Tircuit v. Gottlieb

151 So. 428
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 4, 1933
DocketNo. 1248.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 151 So. 428 (Tircuit v. Gottlieb) 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
Tircuit v. Gottlieb, 151 So. 428 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Thomas Tircuit substantially and in effect alleges that he purchased an automobile from Lewis Gottlieb by authentic act dated June 10, 1932. That Lewis Gottlieb is engaged in trade under the name of Standard Motor Car Company. That he was entitled to a new automobile; finding some marks and scratches on the one delivered to him his father, Thomas Tircuit, Sr., representing him, brought it to Baton Rouge and requested Gottlieb to substitute another automobile in its place. He alleges that Gottlieb agreed to do so; that he returned to Gottlieb the automobile that had been delivered to him in the sale, but Gottlieb, not having at the time another automobile with the same finish as the one he returned, expected a carload of automobiles in a few days and they therefore agreed that petitioner should wait the arrival of the shipment and select therefrom a new automobile to take the place of the one returned. That in a few days he received notice from Gottlieb that the carload of new automobiles had arrived and to come and get the one that he was to receive in the exchange. That he sent his brother to get it, but Gottlieb refused to let him select another automobile and refused to return the one that had been left with him in the exchange.

Plaintiff claims in his petition to be the owner of the automobile sold to him on June 10, 1932, but in' another part of his petition he alleges that Gottlieb, previous to the suit, had tortiously converted it to his own use. He prays in the alternative, in cáse the automobile which he claims cannot be returned to him, that he then, in that event, recover $1,326.14 as its value, with damages set out in his petition.

The defendant for answer substantially alleges that plaintiff is not the owner of the automobile described in his petition; admits that it was sold and delivered. to him, but alleges that plaintiff was not satisfied with it and brought it back, and that they entered into an agreement to substitute another one in its place, and pursuant to this agreement it was returned to him. He alleges that as a result of said exchange agreement and return of the automobile which had been sold to the plaintiff, the sale was canceled. He then alleges that the cash consideration contemplated in the act of sale was a certificate of the Louisiana highway commission for $714.43, taken in the sale upon a discount of 20 per cent., making a net sum of $571.74. That there was also received as cash an old automobile belonging to plaintiff, at a valuation of $500, subject to a mortgage of $189.41. That the cash price was thus made up of a highway commission certificate valued at $571.74 and an old' automobile valued at $500, subject to a mortgage of $189.- *429 41. That the balance of the price was on credit and represented by ten notes each for $25.44, payable monthly, a total of $1,326.14. That he was represented in the sale by Atkinson, his agent, who supposed the certificate which he received was a highway certificate. That a highway certificate had a cash value of about 80 cents on the dollar. That when he came to examine the certificate received, it turned out to be a certificate of participation in the proceeds of the State of Louisiana Highway Bonds, Series F, Certificate No. 414, which had no value at all. That he failed to examine the certificate which had been delivered to his salesman and did not discover that it was a participation certificate until after the exchange had been agreed on and after the plaintiff had been notified to come and get the automobile to which he was entitled under the exchange. That when he discovered that the certificate received was not a highway certificate as he had supposed but a participation certificate, which was an entirely different matter, he refused to carry out the exchange, and prayed that plaintiff’s demand be rejected.

There was judgment in favor of the defendant, and plaintiff has appealed.

The petition of the plaintiff and the answer of the defendant contain averments not stated because it would serve no purpose to do so. It is the same as to an exception and an amendment to plaintiff’s petition. There is no dispute as to the important facts, and both sides give substantially the same statement. The undisputed testimony and admitted facts make the issue different in some respects from that set out in the pleadings. In acting on the case we take the admitted and undisputed facts received and developed on the trial, without objection, for our guide.

Lewis Gottlieb, trading under the name of the Standard Motor Car Company represented by his salesman Atkinson, sold and delivered to the plaintiff, Thomas Tircuit, Jr., represented by his father, Thomas Tircuit, Sr., a Dodge automobile manufactured in the year 1932, style four-door sedan, make of engine Dodge Serial No. 3567277, engine No. D L 10713, for the price of $1,326.74. The sale was by authentic act which bears date June 10, 1932. The sum of $1,071.74, said in the act to have been paid in cash, was not paid in cash, but by the delivery of a certificate which both parties supposed was a highway certificate for $714.43 at an agreed price of $571.74 and an old automobile belonging to Thomas Tircuit, Jr., at a valuation of $500 subject to a mortgage of $189.41. The balance of the price in amount $254.40 was on credit and represented by ten promissory notes each for $25.44, payable monthly. The automobile sold to Tircuit, Jr., was delivered the same day, but plaintiff after using it three or four days, became dissatisfied, on account of some marks and scratches which he found on the body and fender, causing him to think he had not received a new car to which he was entitled, go his father, Thomas Tircuit, Sr., acting with the consent of the plaintiff, took the automobile back to Baton Bouge, called on Gottlieb, and requested another automobile in its place.

Mr. Gottlieb, after inspecting the automobile which had been delivered by his agent to the plaintiff, agreed with Thomas Tircuit, Sr., that he was entitled to a new car, and Mr. Tircuit, authorized by his son to do so, and acting in his son’s name, and Gottlieb acting for himself, then and there agreed that the automobile sold plaintiff on June 10, 1932, might be, and it was there and then, returned to Gottlieb, and Gottlieb received it as owner and agreed on his part that plaintiff should have a new automobile in place of the one returned. There was no new sale, and no new price; another automobile was to be substituted for the one returned. The agreement in effect amounted to an exchange. Gottlieb did not, at the time, have a suitable automobile in stock, but was expecting a carload of automobiles in a few days, so it was agreed that plaintiff should wait for the new shipment to arrive, and when it would come, he was to select therefrom another automobile in place of the one returned. Thomas Tircuit, Jr., carried out the exchange agreement on his part there and then by returning to Gottlieb the automobile described in the act of sále. Under the agreement Gottlieb became owner of the returned automobile and Thomas Tircuit,. Jr., became owner of one of the new automobiles to arrive, delivery to abide its arrival and selection. But after this agreement had been entered into and after the new automobile had arrived and plaintiff had been notified to come and get his automobile, Gottlieb discovered that the certificate for $714.43 which Atkinson, his agent, had received, understood, and supposed to be a highway certificate worth $571.74 in cash, was not such in fact, but a participation certificate having no market value.

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Bluebook (online)
151 So. 428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tircuit-v-gottlieb-lactapp-1933.