H. J. Cottam & Co. v. Raphael

198 So. 513
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 1940
DocketNo. 2154.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 198 So. 513 (H. J. Cottam & Co. v. Raphael) 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
H. J. Cottam & Co. v. Raphael, 198 So. 513 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

DORE, Judge.

This is a suit on a promissory note executed by defendant, in favor of plaintiff, of date of October 31, 1927, payable six months after date. Suit was filed and citation served on May 29, 1937, more than nine years after maturity of the note. In order to take the note from under the bar of prescription, plaintiff alleged in its original petition that the note “has been several times extended at the request of the defendant, the last being of date Feb. IS, 1934, when said note was extended for a period of two years.” Plaintiff annexed the original note to the petition, and on looking at the extensions alleged in order to take the note out of prescription, we find two notations endorsed on its back, one of date of April 4, 1928, and the other of date of Feb. IS, 1934, as mentioned in the petition; both of the notations, however, being signed “H. T. Cottam & Co. Inc., C. J. Everett, Secretary.”

Several dilatory exceptions and pleas were filed by the defendants, but it appears that these pleas are not urged on appeal. Whether these pleas were the cause or not, plaintiff, in order to further strengthen its action against an anticipated plea of prescription, filed a supplemental petition wherein it alleged that the note declared upon was the sole and only obligation of defendant to plaintiff and that the defendant had on various occasions during each year from 1928 to 1934 made verbal acknowledgments of the claim and promises of payment to its salesman, and had re *514 peatedly requested the delay in the enforcement of the obligation. Plaintiff further alleged that, in addition to the said oral promises, the defendant had written five letters acknowledging the indebtedness and making promises to pay the same and sets out the dates of those letters, the last being dated Feb. 13, 1934, annexing all five letters to its supplemental petition and making them a part thereof.

The defendant filed a motion to elect, contending that the original suit was based on a note, whereas, by the supplemental petition it now appears that the suit is on an account; the plaintiff filed a motion to strike out certain allegations in the motion to elect; the motion to elect was disallowed. Defendant then filed a plea of five years’ prescription in accordance with 'Civil Code, Article 3540.

When the plea of prescription came up for trial, defendant submitted the plea on the face of the papers, whereupon the plaintiff also submitted the matter without offering proof to show the interruption which it had alleged. The district judge sustained the plea and dismissed plaintiff’s suit. Plaintiff has appealed.

There seems to be only an issue of law presented in the case and that is with regard to whose duty it was to offer testimony. The plaintiff contends that the defendant having filed the plea, it was necessary for him to support the plea with proper proof, and having submitted the plea without testimony, the court must accept as true the allegations of the petition which on their face show an interruption. The defendant, on the other hand, contends that it is the plaintiff’s duty to prove, as it had alleged, the interruption. Both sides cite certain decisions of the Supreme Court and of the Courts of Appeal on the question, each contending that the decisions support their respective contentions.

The cases of Foster & Glassell Co. v. Knight Bros., 152 La. 596, 93 So. 913, Jeanfreau v. Jeanfreau, 182 La. 332, 162 So. 3, 5, and Succession of Smith, 182 La. 389, 162 So. 21, relied on by plaintiff in which it seems to be held in effect that for the purpose of considering a plea of prescription the allegations of the petition must be accepted as being true, are not cases dealing with promissory notes or open accounts, but rather involving pleas of prescription against certain causes of action arising on other grounds. In the Glassell case, an employer, having paid compensation to its employee, was seeking indemnity against a third person liable for the employee’s injury. The matter in dispute in the Jeanfreau case, was the ownership of a boat. It was incumbent on the defendant, in order to sustain his plea of prescription under Art. 3506, to show adverse possession in good faith and by a just title, as owner, during the three successive years without interruption, to plaintiff’s. Plaintiff’s allegation of ownership was corroborated by the only testimony in the record. In the Succession of Smith, the plaintiffs sought to annul and avoid the will of their grandfather, and also to annul and avoid a purported act of renunciation of their father in his father’s succession. The plea of prescription -filed was under Civil Code, Article 3542. • The respective records of the proceedings mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition were annexed and made part thereof. It was also conceded that more than five years elapsed from the death of plaintiff’s father to the filing of the suit and that during that time plaintiffs were majors. Plaintiffs could not prove more than they had alleged and the documents annexed showed the transactions. These cases did not deal with any allegations to interrupt prescription. But where in a case like the present one, the object of the suit is a promissory note, and the note itself, as well as the written proof offered to show interruption of prescription are part of the pleadings, we are of the opinion that the principle of the cases supra does not apply. There are too many decisions holding that on an obligation of this character, the holder of the obligation sued on is held to the duty of showing that it is not prescribed. As stated in perhaps the most logical of all the opinions, Manders v. Irwin, 118 La. 1048, 43 So. 698, 699, the plea of prescription admits the debt only in so far as prescribed. Furthermore, the court makes a statement which seems to us to be unanswerable and that is that “if the plea admitted the allegations made to take the debt out of prescription, it would be self-destructive.” We are, therefore, of the opinion that the burden of proof rested with the plaintiff to introduce evidence to show that prescription had been interrupted.

The note, on its face, shows that it is long prescribed. As far as the allegations in the original petition, with reference to the endorsements on the back of *515 the note, are concerned it is apparent that they are not sufficient, when read in connection with the manner in which the endorsements themselves are made, to show any interruption of prescription. These endorsements as shown are not made and signed by the defendant, the maker of the note, but are made and signed by the agent of plaintiff company. If these endorsements were permitted to serve in order to take the note out of prescription it would be an easy matter for anyone holding a note to release it from the effects of prescription by simply taking it and writing endorsements on the back of it as he pleases. We had somewhat a similar question involved in the case of Continental Bank & Trust Co. v. Simmons, La.App., 177 So. 384, and stated that to sanction such a practice would in effect amount to a circumvention of Article 3460 of the Civil Code which prohibits a person from renouncing a prescription not yet acquired.

Plaintiff no doubt appreciated the situation with which it would be confronted, as it found it necessary later to file the amended and supplemental petition making other allegations regarding acknowledgment of the debt in writing and annexing to that petition five certain letters which it alleges show an interruption.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Corsey v. State, Through Dept. of Corrections
366 So. 2d 964 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1978)
Torrey v. Simon-Torrey, Inc.
284 So. 2d 130 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1973)
Succession of Brower v. State
80 So. 2d 217 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1955)
Reconstruction Finance Corp. v. Ardillo
200 So. 687 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1941)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
198 So. 513, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/h-j-cottam-co-v-raphael-lactapp-1940.