Harper v. Barton

2 La. App. 317, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 451
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 6, 1925
DocketNo. 2216
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 La. App. 317 (Harper v. Barton) 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
Harper v. Barton, 2 La. App. 317, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 451 (La. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

CARVER, J.

Plaintiff sues defendant for $243.45, besides interest, alleged balance due on open account. Annexed to the petition is an itemized statement of the goods alleged to have been purchased and the credits; the debit sjde beginning March 15, 1919, with an item of balance due on phosphate, $32.00, and then showing no further item until March 6, ■ 1920, when frequent purchases are charged in March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October and November, 1920, the last item for that year being November 26. Nothing is charged then until August, 1921. Interspersed are various credits of cash throughout 1920 and 1921 both.

Defendant denies owing the debt, and alleges that he did not trade with plaintiff at all during the years 1920 and 1921. He also pleads the prescription of three years.

[318]*318Citation was served December 14, 1923.

The district judge gave plaintiff judgment for $47.50, being the total amount of tbe purchases made in 1921, bolding tbat payments of $41.55 made in tbat year should be imputed to tbe oldest items on tbe account, and bolding, further, tbat all of tbe items for 1920 were prescribed.

Plaintiff appealed and defendant does not ask for any amendment of tbe judgment.

Plaintiff contends, in this court, tbat tbe various payments made in 1921 were tacit acknowledgments of tbe debt which interrupted the prescription of three years.

Defendant claims tbat under Civil Code, 3538, as amended by Act 78 of. 1888, tbe interruption of prescription on open accounts can only be proved by written acknowledgment.

Tbe pertinent parts of tbe original article and of tbe act amending it are as follows:

“The following actions are prescribed by three years: * * *
“That on the accounts of merchants, whether selling for wholesale or retail. * * *
“Tbat on all other open accounts.
“This prescription only ceases from tbe time there has been an account acknowledged, a note or bond given, or an action commenced.”

Act 78 of 1888 provides:

“That Article 3538 of tbe Revised Civil Code of Louisiana be amended and reenacted so as to read as follows:
“ ‘Art. 3538. Tbe following actions are prescribed by three years: * * *
“That on tbe accounts of merchants, whether selling for wholesale or retail.
“Tbat on all other accounts.
“This prescription only ceases from tbe time there has been an account acknowledged in writing, a note or bond given, or an action commenced.”

Tbe changes were in striking out tbe word “open” between tbe words “other” and “accounts” and in interpolating tbe words “in writing” after tbe word “acknowledged.”

Defendant’s contention appears to be sustained by tbe decision in Sleet vs. Sleet, 109 La. 302, 33 South. 322.

In that case tbe plaintiff sued for a balance on open account running some eighteen years and consisting mainly of wages due him by tbe defendant, but in part of other things; tbe account being credited from time to time with money and goods received by plaintiff from defendant and being balanced at tbe end of each year. Plaintiff kept tbe books, but tbe court found tbat defendant bad access to them and probably knew what they showed. At any rate, defendant did know tbat plaintiff was drawing goods and money on tbe account.

Tbe court, considering Article 3538 as amended, held that all items on tbe account over three years old at tbe time tbe suit was brought were prescribed, virtually bolding tbat tbe credits on the account, not constituting, as to defendant, written acknowledgments, did not interrupt prescription.

We think it clear tbat if this decision correctly expresses tbe law, tbe judgment of the lower court was unquestionably correct.

But learned counsel of plaintiff cites three later cases which, be claims, sustain bis contention tbat prescription on an open account can be interrupted by a payment.

These are:

Block vs. Papania, 121 La. 683, 46 South. 694.

Succession of Driscoll, 125 La. 287, 51 South. 200.

Lewis vs. American Creosote Works, 150 La. 194, 90 South. 566.

[319]*319In the Block case, the court said:

“We do not think it was the intention of the General Assembly to cut off absolutely ‘interruptions’ of prescription under the short prescriptions unless the evidence thereof in writing should be produced, while allowing parol evidence to be introduced to establish the interruption of prescription upon claims or debts evidenced by writing, to which the larger five-year prescription is applicable.”

But the thing relied on in that case as interrupting prescription was not an: acknowledgment implied by a payment but an express promise to pay.

The court quotes from the opinion of the Court of Appeal as follows:

“The account is on its face prescribed; but the testimony is conclusive that the defendant on several occasions before prescription had accrued verbally promised to pay the debt.”

We take this to mean that he not only owed a debt but knew the amount of it and that the promise related to a specific debt.

The court further said:

“The present decision in no wise departs from that of Sleet vs. Sleet, 109 La. 303, 33 South. 322.”

In the Driscoll case the court was not dealing with an open running account composed of various items, but with a single transaction of a loan of $1,000.00. Moreover, the plea of prescription was sustained, the court holding that parol was not admissible to prove interruption as against a party deceased.

The Lewis case, too, was not one of an open running account composed of different items, but though declared to be an account was a single transaction, being a purchase of ten carloads of creosote oil.

In neither the Driscoll nor the Lewis case was it intimated that the Sleet case was to be regarded as overruled.

Counsel also cites the following cases:

Butler vs. Ford, 9 Rob. 112.

Lejeune vs. Hebert, 6 Rob. 419.

Wilson vs. Bannen, 1 Rob. 566.

McGinty vs. Henderson, 41 La. Ann. 382, 6 South. 658.

The McGinty case, it is true, was decided in 1889, but it was brought in 1887 before the change in the law which, therefore, could have had no bearing on the controversy. Moreover, it turned on the construction of Article 2278, and the holding was that' payments made by checks were not parol but written evidence. Then, too, the ease involved not a running account but a single loan of $35,000.00.

The other cases cited were decided before the change in the law, and all of them dealt with single debts and not running accounts composed of various items.

In the Butler ease it was a note.

In the Lejeune case it was a debt secured by mortgage.

In the Wilson case it was a single freight bill, and the question was not interruption of prescription but suspension by reason of holding the freight in pledge.

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Related

Holmes Co. v. Hiller
7 La. App. 590 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1928)

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Bluebook (online)
2 La. App. 317, 1925 La. App. LEXIS 451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harper-v-barton-lactapp-1925.