Stewart Bros. Cotton Co. v. Dufilho

133 So. 521, 16 La. App. 148, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 478
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1931
DocketNo. 3338
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 133 So. 521 (Stewart Bros. Cotton Co. v. Dufilho) 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
Stewart Bros. Cotton Co. v. Dufilho, 133 So. 521, 16 La. App. 148, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 478 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

DREW, J.

Plaintiff sued for the sum of $1,781.10, with legal interest thereon from judicial demand, alleging that in the months of August and September, 1926, it bought from defendant 500 bales of cotton at prices #fixed at the time of purchase, defendant to be responsible in respect to the grade and staple of the said cotton according to its outturn in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, indemnifying plaintiff against any difference in this respect between the said cotton as billed out by defendant, and plaintiff indemnifying and making good to defendant any excess due the said defendant in this respect, over the amount at which the said cotton was billed.

That in the months of September and October, 1926, the 500 bales of cotton were shipped by defendant to plaintiff and invoiced at the aggregate sum of $41,557.98, which sum was paid by plaintiff; but the New Orleans outturn of said cotton in respect to the grade and staple, amounted to the sum of $39,911.68, leaving a difference due plaintiff by the defendant of $1,646.30. It further alleged that under the direction of defendant, plaintiff incurred an . expense of $134.80 in having 337 bales of cotton classed by the New Orleans Cotton Exchange, which amount was due plaintiff by the defendant. It prays for judgment accordingly.

Defendant admits the contract, as alleged by plaintiff, but alleges that the staple of such cotton was to be based on types furnished him by plaintiff. He admits the shipment of 500 bales of cotton invoiced at the sum of $41,557.98, and affirmatively alleges that the purported New Orleans outturn on said cotton was not based on staple types of plaintiff, according to the agreement between him and plaintiff, but on government and New Orleans Cotton Exchange staple types, which are different from plaintiff’s types. That his invoices were based on staple types furnished him by plaintiff as a basis for the classification of said cotton under the contract entered into between them, and that the classification of the grade of the cotton made by him was correct, and that made for plaintiff was incorrect. He further denies that he is responsible for the charges made by the New Orleans Cotton Exchange for the classifying of said cotton and prays that plaintiff’s demands be rejected.

There was judgment in the lower court in favor of plaintiff for the amount of $1,646.30, the alleged difference between the sum paid defendant and the outturn of the cotton in New Orleans, and rejecting plaintiff's demands for the $134.80, paid by it to the New Orleans Cotton Exchange for classification of the said cotton. From this judgment defendant in open court asked for orders of suspensive appeal to this court, and same were granted upon defendant’s furnishing bond in accordance with the law and made returnable on May 21, 1928.

The judgment of the lower court was signed on April 18, 1928, and on the same day bond in the sum of $2500 was executed, with Mrs. Miriam Conway Dufilho as surety, and filed with the clerk of the district court. The case was returned into this court on May 21, 1928. On May 9, 1928, plaintiff served notice on defendant that it objected to the suspensive appeal bond filed by him for the reason that the amount of the bond was insufficient and the surety thereon pecuniarily insufficient and without capacity to bind herself as surety thereon for the obligation of her husband. That plaintiff would test the [150]*150sufficiency of said bond as to tbe amount, and the solvency, sufficiency and capacity of said surety. Defendant failed to furnish another bond, and on May 22, 1928, one day after the- appeal had been returned into this court, plaintiff and appellee filed a motion to dismiss the appeal for the reasons set out in the notice served upon defendant, alleging service of said notice, and attaching copy of same, together with a certificate of the clerk of the district court that no additional or supplemental bond had been filed by defendant. The motion to dismiss was ordered by this court to be placed on the preference docket, but was never tried until the hearing herein on the merits.

On May 26, 1928, plaintiff filed in the lower court a rule to show cause why execution should not issue on the judgment, alleging the facts above set forth, attacked the bond, and prayed for the issuance of a fieri facias, and that the appeal' bond be declared invalid. The rule was made returnable on May 30th, at 2 p. m., at which time there was no appearance by defendant or his counsel, and the rule was duly tried and made absolute. The appeal bond was declared to be invalid and ineffective, and the clerk was ordered to issue a fieri facias on the judgment.

After execution issued, the defendant paid the judgment in full, and on June 16, 1928, had the judgment canceled on the mortgage records of Caddo parish, Louisiana.

On February 1, 1929, defendant petitioned for a devolutive appeal from the original judgment, which order was granted, fixing the appeal bond at $50, and making the return day February 25, 1929. The bond was filed on February 5, 1929, and on February 23, 1929, the defendant presented a motion to this court setting out that he had taken a devolutive appeal and was filing a supplemental transcript showing all proceedings had in the lower court since the record was lodged in this court under his suspensive appeal, and prayed for orders allowing him to prosecute his devolutive appeal on the original and supplemental transcript. The motion and supplemental transcript* were ordered filed under the number and as part of the original record.

On February 28, 1931, plaintiff, appellee, filed a motion to dismiss the devolutive appeal, setting out all the facts above stated, and alleging that defendant’s acts constituted an abandonment of the suspensive appeal, and that he no longer had a right to a devolutive appeal.

The motion to dismiss presents an interesting question and one on which the jurisprudence of this state is apparently greatly in conflict. However, since our finding on the merits is that the judgment of the lower court is correct, we prefer to base our decision on the merits alone.

Plaintiff and defendant are in full accord as to wbat the contract was in most respects—that is, that in the months of August and September, 1926, ' plaintiff bought from defendant 500 bales of cotton, at prices fixed at the time of purchase, the defendant to be responsible in respect to the grade and staple of said cotton, according to its outturn in the city of New Orleans, Louisiana, defendant indemnifying plaintiff against any difference in this respect between the said cotton as-billed out by defendant, and plaintiff indemnifying and making good to defendant any excess due said defendant in this respect over the amount at which the said cotton was billed. They are in full accord as ■ to the amount received by defendant [151]*151for the cotton, tq-wit: $41,557.98, and there is no dispute as to the amount of the out-turn of the cotton at New Orleans, to-wit: $39,911.68. The one thing of which defendant complains is that the outturn in New Orleans was based upon government and New Orleans Cotton Exchange staple types and not upon staple types, of plaintiff. That he sold upon private staple types of plaintiff furnished him by plaintiff and not on government or New Orleans Cotton Exchange types. That the cotton he sold plaintiff was properly classed according to types furnished him by plaintiff; and that plaintiff has failed to prove its claim because it has failed to show that the outturn was based upon the types furnished him, defendant, by plaintiff as a basis for classification.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 So. 521, 16 La. App. 148, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 478, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stewart-bros-cotton-co-v-dufilho-lactapp-1931.