Woodward-Wight & Co. v. Haas

149 So. 161, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1898
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1933
DocketNo. 1160.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 149 So. 161 (Woodward-Wight & Co. v. Haas) 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
Woodward-Wight & Co. v. Haas, 149 So. 161, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1898 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, Judge.

Woodward-Wight & Co., Limited, brought suit against Leon S. Haas on three promissory notes, the aggregate amount due on which is $461.64, interest and attorney’s fees to he added.

The defendant, Haas, admits plaintiff’s ownership of the notes, hut denies that it is a holder in due course. Further answering, he sets up against the plaintiff a demand in reconvention, the aggregate amount of which is $341.58, with legal interest to be added.

On the trial of the ease, the plaintiff offered in evidence the notes sued on and rested, upon which defendant sought to offer evidence the purpose of which was to support his demand in reconvention. The plaintiff objected to any evidence for such a purpose, and the objection was sustained. Judgment was then rendered in favor of the plaintiff as prayed for. Defendant’s demand in recon-vention was rejected as in case of nonsuit. Defendant has appealed.

The only question before us is the correctness of this ruling, sustaining plaintiff’s objection to any evidence, the purpose of which was to support defendant’s demand in recon-vention. v

*162 The Code of Practice explains the meaning of the term, “demand in reconvention.” “The demand which the defendant institutes in consequence of that which the plaintiff has brought against him, is termed a demand in reconvention.” Code Prac. art. 374.

Defendant claims in reeonvention as follows:

Article 1. Defendant is entitled to a commission and credit of $40 from plaintiff for 40 Hunter fans sold and delivered to the Hotel James of the city of Opelousas, plaintiff having agreed and contracted verbally with defendant to allow and give defendant a commission of $1 on each fan sold, said fans having been sold during the early part of the year, 1030, and which said commission defendant has never been paid despite amicable demand therefor.

Article 2. On or about March 12, 1931, defendant bought $384.37 worth of Dodge machinery supplies from plaintiff.

Article 3. As an inducement and as a consideration for said purchase, plaintiff agreed and contracted verbálly with defendant to credit defendant with all or any part of said merchandise that was slow moving; that is, that would sell slowly or was hard to sell to defendant’s customers, and that defendant wished to return to plaintiff.

Article 4. Defendant still has on hand, at the present time, the following part of said merchandise, that is slow moving, to wit: $51.23 worth of flat boxes, $13.62 worth of soiled safety collars, and '$236.73 worth of pulleys, making a total of $301.58 worth of said merchandise left on hand • and in defendant’s stock, all figures and amounts representing the net cost to defendant of said .merchandise, as will more fully appear from ¡inventory of flat boxes, soiled safety collars and pulleys, annexed hereto and made a part hereof and marked Exhibit A.

Article 5. Defendant desires to avail himself of the terms of said verbal contract and agreement and. to return all of said slow-moving merchandise that he has left on hand, and that he is' therefore entitled to a credit of $301.58 on account of said merchandise, making a total of $341.58.

The plaintiff objected to any evidence, the purpose of which was to support this demand, on the ground that the allegations of the re-conventional demand are too vague, general, and indefinite to admit of any proof in support of them, and for the further reason that, with regard to the alleged contract, described in ‘articles 2, 3, 4, and 5 of defendant’s reconventional demand, the demand therein made is premature because there was no putting in mora, and evidence in support of the demand is therefore inadmissible. Defendant offered to show that tender was made to plaintiff of the goods described in article 4 of his reconventional demand after filing of reconventional demand, but prior to the date set for the trial. To which offering plaintiff further objected on the ground that there was no allegation in the answer or re-conventional demand that tender of said goods had been made.

It is not claimed in the objection nor argued in plaintiff’s brief that defendant’s demand in reconvention, concerning the commission, which he claims on account of the sale of the Hunter fans and on account of his right to return and receive credit for the slow-moving Dodge machinery supplies, does not state a cause of action, but his objection is that defendant’s averments on the subject are too vague, general, and indefinite to admit of any proof in support of same.

Dealing with the record as we find it, we quote from the syllabus in Stringfellow v. Nowlin Bros, et al., 157 Da. 683, 102 So. 869, as follows:

“Position of one instituting a reconventional demand becomes that of plaintiff so that, although demand be inserted in answer, it is not considered as a part thereof but as a petition setting forth a distinct cause of action.

“As a reconventional demand is considered as a petition setting forth a distinct cause of action, it is subject to all rules of pleading applicable to plaintiff, and must be set forth with same clearness and precision as if alleged in a direct action.”

There are other decisions to the same effect.

The Code of Practice, art. 161, provides that: “It is sufficient, in all judicial demands * $ * to express clearly what is de?-manded, with such conclusions as may serve for a basis to the judgment to be rendered in the cause.”

Article 171 requires that the petition set forth a cause of action.

Article 172 provides, among other matters, that it “must contain a clear, and concise statement of the object of the demand, as well as of the nature of the title', or the cause of action on which it is founded.” It is further provided that it must end by conclusions analogous to the nature of the action to which the plaintiff has resorted.

The itemized account marked Exhibit A annexed to and made part of the answer is to be considered in connection with defendant’s averments. The averments meet and satisfy the requirements of the Code of Practice on the subject. The plaintiff is thereby informed of all that it needs to know in order to defend itself on that account. It may be assumed that plaintiff is not dependent on defendant for information as to the name of its representative, who entered into the alleged contract with defendant. Neither is it dependent on him for information as to the place of contract. As for the date of the contract, *163 the plaintiff is sufficiently informed hy defendant’s averments on that subject.

If plaintiff felt that it was entitled to details and particulars not set out in the demand in reeonvention, it should not have waited until the trial of the case on the merits had been entered into, but should have timely and before the day fixed for the trial urged its request by way of an exception and in such a way that the lower court could have ruled on the matter and allowed the defendant to supply the data in case the plaintiff was found entitled thereto. The case Doullut v. McManus, 37 La. Ann. 800, is applicable to the situation. The plaintiff cites us authorities on the subject, but we do not find them appropriate to the present case.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 161, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/woodward-wight-co-v-haas-lactapp-1933.