French Market Ice Mfg. Co. of N. O., Ltd. v. Dalton

130 So. 122, 15 La. App. 115, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 626
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 8, 1930
DocketNo. 647
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 130 So. 122 (French Market Ice Mfg. Co. of N. O., Ltd. v. Dalton) 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
French Market Ice Mfg. Co. of N. O., Ltd. v. Dalton, 130 So. 122, 15 La. App. 115, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 626 (La. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

ELLIOTT, J.

French Market Ice Manufacturing Company of New Orleans, Limited, is the plaintiff in a suit against John Dalton for $1,402, alleged by plaintiff to be the balance due it by defendant on account, for ice sold and delivered to said Dalton during the months of May, June, July and August, 1926. The plaintiff alleges that the total amount sold was $2,152, on which the defendant paid $750, leaving $1,402, claimed in its petition.

The plaintiff alleges that said Dalton requested it to bill the ice to John Dalton Company and to carry the account in that name, which was done for his convenience.

It further alleges upon information and belief that it was so requested by said Dalton as a ruse, in anticipation of defeating its claim against him personally for liability on account of said ice.

That said John Dalton Company is com[116]*116posed of John Dalton, his wife and sister, and has been an inactive corporation for several years; no meeting of stockholders having been held or officers appointed, and no authorization given to the self-styled president, John Dalton, to engage in the ice business. That said ice business was carried on truly and simply for the benefit of John Dalton individually.

That said John Dalton used all the funds received from the sales in the ice business, derived the sole and exclusive benefit from the said business, and is therefore personally responsible to your petitioner for the amount due on said account.

Judgment against John Dalton was prayed for accordingly.

Defendant urged against plaintiff’s petition an exception of no right or cause of action. The exception was overruled in the lower court. Defendant urges that the ruling was erroneous.

Defendant contends that plaintiff’s averment that he requested it to bill the ice to John Dalton Company and to carry the account in that name as a ruse, in anticipation of defeating its claim against him personally, is contradicted by subsequent averments admitting that John Dalton Company was a corporation, without alleging that it had been legally dissolved or liquidated, and gives no right to a judgment against him as a stockholder.

Defendant is not sued as a stockholder in John Dalton Company, Ltd.

The averment is that he personally contracted the debt and endeavors by a ruse to escape liability. That he engaged in and carried on the ice business, with ice received from the plaintiff under said contract for his personal benefit, used all of the funds derived from the sales of said ice; and personally received the sole exclusive benefit of the business, states a cause of action against him personally.

The exception was properly overruled.

Defendant urges that plaintiff knew of the existence of the company, and having dealt with it as such, is estopped to deny its corporate capacity, citing Bond & Braswell v. Scott Lumber Co., 128 La. 818, 55 So. 468, and Tulane Improvement Co. v. Chapman & Co., 129 La. 562, 56 So. 509.

The lower court reviewed the case but makes no mention of this plea.

Defendant filed a petition for rehearing in the lower court, setting forth the various matters in regard to which he contended that the court had erred; but made no complaint on account of the failure of the court to rule on or to sustain such a plea.

The first and fundamental principle of the law on the subject of estoppel by matters in pais is that the language or conduct of the party estopped was acted on by the party urging the estoppel, and that the party thereby so induced to act will suffer injury if the other party is permitted to controvert his act, or deny what he has held out to him to be true. Greenleaf on Evidence, vol. 1, subject Presumptive Evidence, secs. 22, 27, and subject Admissions, secs. 207-209; Jones on Evidence, subject Admissions, secs. 275, 277, 279, 280; Best’s Principles of Evidence by Chamberlayne (7th International Ed.) subject Admissibility and Effect of Evidence, sec. 543, p. 495, and note p. 504; Bigelow on Estoppel, subject Estoppel by Conduct, secs. 1 and 2, pp. 556 to 585.

The defendant has not so alleged in his answer, nor was any proof of that kind [117]*117tendered on the trial; hence there was no question of estoppel before the lower court, and there is none before this court.

In .the case of Bond & Braswell v. Scott Lumber Co., supra, and Tulane Improvement Co. v. Chapman & Co., supra, creditors, after dealing with a corporation as such, sought to hold the stockholders liable as commercial partners, because of informality in the act of incorporation.

In the present case, the plaintiff alleges that it contracted and dealt with John Dalton personally, and that the said John Dalton personally owes the debt that the contract calls for.

Defendant denies that he dealt with plaintiff personally, and personally contracted the debt. He alleges that he acted only as the agent and representative to John Dalton Company, Limited; that the plaintiff dealt with John Dalton Company; and that John Dalton Company, Limited, owes the debt. The lower ■ court acted on this issue and it was the proper course to pursue; there was no question of estoppel alleged to the court.

The defendant, on the trial, objected to parol evidence to prove a promise to pay a debt of a third person. The court ruled on this objection several times, holding that according to the plaintiff there was no third person debtor; that according to defendant if there was a debt, it was due by a third person; that the subject-matter involved the gist of the controversy and referred it to the merits.

Defendant urges that the ruling was in violation of the Civil Code, art. 2278. The objection was good, on the theory that the debt was due by a third person. But that theory could not become controlling until it had been first shown that the debt was due by a third person. The objection assumed the fact. The question was the principal issue before the court and could only be decided after hearing the parol evidence concerning the alleged oral agreement entered into, upon which the ice was sold and delivered. It was only after hearing the evidence as to the identity of the debtor, that the court could say whether it was John Dalton personally, or John Dalton Company, Limited, that owed the debt. The action of the court in referring the objection to the merits, and hearing the parol evidence was correct.

The testimony of S. P. Simone, president and general manager of ' plaintiff, was taken in New Orleans on May 2'8, 1928. He was asked in behalf of the plaintiff:

“Q. State whether or not you have ever had any business dealings with John Dalton, and if so, what those business dealings were and the manner in which your business relationship with John Dalton originated.”

His answer in effect was that John Dalton came to "his office and stated that because of particular circumstances obtaining among the ice dealers of Morgan City, he desired to purchase carloads of ice in New Orleans. He also requested, at die time, that the bills of lading and the me be shipped to John Dalton. Company, and requested that he make the bills out under said title, in order, as he stated, that the retail ice dealers would not be suspicious' of him. At the time he was not advised that there was any John Dalton Company, Limited, or that Mr. Dalton was connected with a corporation of the same name.

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Bluebook (online)
130 So. 122, 15 La. App. 115, 1930 La. App. LEXIS 626, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/french-market-ice-mfg-co-of-n-o-ltd-v-dalton-lactapp-1930.