Wall v. Hardwood Mfg. Co.

54 So. 300, 127 La. 959, 1911 La. LEXIS 492
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 16, 1911
DocketNo. 18,102
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 54 So. 300 (Wall v. Hardwood Mfg. Co.) 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
Wall v. Hardwood Mfg. Co., 54 So. 300, 127 La. 959, 1911 La. LEXIS 492 (La. 1911).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

On the 19th of March, 1909, the parties to this suit entered into a contract by which the plaintiff sold to the defendant one-half million feet of pine at $7 per thousand and 2,000,000 feet of oak at $9 per thousand. The pine logs were to be delivered in rafts in the Ouachita river at the mill of the defendant, and were to be paid for $3,000 cash, $3,000 in 60 days, and the balance of $4,500 in five months. For the deferred payments, notes were to be given. The oak logs were to be delivered on the banks of the Ouachita river and Bayou [962]*962D’Arbonne at the rate of 400,000 feet per month. The contract specified that they were to be of “Cow Oak, Forked Leaf White Oak, and Overcup Oak.”

The defendant company’s sawmill, as the name of the company indicates, is a hardwood mill; that is to say, is designed to cut hardwood, not pine. And, in view of that fact, the defendant was not anxious to have the pine logs, but took them simply in order to have the oak. As a matter of fact, the defendant company, after sawing a considerable part of this pine timber, found that it was doing so at a loss, and concluded to sell the remainder.

By verbal agreement, the two notes for $3,000 and $4,500, respectively, called for by the contract, were not executed and delivered at the date of the contract, but were to be given later. This was for the accommodation of the defendant company, which did not desire to have it appear in the reports of the commercial agencies that it had given notes, as it was supposed to be doing business on a cash basis. No exact date seems to have been fixed by the verbal agreement for the execution and delivery of the notes.

Nearly two months passed without the notes having been delivered, and without the plaintiff, on his part, having made any delivery of oak logs. By that time, the parties seem to have been mutually pressing — ■ the plaintiff for the notes, and the defendant for the delivery of the oak timber. A few days before the expiration of the 60 days when the first note was to have been payable, the defendant executed and tendered the two notes to the plaintiff, but with the following clause added to the $4,500 note, to wit:

“The payment of this note is conditioned on the performance of the contract between us of March 19, 1909.”

Plaintiff at first refused to accept the note with this clause in it, but finally consented to do so.

Defendant says that this clause was thus inserted in view of the failure of the plaintiff thus far to have complied with his con-; tract. The note of $3,000 was paid by defendant at the time the plaintiff consented to accept the $4,500 note; its maturity being thus anticipated by some seven or eight days.

A few days thereafter, namely, May 19, 1909, the defendant wrote a letter to plaintiff making peremptory demand for the delivery of the oak logs as per contract, or, in other words, putting plaintiff in default. By a letter dated on the same day, May 19th, but mailed later, the plaintiff answered that he had something over 400,000 feet of logs on the banks of the Ouachita river and D’Arbonne bayou ready for delivery. Defendant inspected this timber and found it to be-“post oak, pine oak, and red oak,” and not “Oow Oak, Forked Leaf White Oak, and Overcup Oak,” as called for by the contract. Plaintiff, however, testifies that some 15 per cent, of it was of the kind called for by the contract. For want of better, the defendant consented to make a trial of this timber, and, accordingly, took approximately three barge loads of it, or about 63,000 feet, to see if the same could be utilized. The timber proved unsatisfactory, and defendant notified plaintiff that it would not receive any more of the same kind, but would insist that plaintiff deliver the kind of timber called for by the contract. In the meantime, the plaintiff had continued to put logs of the same unsatisfactory character on the river bank for delivery to defendant. After several interviews and a good deal of discussion, the parties agreed to inspect and scale the logs on the river bank, as a provisional measure, with a view to some adjustment of their differences. As the result of this inspection and sealing, 247 logs, aggregating 76,166 feet, were found to come up to the requirements of the contract, and were marked with a blue pencil for future identification; about [964]*964100 were found to be simply worthless; 731, aggregating 177,364 feet, were found good, though not of the character called for by the contract, and were marked with plaintiff’s brand for identification. After further disagreement and discussion, the parties finally came to a compromise, by which, in full settlement of the whole business transaction between them, the defendant was to take all the timber that had been scaled and marked and pay the plaintiff $1,828 in cash, together with the $4,500 note. A written instrument of compromise was drawn up to witness the compromise. Defendant paid the $1,828 cash. But, when defendant went to take the timber, differences again arose. Plaintiff objected to the defendant’s taking that part of the timber which was below a point called Daily’s Woodyard, contending that the timber sold was only that part of the timber which was above Daily’s Wood-yard. The instrument evidencing the compromise did in fact read as thus contended by plaintiff; but it had not been made to express the true agreement of the parties. It read:

