Case ID: la-ann_23/html/0699-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Ledeling, C. J.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

No. 182.
    Silbernagel & Co. v. L. D. Baker, Administrator.
    Under the allegation of ownership in a suit for a lot) of cotton, if the plaintiff fails to establish title lie can not, in the same action, he permitted to show that lie has a lien and privilege on the same cotton to secure the payment of the debt which has not been judicially demanded.
    A diction cn paiement is incomplete if the thing given in payment has not been delivered. C. p. 2G55, 2G5G.
    APPEAL from the Fourteenth Judicial District Court, parish of Morehouse.
    
      Ray, J. Todd <fi Brigham, for plaintiffs and appellees,
    
      JTeivton c6 Ball, for defendant and appellant.
   Ledeling, C. J.

The plaintiffs sue the defendant for all the cotton grown on the plantation of John W. Baker, deceased, and'inventoried ns part of his succession, claiming to he the owners thereof by virtue of a verbal sale made by said Baker during his lile, and they had the ■cotton sequestrated.

The testimony of the agent of the plaintiffs shows that before his death John W. Baker covenanted and agreed to haul and deliver to plaintiffs, at Prairie Mur Kouge, all the cotton winch he made on his home place and on the McCord place, and three-fourths of the cotton made on the Tiimhle place. It further appears irom the testimony of the witness that the cotton was to he given iu satisfaction of a debt due by John W. Baker to Silbernagel & Co., estimating the cotton at fourteen cents per pound.

The cotton claimed in tins suit was never delivered to Silbernagel & Co.; a part of it seems to have been gathered after Baker’s death, and it was all sequestrated in the possession of the administrator of the estate of John W. Baker. We do not deem id necessary to consider tbe questions of law discussed by counsel, orally and by briefs, relative to sales, as tbe contract in question is lacking in one of tbe essentials of a sale, to wit: a price to be paid in money. The contract was a elation en paiement, and it was incomplete for want of delivery. C. C. arts. 2655, 2656.

'Pile plaintiffs’ counsel insist that if plaintiffs are not tbe owners they have a privilege on the cotton to secure tlieir claim against J. W. Baker, deceased. In their petition they allege that they are tbe owners of tbe cotton and they pray to have the cotton delivered to them because they are owners thereof. In this court they ask us to allow them a privilege on tbe cotton to secure an account, for which they have made no demand whatever. Tbe statement of tbe proposition is enough to show its unreasonableness.

The cases referred to in 5 An. 646, and 7 La. 51 and 152, are not analogous to the one before us.

It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the judgment of the district court be avoided and reversed, and that there be judgment in favor of the defendant, setting aside the sequestration and rejecting the plaintiffs’ demand, with tbe costs of both courts.

Rehearing refused.