Lambeth v. Wells
Lambeth v. Wells
Opinion of the Court
The plaintiffs allege that they are the
The defendants deny that the cotton is the property of the plaintiffs, and pray for a dissolution of the injunction, with damages, &c.
The facts of the case are, that Gray and wife, the debtors in the. execution, were largely indebted to the plaintiffs. In December, 1842, Gray applied to the agent of the plaintiffs, to know if he would purchase his crop of cotton for the plaintiffs, and give him credit on the debt he was owing to them. The agent agreed to do so; and it was stipulated that the plaintiffs should give Gray the current price in New Orleans for the cotton, it being understood as a sale by weight; and that credit should be given for it on the obligation held by plaintiffs. As soon as this was agreed to, the general agent of the plaintiffs in the parish, selected Mr. Texada as his agent to receive the cotton; and, in the presence of Gray requested him to do so, and gave him a written procuration to that effect accordingly. Texada the next day, with two of the neighbors of the parties, went to the plantation of Gray, and in the gin and cotton-house, found a quantity of cotton in the seed, which they estimated would make about eighty bales, when Gray told them that he then delivered the cotton to Texada, as agent for the plaintiffs; and upon being asked what he had gained by such a sale, he said he had gained the risk of keeping the cotton ; and, that if it should be lost, he would hold the plaintiffs
The court below, at first dissolved the injunction, with heavy damages, but granted a new trial; and when the case was heard again, the injunction was maintained for the proceeds of the sale of the twenty-five bales of cotton, and dissolved as to the ungin-ned cotton ; the whole having been sold by consent, and the proceeds in deposit made to represent the cotton itself. From this judgment, the defendant Wells has appealed; and the plaintiffs in this court pray, that it be so amended, as to give them the proceeds of the unginned cotton.
That the agents of the plaintiffs and Gray were acting in good faith in this transaction, we have no doubt; and we have endeavored to bring our minds to the conclusion, that the judgment of the inferior court was correct; but after as mature consideration as we have been able to bestow on the case, we are unable to come to that result.
The sale between the parties was no doubt good, as soon as there was an agreement for the price and the object; and each party had a right to compel the other to perform the contract, by delivering the property in the manner directed by law. But the question at once arises, whether it is perfect as to third persons ;
The compilers of the Code, after having settled the principles we have stated, proceed to point out the mode of making a delivery ; and article 2452 says, that “ it is the transferring of the thing sold into the power and possession of the buyer.” The Civilians all consider, that it is essential that the thing shall be under the control, and in the power of the purchaser. If the effects be moveable, the thing passes by actually giving it into the care of the buyer. If the thing sold be in a building where it is kept, there must be a delivery of the key; but if the thing cannot be transported at the time of sale, the consent of the parties will be sufficient. Art. 2453.
In the case before us, there was not a sale en bloc. The cotton was never weighed, either before or after it was pressed. The key of the buildings in which the unginned cotton was, never was delivered to Texada. It is not shown that the cotton could not be transported elsewhere; and, in fact, we see none of the leading requisites of a good delivery established. The fact of putting the initials of the plaintiffs on the bales, is one mark of ownership ; and if the sale had been at so much per bale, instead of per pound, it would, in our opinion, have been good ; and had the bales been weighed, before or after being hauled to
The counsel for the plaintiffs rely much on the case of Shuff v. Morgan et. al., (9 Martin 592,) to show that, the delivery has been sufficient. An examination of that case shows, that it was different from this. Matthews the debtor, sold Shuff a flat boat, and 20,000 hoop poles, which were in it. The boat and poles were put into the possession of Shuff, and he had a part of the price. His laborers were employed on the boat for several days, counting the poles and landing them from the boat, when the attachment was levied. Under these circumstances, the cout held the sale good, and dismissed the seizure. There are some striking points of difference, between that case and the present. There the thing was under the control, or in. the power of the purchaser; but not so with the plaintiffs. Gray had the keys of the houses, if there were any; he had the possession of the buildings, and could enter at his pleasure. He was bound to gin and pack the cotton in bales, which, in some measure, made the delivery a suspensive condition. The sale was not of cotton with the seed in it, but of cotton with the seed out, and ready for market; it must, therefore, necessarily have remained under the control of the vendor, and that being so, the delivery was not good.
It appears to us, that this.case approaches that of The Planters Bank of Mississippi v. Crane, (2 Robinson, 490,) nearer than any other; and as we do not feel disposed to depart from what seems to be the clear letter of the law, for the purpose of seeking its spirit, we are compelled to decide, that the court below was in error, in maintaining the injunction for the proceeds of the twenty-five bales of cotton, and so far the judgment must be reversed.
The counsel for the plaintiffs strenuously contend that as there had been a sale of the property, the sheriff could not seize it, although the sale were fraudulent, but that an action must be brought to annul it; and he cites various decisions of this court, in which it has been decided, that where real property has been apparently legally conveyed, by an authentic act, or by one under private signature, duly recorded, a seizure could not be made, but an ac
This-judgment, and the four preceding, were pronounced in October, 3844, but did not become final, by the lapse of three judicial days, until the present term.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- William M. Lambeth and another v. Montfort Wells and another
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- Published