Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc. v. Guerin

112 So. 34, 163 La. 426, 1927 La. LEXIS 1649
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 28, 1927
DocketNo. 26298.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 112 So. 34 (Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc. v. Guerin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc. v. Guerin, 112 So. 34, 163 La. 426, 1927 La. LEXIS 1649 (La. 1927).

Opinion

LAND, J.

The defendant, a feme sole of the age of majority, is sued by plaintiff corporation for a balance of $2,500, alleged to be due on an original subscription of 400 shares of stock of the Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., at the price of $12.50 a share.

Plaintiff alleges that defendant paid $2,-500 cash on said stock on November 8, 1921, the date of the alleged subscription, and agreed to pay the balance in 90 days after December 1, 1921.

Defendant avers in her answer that the alleged stock subscription was obtained from her by M. J. Guerin, Jr., president of plaintiff corporation, and by other representatives of said corporation, by fraud and by misrepresentation of material facts.

' Defendant represents that she paid the sum of $2,500 on the original stock subscription, without having any knowledge at the time of the fraud being practiced upon her and of the falsity of the representations made to her.

The four certificates, issued to defendant for the 200 shares of stock paid for by her, were tendered to plaintiff corporation .at the time the answer was filed, and were deposited in the registry of the court, and defendant has demanded, in her answer, judgment in re-convention against plaintiff for the price of the stock already received.

Defendant prays that the demand of plaintiff be rejected, and that she recover on her reconventional demand judgment against plaintiff in the sum of $2,500, the price of the stock for which she has paid, with legal interest thereon from November 8, 1921.

Judgment was rendered in the civil district court in favor of the plaintiff, the Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., in the full amount sued for, with legal interest, and defendant has appealed.

1. In our opinion, the judgment appealed from is erroneous.

■ The Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., is a Delaware corporation organized by J. Morinville Guerin, Jr., and his son, Wilfred Guerin, and authorized to do business in this state. The Guerins are not related to defendant, although bearing the same name.

Defendant is an inexperienced woman in business matters, and inherited some means from an uncle.

The evidence shows that defendant was solicited repeatedly by the Guerins, their sales manager, and salesman to make the purchase of the 400 shares of stock involved in this suit, and that the sale of the stock was effected only after considerable effort upon their part.

During the negotiations leading up to the stock subscription, Wilfred Guerin stated to defendant that he was the inventor of a new patent for locating vacant seats in a darkened auditorium. This statement was not true. While negotiations were-pending for the sale of the stock, defendant was presented also with a fraudulent advertisement published in the New Orleans daily papers, announcing that the Guerin system ivas in operation in a million dollar moving picture theater in Los Angeles, and that its manager considered that the Guerin system had proved to be a great financial sueeess.

*429 The advertisement in question reads as follows:

“Don’t Read This!
“The Talk of Los Angeles!!!
“Guerin Theater Seating System is Now Operating in the New Million Dollar Theater of Los Angeles.
“The oioner says it is increasing his receipts by $150 to $250 per day! These wonderful systems will make and earn thousands yearly for theaters, yet cost them practically nothing.
“Vacant Seat Indicator in Grauman’s Million Dollar Theater, Los Angeles, California.
“Only 5 out of Every 100 Theaters Would Make Every Investment of $100.00. Now Worth $4,000.00.
“An Investment Opportunity Equaling All the Great Possibilities of Oil.
“Yet with None of Its Risks Whatever, but Practically Now Equal to a ‘Producing Well.’
“Gall at our offices in the New Hibernia, Suite 90S, or fill in blank below and mail now for particulars.
“Stock Salesmen and Salesladies Wanted!
“Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., Vacant Seat Indicating Systems for Theaters, Suite 903, New Hibernia Bldg., New Orleans, Louisiana.
“Gentlemen: Kindly send: me full particulars of the stock you have to offer. This places me under no obligation whatever.
“Name: -.
“Address: -.
“Guerin Theater Seating System, Incorporated.
“903 New Hibernia Bldg. New Orleans.”

The Guerins also issued a circular containing, in part, the following statements:

“The direct management of the company rests in the president and his son, who is vice president and secretary — the inventor of the system. * * *
“The system is the invention of a Louisianian and is backed by the Louisiana people, placing it in a peculiarly strong position from the standpoint of administration.
“We have secured authority for the sale of our stock from the Louisiana Securities Commission so that the legality of the system is assured to our stockholders.”

The evidence of M. J. Guerin, Jr., taken on the return of the subpoena duces tecum on June 27, 1923, shows conclusively that the Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., was not in business at that date, that no installations of the Guerin vacant seat indicator had been made in the Grauman Million Dollar Theater, in Los Angeles, or elsewhere, hut that plaintiff corporation was still in a state of promotion.

As a matter of fact, the Hansen patent, obtained June 6, .1916, an invention with an indicator board in the lobby by which vacant seats can be located in a darkened theater, was in operation in the Grauman Theater, at Los Angeles, at the date of the fraudulent advertisement herein referred to, and the truth is that neither the Guerin Theater Seating-System, Inc., nor Wilfred Guerin had any interest whatever in the Hansen patent.

At the date of the institution of this suit, March 28, 1922, the Guerin Theater Seating System, Inc., owned the Johnson patent, dated February 26, 1918, and issued 1 year, 8 months, and 20 days after the patent of Hansen, the original inventor of the basic idea of seat indicators in the lobby of a theater.

In addition to this, Wilfred Guerin had filed two applications for patents which had not been granted, and which related merely to improvements in theater seating devices and were quite identical with the basic idea of the original Hansen patent, and with the later Johnson patent, which itself was only an improvement upon the original Hansen patent.

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112 So. 34, 163 La. 426, 1927 La. LEXIS 1649, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerin-theater-seating-system-inc-v-guerin-la-1927.