“All the hardwood timber now lying and situated on the Ouachita river at and between Daily’s Woodyard and Buffalo Landing aggregating 257,000 feet, more or less.”

The president of the defendant company had signed the document assuming that the points mentioned designated correctly the location of the timber which had been scaled and marked and was proposed to be included in the compromise agreement. Defendant was desirous of carrying out the compromise and made every effort in vain to induce the plaintiff to correct the written instrument so as to make it express the true agreement of the parties. Meantime the maturity of the $4,500 note was approaching. Defendant deposited in bank an amount sufficient to pay the note, but would not make the payment unless the plaintiff agreed to correct the instrument of compromise so as to include all the timber that had been scaled and marked. Defendant offered to let the money remain in escrow for the payment of the note, subject to the correction of the instrument evidencing the compromise. The bank in whose hands the plaintiff placed the $4,-500 note for collection caused it to be protested on the day it fell due (a ceremony altogether useless so far as conserving the rights of the plaintiff was concerned, but of a nature to damage seriously the credit of the defendant company); and five days thereafter plaintiff filed this suit.

The suit, as originally filed, was a plain suit on the $4,500 note. On the next day after its filing, however, the plaintiff, by supplemental petition, obtained writs of sequestration and attachment, on the usual allegations, and on the allegation that the defendant company was a Kentucky corporation having its domicile in that state and a nonresident of Louisiana.

Under the writ of sequestration, the sheriff seized 500,000 feet of .logs — part of the pine logs that had been sold by plaintiff to defendant; and under the attachment he seized the sawmill plant of the defendant, some $16,000 of lumber at the mill, and the sum of $4,909.32 on deposit to the credit of defendant in one of the local banks; in fact, all of plaintiff’s property in Ouachita Parish'.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Semon v. City of Shreveport
389 So. 2d 438 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1980)
Southern Television Electronics v. Read
244 So. 2d 624 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1971)
American Steel Building Co. v. Brezner
158 So. 2d 623 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Ralph's Fleet, Inc. v. American Marine Corp.
157 So. 2d 317 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1963)
Wright v. Superior Oil Company
138 So. 2d 688 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1962)
Bardwell v. Maniscalco
135 So. 2d 84 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Williams v. Credit Service Corporation
113 So. 2d 319 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1959)
Pate v. Western Geophysical Co. of America
91 So. 2d 431 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1956)
Brantley v. Tremont & Gulf Railway Co.
75 So. 2d 236 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1954)
Finance Security Co. v. Mexic
188 So. 657 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1939)
Price v. Foster
161 So. 161 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1935)
Crozat v. Toye Bros. Yellow Cab Co.
145 So. 60 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
Phillips v. Weichert
141 So. 476 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1932)
General Motors Acceptance Corporation v. Sneed
119 So. 417 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)
Dehan v. Youree
117 So. 745 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1928)
Hathaway v. Winn
4 La. App. 588 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1926)
Cooper v. Blanck
39 So. 2d 352 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1923)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 So. 300, 127 La. 959, 1911 La. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wall-v-hardwood-mfg-co-la-1911.