Vinton Grain Co., Inc. v. Rickerson

148 So. 292, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1821
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1933
DocketNo. 1129.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 148 So. 292 (Vinton Grain Co., Inc. v. Rickerson) 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
Vinton Grain Co., Inc. v. Rickerson, 148 So. 292, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1821 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

LE BLANC, Judge.

On July 31, 1930, the Louisiana highway commission awarded a contract to Lawrence Construction Company of Jackson, Miss., under which the latter bound and obligated itself to build a certain paved highway extending 4.86 miles west from the town of Vinton in the parish of Calcasieu, known and described in the contract as state project 1900. Lawrence Construction Company sublet part of the work it was obligated to do under the contract to George W. Rickerson, one of the defendants in this suit. The Union Indemnity Company became bondsman for the Lawrence Construction Company, guaranteeing full and faithful compliance with all the terms and conditions of the contract. The claim here* presented is one for feed furnished by the plaintiff, Vinton Grain Company, Inc., to Rickerson for the mules and *293 other live stock used by him in the construction and erection of the road, and, he having failed to pay for same, demand is now made on the Union Indemnity Company on its bond. The amount is said to be a balance of $1,-294.38, and, as more than thirty days had elapsed since amicable demand for payment, there is a demand for 10 per cent, additional for attorney’s fees.

Riekerson made no defense, and judgment went against him by default. He is not a party to this appeal, which was taken by plaintiff from the judgment below, which rejected the demand as against Union Indemnity Company.

From the testimony, it appears that, when Riekerson started on the job, he established a line of credit with the plaintiff company for groceries as well as for the feed account which is here sued on. The bills for groceries were not separated from those for the feed, and they were all carried on the same account. The account, about the middle of January, 1931, amounted to $4,998.33. It is not disputed that the bondsman under the Public Works Building Law, Act No. 224 of 1918 as amended by Act No. 271 of 1926, whilst liable for feed that is used and consumed by mules and other live stock used on the work, is not liable for groceries furnished to the contractor. Nor, we understand, is it disputed that he is liable for feed furnished the subcontractor to the same extent as he would be for that advanced to the contractor.

Toward the latter part of 1930, or during the early days of 1931, Riekerson defaulted on his contract, and, on notice to that effect by Lawrence Construction Company, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, surety on his bond, assumed his subcontract and placed him in charge of the work. At that time Lawrence Construction Company owed Riekerson a sum in excess of $5,000. The testimony indicates plainly that Mr. Roy Miller, manager of the plaintiff company, was fully aware of the fact that Riekerson had defaulted on his contract and that his surety had taken over the work. He knew also that Lawrence Construction Company was indebted unto Riekerson and was anxious to see him paid so that his company in turn could be paid their indebtedness. So anxious, in fact, was he, that Riekerson says that he interceded for him, rang up the bonding company in New Orleans, and finally “scared”’ Lawrence into mailing the check to the bonding company. This check, which was given by the Lawrence Construction Company to the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, on January 8, 1931, was for the sum of $5,-697.34. From that amount, $1,000 was deducted to meet a payroll, $8.55 was paid for exchange, and the balance, $4,688.79 waá deposited in the Calcasieu National Bank at Lake Charles, subject to withdrawal by check signed by Riekerson, and countersigned by Terrell Woosley, local agent of the United' States Fidelity & Guaranty Company. On this amount so deposited there was drawn on. January 16, 1931, a check signed by Ricker-son and countersigned by Woosley, in the sum of $2,000, payable to the order of Yinton Grain Company, which check was delivered to Mr. Miller by Riekerson in person. In using that check in liquidation of his company’s account, Miller, who had in the meantime segregated the feed bills from the grocery account, applied the whole amount to the grocery account, extinguishing that account in full, and gave credit on the feed account for the balance. That balance not being sufficient to pay the feed bill in full, plaintiff now seeks to hold the Union Indemnity Company for the remainder, which is the amount herein sued upon.

The defense of the Union Indemnity Company, of course, is that the payment should have been applied to the feed account, and, as the balance of that account has since been paid in full, plaintiff can recover nothing further from it, as it is not liable for the grocery account.

The issue involved, therefore, is with regard to the imputation of payment of the .$2,000, the proceeds of the check received by plaintiff from Riekerson.

The contention made in behalf of the plaintiff is that it was Riekerson who was its debtor, that he was the one concerned in-the discharge of the debt, and that, as he consented to the imputation of the payment to the grocery account, it was properly applied, and they are entitled to recover the balance on the feed bill from the contractor’s bondsman.

This contention necessarily brings us to a consideration of the circumstances under which the check was given and the payment made.

The evidence satisfies us that Miller knew all that was going on and that he had been advised by his own attorney, and by representatives of both the Union Indemnity Company and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, that, whilst the latter was liable for his company’s feed bills, it was not liable for'the grocery account. It was upon securing this information that he separated the two accounts. I-Ie is not certain when Riekerson presented the check to him; believes that it was on or about January 19, 1931, which was some days after he had divided the account. 1-Ie says that, when Riek-erson delivered it, there was a discussion between them as to the application of the funds and that Riekerson practically consented to-the payment of the grocery account when he told him that he “could do as he pleased.”

Rickerson’s testimony, however, which is far more positive, is that on the same day that the check was drawn, January 16, 1931, he drove from Lake Charles to Vinton with *294 it, and delivered it to Miller that same day. He went to Mr. Woosley’s office to have the latter countersign the check as required, and, fearful that it might be lost on the way, he himself did not sign it until he reached Vin-ton. He says that on that day there was no conversation with regard to the application of the proceeds, but that it was a day or two after that Miller called him at the hotel where he stopped in Vinton and asked him to come over to his office. He complied with the request, and it was then for the first time that Miller asked him about imputing the payment to the grocery account. He says that Miller told him he had found out that the Union Indemnity Company was not liable for the groceries, and asked him, “What about crediting the full • amount of groceries on this chock, giving the feedbill' credit for .the balance of it?’’ He says that Miller even asked him to write such an in-dorsement on the check itself. This he refused to do, for the reason that the check had been countersigned by Woosley, and he did not think he had the authority to write anything on it out of his presence.

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148 So. 292, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vinton-grain-co-inc-v-rickerson-lactapp-1933.