Walker v. Pattin

199 So. 146
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 1940
DocketNo. 2166.
StatusPublished

This text of 199 So. 146 (Walker v. Pattin) 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
Walker v. Pattin, 199 So. 146 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

LeBLANC, Judge.

The plaintiff in this suit, John W. Walker, alleges in his petition that during the month of December, 1932, he entered into an agreement with the defendants, L. Alphonse Pattin and H. D. Mack, by the terms of which they would care for his hogs which roamed at large in the woods in the neighborhood of Turkey Creek in Evangeline Parish and that at the end of each year, from the hogs that were slaughtered, there would be an equal division of meat, the defendants receiving ,one-half and he the other half. Pie avers that the agreement was carried out each year according to its terms up to and including the year 1938. He sets out further that in order to facilitate the defendants in attending to their duties under the contract in rounding up the hogs at the killing season, he loaned the defendant Pattin a black hog-dog named Black, a riding saddle, a blanket and a bridle.

He further avers that, at the time of the agreement, he was the owner of two hog marks or brands which he describes and which he now finds recorded in the office of the clerk of court of the parish in the name of the defendant Pattin.

In substance plaintiff alleges that in 1938 the defendants failed to carry out their part of the agreement and refused to turn over any of his hogs when called on by him to do so and that they also refused to return the property which he had loaned them. He estimates the number of his hogs under care of the defendants at eighty-five and in addition claims that they have unlawfully converted thirty-five more by branding them with the mark illegally recorded in the name of Pattin.

The prayer of his petition is that he be declared to be the owner of the eighty-five hogs in the care of the defendants, of the black hog-dog, the saddle, blanket and bridle which they have in their possession as well as of the hog marks or brands recorded in the name of Pattin. He further prays that defendants be condemned to return to him all the said hogs and property loaned to them by him. With regard to the brands he prays that they be ordered to have the clerk of court cancel the recordation of same now appearing in Pattin’s name or in default of their doing so that they be can-celled by virtue of the judgment in his *147 favor and further that defendants be ordered to return the thirty-five hogs illegally branded with Pattin’s alleged brand and that he be authorized to remove the said marks from the said hogs and replace them with his own brand.

Defendants for answer deny any such agreement as alleged by plaintiff in his petition. They admit having possession of the property involved in the controversy and then affirmatively set out their ownership of same by purchase from the plaintiff. They deny the allegations with regard to the. hog marks claimed by plaintiff and admit that the defendant Pattin has had recorded his ownership of the same which he still claims as his property.

After trial there was judgment in the district court in favor of the defendants dismissing plaintiff’s suit and he has appealed. The trial judge assigned written reasons for judgment in which he indicates in rather positive terms the difficulty he experienced in reaching the conclusion that there had been a sale of the hogs and other articles as contended by the defendants. The doubt which he seems to have entertained and which appears from reading the written reasons of the district judge caused us to examine into the facts with perhaps a bit more than usual and ordinary attention and our investigation has led us to a different conclusion than that reached by him.

The record contains a mass of confusing and conflicting testimony, a large bit of which, as noted by the district judge, was wholly irrevelant and could well have been excluded. We take it that it was in an effort to get all the light and information possible on the alleged transaction that it was admitted, but unfortunately it has served no purpose except to unnecessarily encumber the record.

It appears from the testimony that the plaintiff was the owner of a large number of hogs branded with his marks which roamed at large in the woods in the vicinity of Turkey Creek. It was his custom to arrange with some one to attend to them for him and under the agreement which he always made, a certain number of hogs were killed each year and the meat was equally divided between himself and the caretaker. In 1932 he estimates that he had about three hundred hogs in the woods and in December of that year, according to his contention, he entered into such an'agreement as just described with the defendants whereas in this instance it is claimed by the latter that the defendant Pattin bought the hogs from plaintiff, the sale also including a horse, hog-dog, bridle, saddle and blanket.

The plaintiff testifies most positively that he entered into the agreement as alleged by him and that the defendant Pattin was to have the use of his horse, dog, saddle, bridle and blanket, all of which were turned over to him. The defendant Mack was to live on his place and farm the property on a share basis of fifty per cent of the amount of the crops produced and harvested. He testifies that the agreement was carried out and each year he received his one-half of the meat from the slaughter of the hogs. In 193^ he noticed an appreciable decrease in the number of hogs and received only 90 pounds of meat as his share of the killing. So, in February 1938, he notified Pattin that he would terminate the agreement and demanded the return of his horse, saddle and dog which Pattin refused to deliver, claiming them as well as the hogs as his own by having bought and paid for the same. At that time there remained only eighty-five hogs. Pie then learned that Pattin had caused to be recorded an affidavit claiming to be the owner of all the hogs bearing his hog mark and owner also of the brand itself.

According to plaintiff’s testimony the agreement was entered into at night at the defendant Pattin’s home and in the presence of certain members of Pattin’s family, including the co-defendant Mack, Pattin’s son-in-law, and a man named Marshall Deville.

Pattin’s version of what happened is that in 1932, the plaintiff was indebted to him for money which he had borrowed from time to time and as he was crippled and getting old and could not pay him, and was fast losing his hogs, after several days effort in trying to settle with him, finally persuaded him to take the hogs, horse, dog and bridle in payment. The blanket, he says, was not included as the one he had, he had bought from Marshall Deville. In his testimony when he is asked how much did he pay for all that he had bought, he says that he made him an offer of $50 and 500 pounds of meat which was accepted. He states that he complied with his part of the agreement by delivering a certain quantity of meat each year. Right here there appears an inconsistency in his testimony which we find it impossible to recon *148 cile with his version of what the transaction was. At first he states that plaintiff, after apparently much effort, persuaded him to take the property in satisfaction of an indebtedness which he owed him and then he says that the consideration for the sale was $50 and 500 pounds of meat.

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199 So. 146, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-pattin-lactapp-1940.