Taylor v. Almanda & Bro.

23 So. 365, 50 La. Ann. 351, 1897 La. LEXIS 356
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedDecember 28, 1897
DocketNo. 12,462
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 23 So. 365 (Taylor v. Almanda & Bro.) 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
Taylor v. Almanda & Bro., 23 So. 365, 50 La. Ann. 351, 1897 La. LEXIS 356 (La. 1897).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Miller, J.

The appeal is by plaintiff from the judgment dismissing his suit and accompanying attachment for the amounts claimed to be due him on his contract to furnish defendants with a sugar mill and [352]*352appurtenances, and for extra or additional machinery he alleges was obtained from him by defendants.

The contract made by W. R. Taylor, “agent,” with defendants provides that the mill on the Rosehill plantation is purchased by them from Taylor; is by him to be shipped to defendants in Mexico, the price, ten thousand dollars, to be paid one-half cash when the contract is signed, the residue in eqnal instalments, one in sixty days and the other when the mill is erected on defendants’ plantation, Taylor to provide the engineer for the erection of the mill, and defendants to furnish certain materials and fulfil other obligations incident to the putting up of the mill. The defendants supposed Taylor was the owner of the mill, but it transpired afterward he was not, but had an agreement to buy from the owner of the plantation on which the mill was placed. The defendants complained of delay, in executing the contract, and with greater reason as they conceived because on the faith of it they had paid W. R. Taylor the greater portion of the ten thousand dollars. When defendant learned not only Taylor was not the owner of the mill, but having an arrangement to buy it had not completed its purchase, they became alarmed, not only for their crop dependent on the mill for which they bad contracted, bnt apprehensive of the loss of the large amount of their money paid W. R. Taylor in advance of any delivery. Thereupon, defendants employed an attorney, brought about a meeting of W. R. Taylor and the mill owner anxious to sell, but unwilling to deliver the mill without payment of the price, and this action of defendants, and their vigorous demand that the mill owner should be paid at once by Taylor, and for the fulfilment of his contract to ship the mill, resulted in his payment for the mill and its shipment to defendants late in the fall and more than ninety days after his contract. The mill appurtenances included in Taylor’s contract were to be made by the machinist employed by Taylor, and defendants about the same time they ascertained the cause of the delay in delivering the mill, learned also that the machinist not paid, would not deliver the appurtenances without payment. Thereupon, after some discussion and an effort to obtain the appurtenances, the defendants'were compelled to give their notes to the machinist for the amount due by Taylor on his contract with the machinist. After all this action on the part of defendants in respect to the mill and machinery Taylor had bound himself to furnish, the property was [353]*353finally shipped to defendants’ 'plantation in Mexico. Defendants-have provided the funds here to pay their notes, but Taylor through his agent in Mexico urging defendants to remit the funds for payment of the notes and informed as soon as it was made of the bank to which the money was sent, attached the funds when they reached here and thus seeks to defeat their application to pay the notes. This brought forward the note holders to resist his pretensions by their interventions in this case. They aver their right to-the funds under the facts and the instructions to the bank accompanying the remittance, and they aver that W. R. Taylor and his principal are estopped from contesting the application of the remittance to pay the notes. The controversy thus presents the issues of the right of plaintiff to recover on his contract with defendants, and whether the plaintiff can attach the funds remitted under the circumstances shown by the record to pay the debt Taylor was bound to pay and for which defendants by his default had to provide.

The plaintiff in his petition charges defendants with the contract price, ten thousand dollars, and with' items for alleged extras claimed to have been furnished defendants; he gives them credit for seven-thousand two hundred dollars, paid by them and for the notes they gave, and sues for the residue, two thousand four hundred dollars, he alleges is due. The defendants deny the execution of the contract; allege there was no contract with plaintiff, that he is merely interposed by the real party to the contract, W. R. Taylor; there is the averment of losses sustained by defendants by the non-execution of the contract on which plain-tiff sues, and the defendants reconvening claim heavy damages. The note holders in their interventions allege the circumstances under which defendants issued their notes and remitted the funds for their payment, aver their right to the funds and that plaintiff is estopped by his conduct from levying on the funds under his attachment.

There is a motion to dismiss plaintiff’s appeal, and in support of this dismissal it is urged the amount involved is below the jurisdictional limit of this court. The motion overlooks the amount claimed by plaintiff in excess of two thousand dollars, which carries jurisdiction of the incidental demands. Buckner & Robinson vs. Baker, 11 La. 462; Hart vs. Lodwick, 8 La. 167; Colt vs. O’Callaghan, 2 An. 189; Guion vs. Brown, 6 An. 112.

A great portion of the voluminous testimony put into this record [354]*354is devoted to the propositions that defendants had no contract with plaintiff, but dealt with W. R. Taylor, and that neither owned the mill stipulated by the contract. All this testimony and the,discussion on these points may be laid out of view. One may contract in his own name for another, who may sue to enforce it. Defendants are without interest to inquire into the relations between plaintiff and W. R. Taylor, which it is claimed accounts for the contract in Taylor’s name, described as agent.” It is enough for defendants that, whether sued by Taylor or his alleged principal, they are deprived of no defence. The fact that at the date of the contract Taylor did not own the mill, had agreed to buy it for a price less than the defendants were to pay, can exert no influence on the main issue whether he executed his contract to deliver the mill to defendants.

The plaintiff who sues to enforce the commutative contract must show performance. Taylor’s obligation was to deliver, i. e., ship the mill and appurtenances. Defendants were to pay part cash and the residue in sixty days, and the final payment when the mill was erected. It is claimed by plaintiff there was no default because the mill had to be taken down and prepared for shipment on the plantation. That it seems to us furnishes no answer to Taylor’s entire omission to pay for the mill he had bound himself to furnish until defendants’ action compelled that payment by him; nor is it less impressive on this branch of the case that in the long interval from the date of the contract to the compelled payment, the mill owner refusing delivery without payment, was under the impression the delay in paying him was owing to defendants’failure in their payments to Taylor, when in point of fact he had received a sum from defendant in excess of the requirement of their contract. Obtaining their money on the faith of his contract, and not paying a dollar on the mill until their action brought forward the mill owner, and constrained payment to him, exposed defendants not only to the risk of serious injury to their crop dependent on the mill, but to the loss of their money in his hands, and to serious annoyance and trouble. All this we must consider in connection with the issue he tenders of the faithful execution of his contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 So. 365, 50 La. Ann. 351, 1897 La. LEXIS 356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-almanda-bro-la-1897.