Bay Shoe Co. v. Nacol

8 La. App. 620, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 203
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 12, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 8 La. App. 620 (Bay Shoe Co. v. Nacol) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bay Shoe Co. v. Nacol, 8 La. App. 620, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 203 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

MOUTON, J.

It is alleged by plaintiff that he sold goods, merchandise, etc., to Mrs. Gabe Saloum, a resident of Port Arthur, Texas, for the sum of $1133.92, upon which indebtedness she has paid $675.00, leaving a balance of $458.92 due petitioner; that prior to the shipment of the goods, S. J. Nacol, the father of Mrs. Saloum, in order to induce petitioner to advance these goods to his daughter, sent a telegram to petitioner reading as follows: “Will guarantee, payment of order of Mrs. Saloum. She bought of you,” which was dated Eunice, La., October 16, 1923. Plaintiff avers that Mrs. Gabe Saloum has gone into bankruptcy since the creation of said indebtedness, and that it is therefore compelled to look to S. J. Nacol, defendant and guarantor, for payment.

The foregoing which constitutes the substantial allegations of fact in plaintiff’s petition, is denied by defendant. The defendant, in addition to its denial of the allegations of plaintiff’s petition, avers that whatever goods or merchandise sold by plaintiff, more particularly such as appear in the invoices filed by plaintiff, were sold to one Gabe Saloum of Port Arthur, Texas; that plaintiff in May, 1925, instituted suit in Jefferson County, Texas, against Gabe [621]*621Saloum for the identical goods and merchandise, payment of which is now claimed against respondent in this suit. Under these averments, defendant pleads that plaintiff is judicially estopped from now claiming from Mrs. Gabe Saloum or from defendant, payment for the purchase price of those goods under any contract of guarantee, which is not admitted, but on the contrary, denied.

The pleas in denial and estoppel, are the only defenses urged by defendant in his answer, and there are no other pleas filed.

ESTOPPEL

It appears from the evidence that plaintiff attempted to collect the debt from Gabe Saloum with the view relieving defendant from his liability under the guarantee, and which was intended for his benefit. The defendant was not a party to the proceedings in the County Court of Texas, and has no ground to rest his iplea of estoppel. Such estoppels are not favored, this criticism, not applying, however, to equitable estoppels which aré founded on principles of morality, equity and justice. The estoppel pleaded, if maintained, would defeat the ends of justice and equity. Plaintiff is therefore not estopped from asserting this claim against defendant.

MERITS

When the purported telegram of defendant, of date October 15, 1923, ’was offered in evidence, counsel for defendant objected to its introduction on the ground that it was not admissible until its genuineness had first been established, or until it was shown that it had been sent by the party whose name is typewritten as the sender. The contention is made here that the telegram was inadmissible under the ruling of the Supreme Court in the case reported in Ruhlman vs. Smith, 15 La. Ann. 669.

In that case a paper purporting to contain a dispatch received in Philadelphia from Columbus, Georgia, was offered in evidence. The Court said no proof had been made that the paper produced was in the handwriting of any person employed in the Philadelphia office at the time it purported to have been received, nor had its authenticity been established in any other manner. The Court held that the exception made to its reception as proof, because there was no proof of its genuineness or authenticity, had been well taken, and that the instrument should have been excluded.

C. N. Fortier, office manager for plaintiff company at New Orleans, says on or about October 15, 1923, he wired defendant at Eunice, that plaintiff would ship goods to Mrs. Gabe Saloum on regular terms if he would guarantee the account. He says defendant wired back: “Will guarantee payment of order of Mrs. Gabe Saloum. She bought from you.” A copy of this telegram, which Fortier claims to have received, is filed in the record. There was no record of the telegram procured from the Western Union Telegraph office at Eunice. The present manager at the telegraph office at Eunice said that their records do not show telegrams further back than one year, and that all those prior to that period of time are supposed to have been destroyed. Let us say that the copy of the telegram on the proof offered by plaintiff was inadmissible under the ruling of the Court in Ruhlman vs. Smith, 15 La. Ann. 669, and that it should have been excluded from the record. Even if passed over without consideration, we find sufficient evidence in the record to show that defendant had obligated himself as . guarantor for his daughter Mrs. Gabe Saloum.

In a letter dated Feb. 23, 1924, at Eunice, [622]*622addressed to plaintiff company, among other things therein mentioned, the letter says: “I . back Mrs. Gabe Saloum for $800.00.” This letter is signed S. J. Nacol. In another letter dated at Eunice, June 11, 1924, addressed to plaintiff company, and to which is signed the name of S. J. Nacol, the following statement is made: “Your letter was received and beg to say I asked Mrs. Gabe Saloum how their account stood, with you. She said she paid you four hundred dollars.” Defendant says he can not write. He admits he can sign his name, and says that his boy writes his letters, but denies that he wrote those letters. If the testimony of defendant is true, the only conclusion then, is, that some one forged the letter of February 23, 1924, with the intention of binding defendant as guarantor for Mrs. Gabe Saloum. Not . only that, but someone also forged another letter on June 11, 1924, merely for the pleasure of conveying the information to plaintiff that defendant had visited Mrs. Saloum at Port Arthur, and had made inquiries in reference to her account with plaintiff company. All that is possible but entirely improbable.

Plaintiff company also introduced in evidence the copy of a letter ¡purporting to have been written by it to defendant of date June 16, 1924. This letter begins as follows: “Replying to your letter of the 11th, regarding the account of Mrs. Gabe Saloum,' will state this party is owing us a balance of $411.00 on her first bill we sold her in October, 1923, which account you can now well see is now nine months old.” Defendant says he knows nothing about that letter. He therefore denies that he received it. If his testimony is true in that respect, we would again be forced to the conclusion that plaintiff company had fabricated this letter to make evidence to establish its claim against defendant. We cannot believe that, and we do not think the trial Court could have reconciled itself to any such idea. We are of the opinion that if defendant did not write the letters above mentioned or did not sign them, that they were written and signed by his boy or someone else at his own dictation, and that in the letter of February 23, 1924, he bound himself as guarantor for his daughter.

The amount filed in evidence is carried against Mrs. Gabe Saloum. C. N. Fortier testifies that all the payments received were applied to her account, including the sum of $695.00, which had been sent in by Gabe Saloum, her husband. He testifies that the notes plaintiff had taken from Mrs. Gabe Saloum, and which the record shows were proceeded upon in the case filed in the Texas Court, had been taken in trying to protect defendant as far as plaintiff company was able to do so. There is no doubt, in our opinion, that the debt had been contracted by Mrs. Gabe Saloum, and that defendant had obligated himself as her surety or guarantor.

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Bluebook (online)
8 La. App. 620, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bay-shoe-co-v-nacol-lactapp-1928.