McIntosh v. Kelly
McIntosh v. Kelly
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The minor Helen S. Stafford owned the Cherry Bluff •plantation in Richland parish. Her tutor and father was J. Q. C. Stafford, who during the year 1875 undertook the cultivation of said place, •in the name and for account of the minor. He appointed one Hunter ¡as agent or manager of the place. As such Hunter employed laborers,
R. H. Kelly was a merchant at Girard, in said parish. During the year Calloway, who was a nephew of Kelly by marriage, purchased goods, wares, and merchandise from Kelly. The credit seems to have been extended solely to Calloway. He bought the goods. The account was kept against him alone. It amounted to about $690, and embraced every variety of article of family use, from candy to pickled pork — from tape, needles, and pins to osnabergs and cottonades.
In January, 1867, Kelly, alleging that Calloway and Stafford were planting partners, and that he had furnished them with necessary supplies to make the crop of 1875 on Cherry Bluff, sequestered all the cotton and corn on the place, and caused the same to be delivered to him on bond, and disposed of it.
The present suit is brought by McIntosh, tutor of said minor (the former tutor having died), against Kelly and the sheriff to recover said property or its value. There was judgment below condemning defendants to return the property, and in default thereof to pay its value, $760, less $297 83, the amount of necessary supplies furnished by Kelly to make the crop; also for $100 damages for attorney’s fees, etc. Kelly having died, his administrator, John Chaffe, appeals. The sheriff has not appealed. There was no partnership between Stafford, and Calloway, much less between the latter and the minor. Hunter himself was but a manager or overseer, and had no authority in law or fact to put either Stafford or the minor in partnership with any one.
Calloway is shown to have utterly failed to perform his part of the contract, and to have been a very idle person — neither working himself nor inducing the other laborers to work and gather the crops.
Under the testimony in this case Calloway himself could not. have
The judgment is therefore affirmed with costs.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.