Brenard Manufacturing Co. v. Gibbs

119 So. 483, 9 La. App. 137, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 629
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 2, 1928
DocketNo. 2134
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 119 So. 483 (Brenard Manufacturing Co. v. Gibbs) 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
Brenard Manufacturing Co. v. Gibbs, 119 So. 483, 9 La. App. 137, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 629 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

ODOM, J.

Plaintiff brought this suit to recover of defendant $844.00, and set up as a cause of action that it is the holder and owner of twelve promissory ‘notes aggregating that amount, all executed and signed by defendant and made payable [138]*138to plaintiff, which notes are attached to and made párt of the petition.

Plaintiff amended its original petition by setting out that the notes sued on were given for the purchase price of graphaphones- or music boxes ordered by defendant from plaintiff under a certain order or agency contracts which were signed by defendant and sent to plaintiff at Iowa City, Iowa, for approval as stipulated therein, and that after approving said order the goods ordered were delivered to defendant by delivery to a carrier in' Iowa City, Iowa, as provided in the order, and it attached- said orders to and made them part of the amended petition.

Defendant, in limine, tendered an exception to the suit, alleging that plaintiff was conducting business in this State in violation of law and that therefore plaintiff has no right of action.

No action seems to have been taken on this exception by the Court.

Subsequently defendant filed answer, reserving his rights under the exception, and admitted that he signed the notes sued on but denied by the indebtedness on the grounds that the notes were secured by fraud and without consideration, and he especially alleged that plaintiff’s representative had agreed that if defendant would sign the contract and the notes sued on, he, plaintiff, would place a salesman in the territory who would make sales of the machines, but that no salesman appeared and “that on account of the said failure of the agreement and contract the said machines were never taken out of the railroad and the same were returned to the plaintiff at the place they claimed to have consigned the saihe; that they were duly notified of the failure to carry out the agreement and contract and the true consideration of the said note, and the plaintiff refused and failed to carry out the contract and agreement, and therefore the said notes were without consideration and were secured by fraud and your defendant has nothing in value therefor.”

There was judgment for plaintiff as prayed for and defendant appealed.

OPINION

The contract which defendant signed reads in part as follows:

“The Brenard Manufacturing Co.,
“Iowa City, Iowa,
“Gentlemen:
“Upon your approval of this order and agency contract deliver to me at your earliest convenience, P. O. B. factory or distributing point, the articles mentioned below, in payment for which I herewith hand you my notes aggregating $422.00 which you are to cancel and return to me if agreement is not approved by you.”

(There were two of these contracts or orders, and two sets of notes.)

Then follows a description of the articles ordered and a clause granting to defendant the exclusive agency for plaintiff’s line of “Golden-Throated” - Claxtonola phonographs in that territory for three years and a clause with reference to discount, etc., and the following:

“If any sales under this contract do not amount to $422.00 (the value of the goods ordered and the aggregate amount of the notes accompanying the contract) you agree to either ¡pay me the difference in cash or repurchase these Claxtonolas and records if returned to you in good order and you are to send your bond in the sum of $422.00 to protect me in the conditions of this contract'.
“To make the last above paragraph binding upon you I agree to furnish within thirty days of date hereof 50 names and addresses of persons who may be interested in securing Claxtonolas to whom you are to send appropriate advertising matter * * * You are to have the right to [139]*139send a special salesman into my territory at any time to do field work and promote the sale of Claxtonolas through my agency * * * In order to protect you in your special methods and plans and in your expenditures this' order 'cannot he countermanded.”

This, and one other contract like it, together with the notes sued on, were forwarded immediately to plaintiff company at its home office in Iowa City, Iowa, and was accepted on the same date received and the goods shipped promptly by express. When the goods arrived defendant refused to accept them and in order to prevent a sale of them by the express company they were returned to the shippers at their request according to the testimony of Mr. Loveland, a member of the plaintiff firm, and are being held subject to defendant’s orders.

According to defendant’s testimony, given on the trial of the case, he refused to accept the goods and remove them from the express office, and he was asked:

“Q. Well, when these machines came down there you refused to receive them, absolutely?
“A. Yes, sir; until the man came. That' was the agreement with me. I wasn’t to take them until he came back. 'I wasn’t supposed to get them out of the express company's office until they furnished a helper.”

And he said the agent or helper did not return. He also testified that he would not receive the goods because the plaintiff did not' send him the kind of a bond they agreed to send and “I sent the little old certificate he sent me back and told them I was supposed to get a bond, get a guarantee from them.”

And he was asked:

“Q. They hadn’t complied with the contract as to these material features?”

And he said:

“A. No, sir.”

Plaintiff objected to the above and all similar testimony on the ground that parol testimony is inadmissible under Article 2276 of the Civil Code to vary or alter the written contract, and the Court admitted it subject to the objection, and said:

“But you cannot vary, alter or amend the contract sued on.”

It will therefore be observed that defendant resists payment of the notes on three grounds, to-wit:

1. On the ground, as set out in' the exception filed in limine, that plaintiff is a non-resident of the State and was doing business in this State in violation of Act 64 of 1918.

2. That said notes and contracts were obtaining through fraud.

3. On the ground that plaintiff failed to furnish the bond required by contract.

4. On the ground that plaintiff failed to send the salesman into the territory to sell the phonographs.

I.

Taking up these defenses in the order named, we find that Act 64 of 1918 is a penal statute providing that no persons shall carry on or transact' any business in this State under an assumed name or any name other than his own, without registering with the Clerk of Court a certificate showing the name under which such business is or is to be conducted and the names of the persons owning or transacting such business with the post office address of such persons; and, in Section 5, that any person or persons conducting or transacting any business who shall fail [140]

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Bluebook (online)
119 So. 483, 9 La. App. 137, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 629, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brenard-manufacturing-co-v-gibbs-lactapp-1928.