Farlee Drug Center, Inc. v. Belle Meade Pharmacy, Inc.

464 So. 2d 802, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8506
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 11, 1985
Docket84-CA-249
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 464 So. 2d 802 (Farlee Drug Center, Inc. v. Belle Meade Pharmacy, Inc.) 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
Farlee Drug Center, Inc. v. Belle Meade Pharmacy, Inc., 464 So. 2d 802, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8506 (La. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

464 So.2d 802 (1985)

FARLEE DRUG CENTER, INC.
v.
BELLE MEADE PHARMACY, INC.

No. 84-CA-249.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.

February 11, 1985.

*803 Duplechin & Associates, Jack A. Quarles, Gretna, for plaintiff-appellee.

Stephen J. Hornyak, Gretna, for defendant-appellant.

Before BOUTALL, CHEHARDY and DUFRESNE, JJ.

CHEHARDY, Judge.

Farlee Drug Center, Inc., sued Belle Meade Pharmacy, Inc., on open account for $14,171.53 plus interest and attorney's fees, claiming defendant failed to pay for pharmaceutical supplies purchased from Farlee during 1979 and 1980. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff and defendant appealed.

Although plaintiff obtained judgment on the account in the amount prayed, the trial judge denied attorney's fees because he found plaintiff had failed to comply with the requirements of LSA-R.S. 9:2781, Paragraphs A and B (i.e., written demand correctly setting forth the amount owed, accompanied by a copy of the invoices in support thereof, and due diligence in attempting delivery of the written demand). Because plaintiff has neither appealed nor answered the appeal, the district court's refusal to award attorney's fees is final. LSA-C.C.P. art. 2133.

On appeal, defendant assigns the following errors:

(1) That the trial court erred in admitting evidence of the purchases and payments for the years 1975 through 1978, when the transactions sued upon took place in 1979 and 1980;

(2) That the plaintiff failed to establish properly the balance existing in December 1976, to which defendant's 1977 payments were applied;

(3) That the court erred in concluding that defendant's payments were made on the general account rather than being intended to pay for specific invoices;

(4) That the court erroneously found that the payments made by defendant interrupted *804 prescription on the balance of the account for the years prior to 1979; and

(5) That the court erroneously concluded that defendant's payments from January through October 1979 were properly applied only to pay the balance forwarded from 1978 rather than to pay the account in full.

The problems in this case arise from the plaintiff's unorthodox method of bookkeeping. The business relationship between Stuart Farber, the owner of Farlee Drug Center, Inc., and Joseph Henry, the owner of Belle Meade Pharmacy, Inc., arose from their prior friendship. Henry had been employed by Farlee as a pharmacist before he started his own business in 1974. After Henry opened up Belle Meade Pharmacy, Farber agreed to sell him pharmaceutical supplies and other drugstore items at Farlee's cost. Although Farlee customarily did business on a cash basis, Farber allowed Henry to make purchases on credit.

Henry or one of his employees would come to Farlee several times a week to pick up supplies. A Farlee employee would list the items on a printed padded receipt form, without listing the prices. The Belle Meade employee would be given the merchandise together with the original, unpriced receipt. Farlee would retain the carbon copy; later a Farlee employee, usually Mrs. Flo Terrebonne, the bookkeeper, would check Farlee's cost on the items and list those prices on the carbon of the receipt. Occasionally Belle Meade supplied merchandise to Farlee; these items would be listed on the receipt forms as credits to Belle Meade's account.

These padded receipt forms constituted Farlee's entire record of Belle Meade's account; no traditional ledgers or other books were kept. No periodic written statements of account were rendered to Belle Meade. Early in the relationship Joe Henry would be advised by telephone of the amounts of the invoices once they had been "priced out." Eventually he requested that they just send him the priced-out copy. Farlee developed the custom of sending Belle Meade the priced-out copy after each invoice had been paid in full. Once the priced-out copy had been sent to Belle Meade, Farlee had no further record of those purchases.

Mrs. Terrebonne did, however, keep a make-shift ledger sheet of Belle Meade's monthly total purchases and payments, by recording these on a separate receipt form, in roughly chronological order.

Stuart Farber testified that in the early months of the business relationship Henry would pay for the invoices a week or two after they were incurred. A few months later he began paying in full for a set of invoices at a time, once a month. Eventually he simply began to pay a round figure every month on his account, usually $1,000 or $1,500.

When payments were made, Farlee applied them toward the oldest purchases. When Henry made round-figure payments on the account, they were applied toward the "running balance." Farber stated that whenever a batch of invoices was paid in full, then the priced-out invoices were turned over to Henry.

According to Farber, every now and then he insisted that Henry pay a batch of invoices in full. In mid-1978, Farber said, Henry began to miss the monthly payments here and there, sometimes letting several months go by without a payment. Henry would make another $1,000 or $1,500 payment, then miss a month or two again. Yet Belle Meade continued making purchases. Because of this, Farber said, Belle Meade's account gradually fell further and further in arrears.

Farber testified that by December 31, 1978, Belle Meade's balance was $10,670.50. During 1979, Henry made six payments that totalled $10,670.50. The final payment in 1979 was made on October 26 and cleared out the 1978 balance, said Farber, at which point the 1978 invoices were turned over to Henry. Meanwhile, the total of Belle Meade's purchases during 1979 was $13,852.45. Farber still had the carbons of the 1979 and 1980 invoices because those particular invoices had not been paid.

*805 Henry made one payment in 1980, on January 16, in the amount of $1,500. Belle Meade's purchases in 1980, from January through September, totalled $1,819.08. No further purchases or payments were made thereafter. Thus, according to Farlee's records, Belle Meade's final outstanding balance was $14,171.53, comprising the 1979 balance of $13,852.45 plus the 1980 balance of $1,819.08, less the 1980 payment of $1,500.

Farber and Terrebonne each testified that Henry was orally advised from time to time of his outstanding balance, both during the active business relationship and after it ended. He never protested Farlee's bookkeeping methods, or the way in which his account was handled, or the amounts they stated were due. Flo Terrebonne stated that once or twice Henry did ask her for a written statement of account, and that she sent them to him accordingly. She had not kept copies of these statements.

At trial and on appeal, Belle Meade argues that the account was current as of December 31, 1978 and that the payments made in 1979 were intended by Henry to apply to the 1979 purchases. Conceding that the amount of the 1979 purchases exceeded the 1979 payments, just as the amount of the 1980 purchases exceeded the 1980 payments, Belle Meade contends that at most it owes Farlee $3,500.73.

Farlee's evidence of the debits and credits to Belle Meade's account began with an outstanding balance in November 1976 of $7,718.18, as recorded on Mrs. Terrebonne's makeshift "ledger." Farlee no longer had copies of any invoices prior to 1979 (Farlee's priced-out carbon copies for earlier years had been given to Belle Meade, as mentioned above). The invoices entered into evidence at trial were copies obtained from Belle Meade during pretrial discovery.

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Bluebook (online)
464 So. 2d 802, 1985 La. App. LEXIS 8506, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farlee-drug-center-inc-v-belle-meade-pharmacy-inc-lactapp-1985.