Hawks v. Bright

24 So. 615, 51 La. Ann. 79, 1898 La. LEXIS 568
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 13, 1898
DocketNo. 12,698
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 So. 615 (Hawks v. Bright) 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
Hawks v. Bright, 24 So. 615, 51 La. Ann. 79, 1898 La. LEXIS 568 (La. 1898).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Breaux, J.

Plaintiff and appellant sued on a contract of guaranty. On appeal he urged that an error was committed to his prejudice in. not having pronounced judgment in his favor for the whole of the-amount of his claim, instead of one-tenth of the amount of his claim.

The defendant and appellee controverted plaintiff’s demand and in his answer here asked for an amendment of the judgment by rejecting the whole of plaintiff’s demand, and prayed for judgment on his reconven tional demand for. the sum of fifteen thousand dollars.

From the averments of plaintiff’s petition and the evidence, we gather that in March, 1893, defendant, alleged president of the Right ♦Lumber Company, made application to plaintiff and urged him to buy a part of the stock of the corporation and in order to effect the sale, assured him that the stock was worth a larger amount than that at which it was offered for sale. Tie gave as a reason for desiring to sell, the purpose to enlarge the plant and extend its business.

Plaintiff declined to buy unless the defendant consented to guarantee an annual dividend of, at least, ten per cent. In order to effect the sale, the defendant gave a written guarantee to plaintiff that the certificates transferred “shall receive an annual dividend of 10 per cent for ton years, with the understanding that myself or the Right Lumber Company, Limited, have the option of recalling the stock after-five years and paying one hundred and twenty-five dollars for same.”

The foregoing is an extract from the contract of guaranty.

Plaintiff it appears, prior to buying, wrote to the defendant, raising objection to the language or terms of the guarantee which had been forwarded to him for his acceptance. Defendant immediately mailed another guarantee to plaintiff, and in a letter of advice, expressed the hope that the last guarantee would meet with his approval. The following is an excerpt from the letter: “I think, however, you arc mistaken in your conclusions, as my guarantee is simply an individual guarantee, and does not, affect your claims in the Right Lumber Company for dividends. My understanding of the transacation was and is. [81]*81the same as yours, i. e., your shares are to receive the same dividends that any other shares of the Right Lumber Company receive, but in event the company should not declare an annual dividend of at least ten per cent I am to become personally responsible to you for that amount, making your shares net you 10 per cent per annum, no .matter what may happen, and for this guarantee I have the option of buying, said shares at the expiration of five years at one hundred and twenty-five dollars per share. If this is not plain enough write out just what you desire and send to me for my signature.”

Thereupon plaintiff bought stock to the amount of ten thousand dollars, of the Right Lumber Company, paying- therefor, the sum of eight, thousand dollars.

No dividend, was paid on the shares. In May, 1894, plaintiff alleging a breach of the contract of guarantee; failure to declare dividends, owing to the alleged mismanagement of the defendant as president of the company; wrongs and even frauds committed by him in. the administration of its affairs, brought "suit for the total amount, secured by the contract of guaranty.

.Plaintiff in support of his demand for the immediate payment of' the ten instalments of dividends, as having matured because of defendant’s acts, represented that a short time after he became the owner-of the certificate of shares in the Right Lumber Company, Limited;all the property had been seized under writs of attachment- and other-legal process, issued aginst it, by creditors of the corporation and: had been sold by the sheriff. That there remained a large amount-due after the sale of all its property; it was absolutely insolvent.

Defendant sought to meet plaintiff’s contention by averring, in substance, that the Right Lumber Company was amply able to meet its obligation and to earn dividends at the date of the transfer of its certificates to plaintiff, but that a short time after the transfer, the-plaintiff who was president cf the Momoe Water Works and Light. Company wrongfully and maliciously, as president of that company sued the Right Lumber Company upon a false and fictitious demand, and had an attachment to issue under which all the property of the-company was seized; that the unwarranted appeal to the courts aroused the other creditors, who also sued out writs of attachment and' brought on the ruin of the corporation; that the plaintiff cares for his interest exclusively by buying all the property sold at sheriff’s sale-[82]*82for a limited amount, and that since the purchase he lets the property for a comparatively large annual rental.

lie also alleged, that he had not been placed in mora.

In a supplemental answer he reconvened for damages in a large sum and alleged that the charges in plaintiff’s petition in the case before us for decision of fraudulently scheming to defraud the stockholders .and direct the earning of the company were maliciously and libelously made for the purpose of bringing him into disrepute in the community in which he resided.

The District Court pronounced judgment in favor of the plaintiff for one thousand dollars and interest, being the first year’s dividend guaranteed in the contract, and non-suited plaintiff’s demand for the remainder of dividends, as being premature. The judgment rejected defendant’s reconventional demand for damages.

From the judgment the plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The utter insolvency of the Eight Lumber Company is not disputed.

But defendant contends that plaintiff, president of the Monroe Water Works and Light Company, and one of its principal stockholders, brought about the insolvency of the Eight Lumber Company by filing a suit and causing an attachment to issue, and the seizure under its illegal attachment of all its property; that this prompted the ■suing out of other writs of attachment which proved disastrous to the ■corpora Lion.

The defendant failed in his attempt to trace the cause of the collapse of the Eight Lumber Company to plaintiff. The suit of which he complains was not brought by him, nor was the attachment made at his instance. It was the act of the corporation in his absence. He did not take the required oath or furnish the bond for the attachment. Another person acted in his absence. Whatever may have been his responsibility as president of the Monroe Water Works and Light Company, plaintiff in the suit and attachment, it does not appear that he acted for the purpose of causing the destruction of the Eight Lum'ber Company, but, on the contrary, it was shown that he had naught ■to do with instituting the suit.

The amount involved in this suit was only two hundred and seventy-■eight twenty-nine-one-hundredth dollars, and it is shown that the plaintiff company was amply able to respond for damages, if any had [83]*83been committed. The amount of damages growing out of an illegal .attachment cannot very well be settled here.

Moreover: The suit complained of was brought on the 11th of

February, at the same time with suits of several other creditors. The .next day other suits were brought and other attachments issued.

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Related

Story v. Martin
217 So. 2d 758 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
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54 So. 2d 137 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
24 So. 615, 51 La. Ann. 79, 1898 La. LEXIS 568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hawks-v-bright-la-1898.