Gulf Refining Co. v. Loeb

195 So. 848, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 51
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 6, 1940
DocketNo. 17217.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 195 So. 848 (Gulf Refining Co. v. Loeb) 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
Gulf Refining Co. v. Loeb, 195 So. 848, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 51 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

JANVIER, Judge.

This is a suit on three promissory notes made 'by Robert E. Loeb to the order of Gulf Refining Company. One is for $100 and is due June IS, 1938, one for $100 due July 15, 1938, and one for $45.76 due August 15, 1938. Each bears interest at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum from maturity and stipulates for the payment of 10 per cent, attorney’s fees on the total amount of principal and interest in the event of the necessity for the employment of counsel for collection.

It is alleged that, though all notes are past due, no payment has been made on any of them, and judgment is sought for the full amount of each and for the interest and attorneys’ fees stipulated for.

Defendant interposed the special defense that the notes sued on are void and unen-forcible “for the reason that no consideration passed .from plaintiff to defendant, or any other person, to support the execution and delivery of the said notes”.

Assuming the position of plaintiff in re-convention, Loeb alleged that, at the time of the execution of the said notes, he had paid to plaintiff the sum of $100 “in error”, and he prayed for judgment for the return of the said $100.

There was judgment sustaining this defense and dismissing the suit of plaintiff, and in favor of plaintiff in reconvention as prayed for. From this judgment plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that defendant, Loeb, was vice-president Of, though not a stockholder in, a corporation known as Waverly, Inc., located at Thibodaux,. Louisiana, and that that corporation, in its operations in the manufacture of sugar, from time to time required supplies of fuel oil, which it had frequently purchased from plaintiff, Gulf Refining Company. Prior to December, 1937, Waverly, Inc., having no line of credit with the Gulf Refining Company, had established a system of maintaining with that corporation a deposit of $500 —referred to in the record as a “cushion” ■ — so that, should the said Waverly, Inc., fail to pay for any oil delivered to it, the refining company might, from that deposit or “cushion”, deduct the amount due. At some time prior to December 16, 1937, because of purchases made and not .paid for, Waverly, Inc., had not only exhausted the deposit, but had also incurred an additional liability to the extent of $64.26. On December 16, 1937, additional oil was required, but the refining company refused to make delivery . unless payment should be made, or the deposit or “cushion” renewed. The price of the additional oil required was $281.50. Thereupon defendant, Loeb, by telephone, called the credit manager of the refining company and, as a result of that [850]*850conversation, Loeb gave to the refining company a document referred to by plaintiff as a check and by defendant as a draft and reading as follows :

“The Hibernia National Bank
“In New Orleans
“New Orleans, La., December 16, 1937
“Pay to the order of Gulf Refining Company $564.26 Five Hundred Sixty Four and 26/100 Dollars
“Value received and charge to account of
“Waverly, Incorporated
“(Signed) Robert E. Loeb .
“Robert E. Loeb, Vice-Pres.
“To Lafourche National Bank
“Thibodaux, Louisiana.”

This amount was intended to include the balance of $64.26 which was already due and a new deposit or “cushion” of $500.

When this so-called “draft”' was presented to the drawee bank, it was not honored, and, as a result, the amount due to the refining company became $345.76. Thereafter Waverly, Inc., filed a petition in bankruptcy.

There was a controversy concerning the question of whether Loeb was personally liable and, as a result of a conference at which both he and his attorney were present, he paid to the Gulf Refining Company $100 by check. and gave for the balance his personal notes, which are now sued on.

It is Loeb’s contention that, when he gave to the refining company the draft, or check, for $564.26, he did not incur any personal obligation and that, therefore, when, later, that draft, was not honored, and when, still later, he paid $100 in cash and gave his note for the balance, he received no consideration therefor, since the oil had already been delivered to Waverly, Inc., on the- faith of the draft which he had executed — not individually, but as an authorized officer of Waverly, Inc. It appears that Loeb was not authorized individually to draw checks on the bank account of Waverly, Inc., in the Lafourche National Bank at Thibodaux and that that bank had been instructed to honor checks of the corporation only when signed by two officers.

It is contended now by Loeb that when he executed the notes, not only did he receive no consideration therefor, but that he did so under duress and threats of criminal prosecution. But when evidence was tendered to support this contention that there were threats of criminal prosecution, that evidence was objected to on the ground that the pleadings contained no reference to any such threats. This objection was, we think, properly sustained. The allegation that defendant acted “in error” is obviously inconsistent with the charge that he acted under coercion and threats of' criminal prosecution.

Had Loeb not executed the notes in question and had he not paid the $100 which he did pay, there might have been no liability in him as a result of the original transaction, for, though it is true that the credit manager of the Gulf Refining Company testified that when he agreed to accept the said document executed by Loeb, Loeb “assured” him that it would be paid, still it cannot be said that such a verbal assurance made Loeb liable as surety. It is well settled in this state that one is not liable as surety unless his obligation is assumed in a writing which, in express terms, sets forth the said obligation.

These questions are discussed most interestingly and completely in Tulane Law Review, Vol. XIII, page 519, in an article entitled “The Nature and Essentials of Conventional Suretyship”. In that article it is shown that, because of Article 2278 of our Civil Code, a contract of suretyship must be in writing, and it is also' shown that “Because of the dangerous nature of the surety’s.position, both the civil and the common law provide that suretyship can never be presumed and must always be expressed”. We also find that the requirement that the contract of suretyship must be expressed has been discussed in many Louisiana cases, with the ultimate result that it is now held that there must be more than the suggestion that the principal ob-ligor is financially sound.

For instance, in Exchange National Bank v. Waldron Lumber Company et al., 177 La. 1015, 150 So. 3, 4, it was held that the statement “we are behind Mr. Waldron and financing him” is not an express assumption of the obligation of suretyship. Therefore, we conclude that, had Loeb not executed the notes which are now sued on and had he not made the payment for the return of which the 'recon-ventional demand is filed, there might have been no liability in him as surety, unless upon the theory that he had committed a tort in executing th.e check with only one signature. But, when Waverly, Inc., went [851]

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Bluebook (online)
195 So. 848, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-refining-co-v-loeb-lactapp-1940.