William M. Gillespie, Sr. v. W. A. Ranson Lumber Company
This text of 234 F.2d 285 (William M. Gillespie, Sr. v. W. A. Ranson Lumber Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The district court held that the appel-lee was not liable to the appellant for the conversion of cypress logs which the appellant claimed to own. The timber was grown on lands owned by the Natal-bany Lumber Company in the Spanish Lake Swamp in Ascension Parish, Louisiana. Natalbany sold the timber to W. D. Cann, Sr., who, in turn, on October 1, 1953, entered into a contract with appellant in its entirety as follows:
“This agreement entered into between W. D. Cann, Sr. Party of the first part and W. M. Gillespie, Sr. Party of the second part. For the purpose of selling cypress timber purchased by party of the first part from the Natalbany Lumber Co., to party of the second part.
“Party of the second part agrees to pay $35.00 (thirty-five dollars) per M feet doyle scale for all down or dead timber and $40.00 (forty dollars) per M feet for the standing or green timber.
“Party of the second part agrees to scale the heart and the full scale on the dead timber, but to pay only for the heart scale. Said scale to be a joint scale between the Natalbany Lumber Co., and party of the second part. Logs to be paid for before moving from ramping grounds.”
On October 5th, appellant sent a logging crew into the swamp to cut the standing timber and haul all of the logs and ramp them on land belonging to a farmer, from whom Cann had secured such permission. By November 6th, all of the timber had been cut, and the logs hauled and ramped. Appellant had paid the costs and expenses incident to these *286 logging operations amounting to approximately $3,000.00 and had advanced Cann $250.00 on the price of the timber. On November 13th, the ramped logs were scaled by appellant’s son and a representative of the Natalbany Lumber Company at 93,765 board feet.
A disagreement then arose as to the payment of the purchase price by appellant to Cann, either on the ground that logging had occurred on Natalbany land not covered by the Natalbany agreement with Cann, or on the ground that appellant had thought Cann was making $5.00 per thousand profit, but had learned that Cann had an additional $5.00 per thousand profit. The cause of the disagreement seems to us immaterial to the issues in this case. In any event, appellant was bound to pay Cann the purchase price fixed by their agreement, heretofore quoted, before he moved the logs from the ramping grounds.
On November 17th, appellant received a letter from Cann’s attorney giving him five days to pay for the logs and advising that unless he did they would be sold to someone else. Appellant did not reply. Thereafter, on November 27th, Cann undertook to sell the ramped logs to ap-pellee Ransom. Before making the purchase, Ransom contacted the Natalbany Lumber Company and was advised that the timber was cut from its tract and had been sold by it to Cann. Ransom had no notice at that time of any claim on the part of appellant, Gillespie. On November 28th, Ransom paid Cann in full for the logs in the amount of $7,-501.20 and began to haul them from the ramping grounds to Ransom’s sawmill outside New Orleans.
On December 3rd, Gillespie discovered the hauling operation and telephoned Ransom, president of the lumber company, telling him that the logs belonged to him, Gillespie. He was advised by Ransom that the logs had been purchased in good faith. Ransom then telephoned Cann’s attorney and was assured that the logs belonged to Cann. The remaining logs were subsequently removed to Ransom’s mill, and this suit followed.
Appellant Gillespie insists that he was the owner of and in possession of the logs and that the sale of the logs to Ap-pellee Ransom by Cann was void. Ap-pellee Ransom, on the other hand, maintains that it purchased the logs in good faith from Cann, that at that time Cann had title to the logs as between Cann and Gillespie, and, if not then, certainly so as to any other person, that possession of the logs was in Cann and Ransom required a valid title thereto by its purchase from Cann.
For the passage of title from Cann to Gillespie, appellant relies on Articles 2439 and 2456 of the Louisiana Civil Code, LSA. 1 Appellee Ransom, on the other hand, urges that Gillespie refused to pay the agreed price and that thereafter Cann was not bound by the contract of sale.
Be that as it may, both parties agree that, if Cann retained legal possession of the logs, he could, under Articles 1922 and 2247 of the LSA-Civil Code, 2 pass *287 good title to a bona fide purchaser. The district court [132 F.Supp. 13], for reasons quoted, in the margin, 3 found that Ransom was a bona fide purchaser from Cann, and we agree. The district court further found 4 that Cann retained possession of the logs. Appellant Gillespie concedes in brief “that the decisive issue in this case is the question of legal possession of the logs at or prior to the time of Cann’s attempted sale to Ransom.” Many articles of the Louisiana Civil
Code relate to the ownership and possession of things. 5 Especially important here, we think, is Article 2477:
“The tradition or delivery is the transferring of the thing sold into the power and possession of the buyer.”
Clearly, the concluding provision of the contract between Cann and Gillespie 6 was intended to protect Cann, and for that protection to be effective it should be held that Gillespie did not have “the power and possession” until he paid for the logs. As to third persons, therefore, the sale from Cann to Gillespie was not complete while possession remained in Cann. Under Articles 1922 and 2247, footnote 2, supra, while possession remained in Cann, he could, and we think did, sell to Ransom, a bona fide purchaser.
It would unduly prolong this opinion to discuss the many cases relied on by the appellant, 7 and those relied on by *288 appellee. 8 We think that the judgment of the district court was right and it is
Affirmed.
. “Art. 2439. The contract of sale is an agreement by which one gives a thing for a price in current money, and the other gives the price in order to have the thing itself.
“Three circumstances concur to the perfection of the contract, to wit: the thing sold, the price and the consent.”
“Art. 2456. The sale is considered to be perfect between the parties, and the property is of right acquired to the purchaser with regard to the seller, as soon as there exists an agreement for the object and for the price thereof, although the object has not yet been delivered, nor the price paid.”
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234 F.2d 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-m-gillespie-sr-v-w-a-ranson-lumber-company-ca5-1956.