendant became indebted to them “for moneys due and advanced during the year 1871,” for the plantation worked by him and his partner, Gourdain,’ in the sum of six thousand three hundred and seventy-eight dollars and sixty-one cents, with eight per cent interest per annum thereon from the dates set forth and fully detailed in an account current accompanying this petition, “and that the before mentioned” draft and “pledge” were “ executed to guarantee ” the payment of this indebtedness. They ask for judgment for the full amount of their account, and for the sale of the mortgage and vendor’s privilege claimed to have been pledged to satisfy the said indebtedness to the amount for which the draft was given, besides interest and five per cent attorney’s fees as stipulated in the act of pledge. Under this state of facts we regard the present action, and indeed the plaintiffs themselves so treated it, as on an account current, into which the draft passed, was merged so soon as it was taken up by the plaintiffs. It is evident that the act of pledge, as it is termed, was designed to secure the draft and to give it currency and credit for the purpose of its negotiation so as to raise money and thus enable the plaintiffs to make the proposed advances. The draft was so used, and at its -maturity was paid according to its tenor by the plaintiffs, the acceptors. The draft thus became extinct and with it the pledge or security, if, indeed, it amounted to so much.

The defendant denied all the allegations of the plaintiffs except th© [530]*530signature of the draft and the execution of the notarial act of pledge of the mortgage and vendor’s lien (which we may here remark was not offered in evidence), denied specially receiving any advances from plaintiffs and any indebtedness to them on account of either the draft or act of pledge, the obligations of which were conditional, and the condition had not happened; and sets up against them error, fraud, and want and failure of consideration. He avers further that they were given for the accommodation of the plaintiffs, and to enable them to raise funds to be loaned by them to their copartner, Gourdain, to aid him in his planting; that it was distinctly understood that the plaintiffs would take up the draft at its maturity, and cancel and return it to defendant, by whom it was so loaned to them as an accommodation; that respondent was not to be considered or held bound in the same, and that plaintiffs had frequently assured him that the draft was so taken up and canceled' and respondent discharged therefrom. He further denies the existence, in any event, of any legal or valid pawn or pledge of the conventional mortgage, by reason of its not being susceptible of pledge or pawn, and by reason of there having been no delivery of possession. Defendant sets up a reconventional demand for over twenty thousand dollars, for money loaned plaintiffs, and crops of sugar and molasses shipped to and sold by them and not accounted for, and prays judgment rejecting their demand, and in his own favor, for the amount claimed in reconvention. •

The notarial act professing to create the pledge to secure the draft recites that both are given for moneys, supplies, and provisions furnished and to he furnished to carry on and cultivate, during the year 1871, the plantation cultivated by the defendant and his partner, Gourdain, , and contained the usual obligation on the part of both the partners to ship to the plaintiffs all the crop of sugar and molasses made on the place that year. The act was signed both by Caillouet and Gourdain. Clay Knoblock swears that he was present when the draft and notarial act of pledge were executed, and he is positive that they were given either for the accommodation of the plaintiffs, or of one of the partners of the firm, Gourdain; that he acted as the friend of both parties in this transaction and knew that Caillouet had furnished the money used so far to run the place; and that Gourdain often acknowledged that he was indebted to his commercial firm in the sum of about seven thousand dollars, of which the amount of this draft formed a part; and that he was, besides, indebted to his partner, Caillouet, to at least twenty-five hundred dollars, and was unable to pay him; another witness swears that Gourdain told him this was his debt; and the son of defendant swears that Sevin told him that the amount ought to be charged to Gourdain, but that he could not change his books. This is denied by [531]*531Sevin, as is also the substance of the defense set up. A clerk of the plaintiffs swears to the correctness of the account, but says he only knows it is correct because it is so on the books of the firm. The amount of §1498 21 only appears from the account to have been charged to the Seudday plantation, that worked by Caillouet and Gourdain; while on the thirtieth of May, 1871, that amount was transferred to the account of Caillouet and Gourdain, with whom the account was kept by Sevin and Gourdain from that date.

There is no allegation or proof that Caillouet assumed the payment of that amount, or that he is otherwise liable in any event than as a planting partner, in which capacity' he is not sued. The account was not annexed or alleged to be annexed to or made part of the petition, the allegation of which is, as we have seen, that “ the defendant became indebted to plaintiffs for moneys due and advanced during the year 1871.” The defendant’s counsel asked that the plaintiffs be confined to the proof of cash advances, and the court so ordered. His counsel excepted to this ruling, and offered to amend the petition instanter, while the trial was going on, so as to make the allegation conform to the account, which included many other charges besides cash advanced. We think the court did not err in refusing the amendment under the circumstances and at the time it was asked. It was matter of substance, would have delayed the cause and changed the issues.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Moore v. Davis
196 So. 566 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1940)
Thomas Co. v. Baton Rouge Coal & Towing Co.
7 La. App. 231 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 La. Ann. 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sevin-v-caillouet-la-1878.