A. Lorenze Co. v. Wilbert

115 So. 475, 165 La. 247, 1928 La. LEXIS 1706
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 18, 1928
DocketNo. 27843.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 115 So. 475 (A. Lorenze Co. v. Wilbert) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. Lorenze Co. v. Wilbert, 115 So. 475, 165 La. 247, 1928 La. LEXIS 1706 (La. 1928).

Opinion

O.’NIELL, C. J.

Tbe plaintiff bas appealed from a judgment dismissing tbis suit on an exception of no cause of action. Tbe suit is on a promissory note for $3,200, dated tbe 26tb of April, 1919, payable to tbe order of tbe plaintiff, A. Lorenze Company, and signed: “Penn La. Oil & Gas Co., Inc., by Erederic Wilbert, Vice President.” Tbe note is the one that was sued on in tbe case of A. (Lorenze Co. v. Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co., Inc., 155 La. 749, 99 So. 586. The defendant in that suit pleaded that tbe vice president, Wilbert, was not legally authorized to sign tbe note; whereupon tbe plaintiff, by supplemental petition, bad Wilbert cited as a party defendant and asked for a judgment against him personally, if tbe court should bold that be was not authorized to sign tbe note. Wilbert, being a resident of another parish than that in wbicb tbe suit was pending, declined to submit to the jurisdiction of tbe court, and bis plea was sustained and tbe suit dismissed as to him. After trial of tbe case against tbe Penn-Louisi’ana Oil & Gas Company, tbe plaintiff’s demand was rejected and tbe suit dismissed; and on appeal to this, court tbe judgment was affirmed, on tbe ground that the meeting of tbe board of directors of tbe Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company, at wbicb the resolution was adopted, purporting to give authority for tbe note to be issued, was held in Pennsylvania, and tbe corporation was organized under tbe laws of Louisiana and domiciled in tbis state, and therefore, under section 2 of Act 267 of 1914, the resolution was not valid. See A. Lorenze v. Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co., 155 La. 749, 99 So. 586.

Thereafter, tbe plaintiff brought tbis suit against Wilbert, averring that be was liable personally for the amount of the note because he had signed and issued it without tbe authority of the corporation, as whose agent he acted, tbe plaintiff annexed to and made a part of tbe petition in tbis guit a certified copy of (1) the original petition, (2) the supplemental petition, (3) tbe citation addressed to Erederic Wilbert, (4) tbe sheriff’s return thereon, (5) Wilbert’s plea to tbe jurisdiction of tbe court ratione person®, and (6) tbe opinion and decree rendered by tbe Supreme Court, all in the case of A. Lorenze Co. v, Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co., wbich we have referred to.

Tbe only allegations that refer at all to Wilbert’s want of authority from tbe Penn-' Louisiana Oil & .Gas Company to sign tbe note, in the petition in tbe present suit, are contained in tbe following paragraphs of tbe petition, viz.:

“That the matters at issue in said suit [meaning the suit of A. Lorenze Co. v. Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co., supra] were decided against petitioner herein in said trial court; and that it appealed to the Supreme Court of Louisiana, which honorable tribunal, after due hearing, handed down a decision affirming the decision of said trial court, as will fully appear from a certified copy of the opinion and decree of said Supreme Court, attached hereto and made a part hereof, and that the same has become final.
“That the said Supreme Court decided that the said Erederic Wilbert, the vice president of said Penn-La. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., signed said note without authority.
“That, since the said Wilbert signed said note as vice president of the Penn-La. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., without authority, he became personally liable for the amount thereof.”

Tbe defendant, Wilbert, in tbe present suit, filed tbe exception of no cause of action, wbicb was beard and overruled. Wilbert applied for a new trial or rebearing of his exception, wbicb tbe court granted. Thereupon, and before tbe exception was again argued or submitted, tbe plaintiff filed a supplemental petition, in which, after reiterating and adhering to tbe allegations of tbe origi *251 nal petition, plaintiff averred that Wilbert was without authority from the Penn-Louisiana Oil &'Gas Company to sign the note sued on, not only for the reasons given by the Supreme Court in its opinion and decree in the former case, but also because, at the time when Wilbert signed the note, on the 26th of April, 1919, he had not been given any authority by the Penn-La. Oil & Gas Company, Inc., or by any one authorized to represent it, to sign or execute the note, and that hiS' doing so, as he did, was without any authority whatever.

The defendant, Wilbert, objected to the supplemental petition on the ground that the allegation that Wilbert had no authority whatever to sign the note' was a contradiction of the allegation in the original petition that his want of authority was due to the invalidity of the resolution of the board of directors of the Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company purporting to give authority for the note to be issued. The objection to the supplemental petition was overruled. The defendant then pleaded that the supplemental petition, taken in connection with the allegations of the original petition, and the documents annexed thereto and made part there-, of, showed that the plaintiff had no cause or right of action. The exception was sustained, and the suit dismissed. The plaintiff has appealed from the decision.

The allegation in the plaintiff’s supplemental petition, that Wilbert had no authority whatever to sign the note for the Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company, adds nothing to the plaintiff’s cause or right of action, for the allegation must not be taken as a contradiction of, but must be regarded merely as an inference or conclusion drawn from, the fact alleged in the original petition, that Wilbert’s want of authority was due to the invalidity of the resolution of the board of directors of the Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Com: pany, purporting to give authority for the signing of the note. The allegation in that respect was made too plain in the plaintiff’s original petition — particularly by the plaintiff’s reference to the opinion and decree of this court on the subject — to admit of a contradiction or withdrawal; and in fact there was no withdrawal, but, on the contrary, a reiteration of the allegation in the plaintiff’s supplemental petition.

We must therefore look to the opinion which we rendered in the suit of A. Lorenze Co. v. Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co., 155 La. 749, 99 So. 586, in order to ascertain whether the reason for which we held that tt;e Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company was not liable on the note is a sufficient reason for deciding now whether the defendant, Wilbert, is liable for having signed the note without authority from the Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company. As we said in the Succession of McDonald, 154 La. 1, 97 So. 262:

“When a record is referred to as proof of an allegation of fact in a petition in a lawsuit, the record referred to governs in determining whether the petition discloses a cause of action.”

The opinion which we rendered in the ease of A. Lorenze Co. v. Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Co. shows that the only reason for which we held that the Penn-Louisiana Oil & Gas Company was not liable on the note was that the meeting of the board of directors of the corporation, at which the resolution was adopted, purporting to give the authority to sign and issue the note, was held outside of the state of Louisiana, whereas the corporation was domiciled in this state. The opinion shows also that the corporation did not receive any cash or other consideration for the note at the time when it was given to A.

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Bluebook (online)
115 So. 475, 165 La. 247, 1928 La. LEXIS 1706, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-lorenze-co-v-wilbert-la-1928.