Fowler v. Cooper

3 La. 215 | La. | 1831

Mathews, J.

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case, the plaintiff claims from the defendants, the value of twenty-one bales of cotton, which he estimates at eight hundred and twelve dollars, alleging that they were his property, and that said defendants took possession of them without his knowledge or consent. He obtained judgment in the court below, from which the defendants appealed.

It appears by the evidence of the case, that the cotton now in dispute was consigned to the plaintiff, as a commission merchant, to be sold on account of the owner, and that through the mistakes of the person with whom it was stored, it was delivered to the defendants (who are also commission merchants) and was by them sold with a lot of other cotton *216(which they held as consignees) for a price less than that now cjajme¿ jjy- plaintiff.

The questions of law, which arise out of these facts, seem to be- the following: first, whether the qualified property, _ . _ *i»i « . , , , , , which vested m the consignee, authorises him to maintain an action for the recovery of its possession, or of its value, and second, whether he can legally support such an action against any other person except the one to whom he delivered P1'°Pei'ly for safe keeping, or the actual possessor, at the time of instituting the suit. As to' the first .of these questions, no doubt exists; or has been suggested in argument of the plaintiff’s right to sue. The second might 10 0 possibly offer some difficulty of solution, m ordinary cases, but we ar& of opinion, all embarrassment is entirely removed ®-’om present by the disclosure of certain facts. It is shown by the testimony, that the defendants received the cotton, reluctantly, believing it not to be theirs, but it was in some sort pressed on them by the owner of the ware-house, to supply a deficiency of a number of bales, which had been stored by them, with the same person who had received in store the cotton of the plaintiff.

Afterwards when an investigation was set on foot, in order to discover the just owner of the property, and it appeared pretty evident, that it had been consigned to the plaintiff, one of the defendants, Mr. Cooper, offered to pay its value to said plaintiff, as appeared by the testimony of the witness Adone. This witness states, that Cooper expressed his belief to Fowler, that the cotton in question was not his (Cooper’s) and that he would pay to the former any difference in price sustained between Mississippi and Tennessee cotton, if it proved to he Fowler’s cotton. Now by the evidence on record, it is fully proven to be the cotton of the plaintiff, at least he shows a qualified property in it, sufficient to maintain this action.

It, is therefore, ordered, adjudged, and decrbed, that the judgment of the District Court, be affirmed with costs.