David v. Southern Import Wine Co.

171 So. 180
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1936
DocketNo. 16481.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 171 So. 180 (David v. Southern Import Wine Co.) 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
David v. Southern Import Wine Co., 171 So. 180 (La. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Joseph B. David, as assignee of Julius H.. Wiener, an attorney and notary practicing in this city, claims of Southern Import Wine Company, Inc., $300 alleging that to be the amount due by said defendant to said Wiener for notarial and legal services rendered in connection with the incorporation of the said wine company. Defendant simultaneously pleaded the prescription of one year as established by *181 article 3534 of the Civil Code, exceptions ■of vagueness and no cause of action, and also denied categorically the allegations ■of plaintiff’s petition and alleged a special defense to which we shall later advert and in which it contended that in no event could it be held liable for more than $25.

The plea of prescription was founded on the theory that the allegations of the petition could be interpreted as characterizing the entire service rendered by Wiener as notarial, charges for which service, if notarial, would have prescribed in one year, since C.C. art. 3534 provides, inter .alia, that:

“The following actions are prescribed by ■one year:
“That of * * * notaries * * * for the fees and emoluments which are due to them in their official capacity.”

The exception of vagueness was directed at the failure of plaintiff to allege what portion of the charge had beén made for notarial and what portion for legal service. The exception of no cause of action was based on the fact that the petition alleged that the service had been rendered prior to incorporation, it being argued that service rendered prior to incorporation could not authorize a charge, against the corporation itself.

The exception of vagueness having been sustained, plaintiff amended by supplemental petition, which contained the allegation that the amount claimed for notarial service was $25 and the charge for legal service $275. Defendant again filed a plea of prescription of one year and again denied categorically all of the allegations of the two petitions.

The court, a qua, without passing upon the plea. of prescription, or the remaining exception of no cause of action, rendered judgment for plaintiff for $25. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed, contending that the amount should he increased to $300 as originally prayed for, and the defendant has answered the appeal maintaining - that the suit should be dismissed in toto.

It is now conceded by counsel for plaintiff that as to that portion of the claim, to wit, $25, which represents the notarial charge, the plea of prescription is well founded. Thus the claim is reduced to $275 for legal services alleged to have been rendered in connection with the organization and incorporation of defendant corn-pany. Against this claim defendant presents four defenses:

First, that the services rendered in the preparation and execution of a corporate charter are notarial and not legal and that, therefore, no legal charge may be made therefor, and that, if the charge is notarial, the claim therefor is prescribed under the codal article already re'ferred to.

Second, that nothing at all is due, for the reason that such legal service as may have been rendered was rendered prior to incorporation and, consequently, could not be charged against the corporation, but must be collected for, if at all, from the individuals who contracted for the service.

Third, that when the persons who subsequently incorporated the defendant company met to discuss preliminary plans for incorporation, they authorized Hr. Walter Weiss, who was to be president and who later became president, to employ Mr. Wiener, to pass the act of incorporation, and that when Mr. Weiss was authorized to employ Mr. Wiener he was instructed to agree upon a fee of not more than $25, the contention being that Mr. Wiener, in any event, is bound by the instruction given by the principals to Mr. Weiss, and, therefore, cannot claim more than the $25, for which Mr. Weiss was authorized to contract.

Fourth, that only very simple notarial service was required and that, therefore, the charge made is excessive.

We shall consider these defenses in the order in which we have above presented them.

We experience no difficulty in concluding that advice and service rendered by an attorney in the preparation of a notarial charter constitute legal services. It is true that the actual passing of the charter is done by a notary, and it is also no doubt true that often notaries, without legal advice, prepare and execute charters for corporations. Nevertheless, we deem it quite plain that decisions on questions involving what shall be put into a charter and what shall be left out require the exercise of legal judgment and that, therefore, charges made for advice on these questions are charges for legal and not for notarial service.

Second. On behalf of defendant counsel call to our attention certain cases which, at first glance, might be interpreted as authority for the view that, wherever *182 legal service leading up to the forming of a corporation is rendered, it may not be charged against the subsequently formed corporation, and that the only recourse of the attorney who renders such service is to demand payment from the individual persons who may have consulted him. But that rule is not applicable where the service is limited to that which immediately precedes, or is, in effect, contemporary with, actual incorporation, and where the actual incorporation is, in effect, ratified and approved later by the acceptance by the corporation of the benefits which have flowed to it from those services. A corporation brought into existence — given its life — by the service of an attorney, may not be heard to say that the service was unauthorized because rendered prior to incorporation. When the benefit of such service is received and accepted by the corporation, it cannot be heard to question the authority through which the service was employed. It may be that in such case the corporation may not be held to the express terms of a contract for such employment; in other words, it may not be held to the contract itself, but it may not repudiate the service entirely and yet reap the benefits therefrom. It may repudiate the contract price if a price has been agreed upon, but it may not refuse to pay for the service on the basis of the value of the benefits received; in other words, on a quantum meruit. This is indicated even in the authorities relied upon by defendant. In Bradshaw v. Knoll, 132 La. 829, 61 So. 839, 843, is found a case pointed to by defendant as authorizing the view that such pre-incorporation service cannot form the basis of a charge against the subsequently organized company. But the service for which recovery was sought in that case was purely promotional, had nothing to do with the actual incorporation of the company, and was not ratified subsequently by the company. Nor did the company receive any benefit therefrom. That this is true is evident, for the court said :

“It is not shown that the' said company ratified or adopted said agreement by resolution or other corporate action, or has received any benefit from the alleged services of Bradshaw.”

Counsel for defendant contend that ratification of the employment of such an attorney may be made only by resolution of the board of directors.

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Bluebook (online)
171 So. 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-v-southern-import-wine-co-lactapp-1936.