Giannopulos v. Philips

129 So. 2d 306, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2088
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 24, 1961
DocketNo. 21576
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 129 So. 2d 306 (Giannopulos v. Philips) 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
Giannopulos v. Philips, 129 So. 2d 306, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2088 (La. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinion

SAMUEL, Judge.

This is a suit for $3,100, being the alleged balance due on defendant’s promissory note dated August 15, 1957, for $3,275 to the order of plaintiff, together with interest and 20% attorney fees as stipulated in the note. The defense was a plea of absence of consideration. Plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of defendant and dismissing the suit.

Plaintiff was the owner of a restaurant in which the defendant, the sole proprietor of a pinball machine business operating under the trade name of C and M Specialty Co., had some of his machines. Plaintiff wanted to sell his business for $9,000 cash and had talked about the matter with one Verbon Gay, an insurance broker. Gay contacted two interested persons, Dalton and Acosta, and introduced them to plaintiff. There was some delay in consummating the sale while the purchasers waited to do business with their own pinball machine operator and plaintiff brought in the defendant, who was desirous of keeping his machines in the restaurant. On August 9, 1957, plaintiff sold his business to Dalton and Acosta for $9,000. As part of the ptxrchase price the new owners executed their promissory note dated August 9, 1957, for $4,500, to the order of the aforesaid C and M Specialty Co., which note was received by defendant and thereafter remained, unendorsed, in his possession. The day the sale took place defendant gave to plaintiff a check for $4,500, which check was payable to the order of plaintiff, drawn on the account of C and M Specialty Co., and signed for that company by the defendant. After the passage of the sale plaintiff endorsed this check in blank and returned it to the defendant who deposited the check to his company’s account on August 12, 1957. On or about said date of August 12, 1957 (as reflected by the testimony hereinafter set forth, the exact date is in conflict), defendant gave plaintiff the note in suit, which note is dated August 15, 1957, and is in the amount of $3,275. On December 12, 1957, defendant paid plaintiff $175 which the former credited to the note in suit thus leaving the balance of $3,100 for which this suit has been brought.

[308]*308Prior to and at the time of these transactions plaintiff was indebted to the defendant in the amount of $1,225, the balance due on an original indebtedness of $1,500 arising out of two advances by defendant to plaintiff, one of $1,000 when the latter went into the business and $500 thereafter for federal licenses due on the pinball machines.

The record reveals that pinball machine, operators customarily advance money to persons going into a business in which the machines can be used in order to have what they refer to as a “location”, a place in which to put and operate the machines, the money so advanced usually being paid back out of the proceeds of such machines.

Dalton and Acosta had operated the business for only a short time when they sold the same to a third person or persons a_,d the litigants discussed between themselves the best method of collecting the $4,500 note. Dalton and Acosta later went into bankruptcy.

Only four witnesses testified. The plaintiff called one witness, Gay, in addition to himself, and the defendant called one witness, his attorney, in addition to himself. Neither of the purchasers of the restaurant, Dalton and Acosta, was called as a witness and the record reflects that these men had no knowledge of the details of the transaction between the litigants.

The plaintiff testified that he had endorsed and returned to defendant the latter’s $4,500 check on the same day he received the note in suit, which note had been dated August 15, 1957, (several days after the check was returned) by defendant so that the date would be “even”. The amount of the note, $3,275, represented the difference between the $4,500 check given by defendant to plaintiff and plaintiff’s indebtedness of $1,225 to the defendant. The note executed by Dalton and Acosta was the defendant’s property at all times and plaintiff understood that defendant had made the usual arrangements to collect this note out of the proceeds of his machine. However, plaintiff admitted on cross examination that, after their conversation relative to the best means of collecting, he and the defendant went to the latter’s lawyer and' plaintiff asked the lawyer to collect the note for his (plaintiff’s) account. At that time it was explained to the lawyer that plaintiff was the owner of the Dalton-Acosta note and that plaintiff had requested the defendant to hold and collect the note for him out of the proceeds of the pinball machines. Plaintiff’s explanation of this action and conversation was that it had been done only at the request of the defendant and with the thought on plaintiff’s part that the sooner the defendant got his money the quicker plaintiff would receive his. He further testified that he had been making $70, $80 or even $90 per week out of the machines so that the note could be paid out of these proceeds within a period of about a year and that Ajax, another coin company, had loaned $3,000 to the persons who purchased the business from Dalton and Acosta.

Verbon Gay, plaintiff’s witness, testified that he was present during a conversation between Dalton and the defendant and had heard the defendant, who appeared to be anxious to keep his machines in the restaurant, offer to contribute to the financing of the purchase by Dalton and Acosta. This witness further testified that plaintiff had brought the defendant into the picture under the impression that the latter would finance part of the purchase price if allowed to keep his machine in the restaurant.

Philips testified that he did not owe plaintiff any money whatsoever, there being no need for him to incur such an indebtedness because he was a man of considerable means (he mentions owning $250,000 in New Orleans real estate in addition to several businesses) and that in any event he would not have advanced as much as one-half of the purchase price. He explained his $4,500 check and his note for $3,275, both payable to the plaintiff, as follows: Giannopulos had been in business for a little more than eleven months when he informed the defendant “Philips, I am going to have to sell [309]*309the place. Would you give me a check over the counter for the sale, and then collect your money from the earnings of the machines, and then after you collect your money, then pay me the difference?”; concerning the note he testified that he gave the same to the plaintiff, at the latter’s request and only as a protection to the latter’s wife in the event of plaintiff’s death, some three weeks after the sale of the business to Dalton and Acosta (we notice that the sale was on August 9, 1957, and the note is dated August 15, 1957). He further testified that he had given plaintiff $175, which the latter had credited against the note in suit, as a further loan at the request of plaintiff who had said he needed $150 to buy a Christmas present for his wife.

Philips’ only other witness, his attorney, confirmed defendant’s testimony and plaintiff’s admission to the effect that the litigants had to come to his office and had asked him to collect the $4,500 note for the plaintiff. The attorney testified that defendant had given him this information and plaintiff had agreed to its correctness.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 So. 2d 306, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2088, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giannopulos-v-philips-lactapp-1961.