Hight Enterprises, Inc. v. SMITH AND JOHNSON (SHIPPING) INC.
This text of 421 So. 2d 267 (Hight Enterprises, Inc. v. SMITH AND JOHNSON (SHIPPING) INC.) 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.
Opinion
HIGHT ENTERPRISES, INC.
v.
SMITH AND JOHNSON (SHIPPING) INC. and Smith and Johnson (Gulf) Inc.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Bernard J. Rice III, Gretna, for plaintiff-appellee.
Ralph E. Smith, Deutsch, Kerrigan & Stiles, New Orleans, for defendant-appellant.
Before BARRY, BYRNES and CIACCIO, JJ.
BARRY, Judge.
This is a suit to collect the balance on a dredging contract. Judgment was rendered against Smith and Johnson (Gulf) Inc. *268 ("Gulf") (who filed for bankruptcy) and Smith and Johnson (Shipping) Inc. ("Shipping") who appeals contending it was not a party to the contract. The district court found Shipping liable as an apparent or undisclosed agent of either Gulf or Armasal Line, the company for which the dredging was done.
The basic facts and the amount claimed are not in dispute. Shipping is a New York steamship brokerage corporation which had a New Orleans office at 904 First National Bank of Commerce Building prior to October 8, 1979. Gulf was formed with Shipping as a 50% shareholder and from October 1, 1979 Gulf was headquartered at 709 Julia Street in New Orleans. It handled all activities in this area; Shipping ceased operations in the Gulf Coast area at that time.
One of Gulf's clients was Armasal, a now-bankrupt corporation which operated a steamship service between the Gulf Coast and Latin America. Armasal's cargo was handled through the wharf facilities at the Dwyer Road Terminal which were leased in Armasal's name and operated by Gulf.
In March, 1980, Captain Hansen, a Gulf employee, telephoned Massey, an independent dredging contractor, to arrange for dredging at the Dwyer Road slip. Plaintiff Hight Enterprises, Inc., acted as billing and administrative agent for Massey, who dealt directly with Hansen. Although Hansen was a Gulf employee and never worked for Shipping, he referred to his employer as simply "Smith and Johnson" in his dealings with Massey. Neither Massey nor Hight's employees were aware there were two separate corporations (Gulf and Shipping) until after the dredging was completed. Both bills for dredging were addressed to "Smith and Johnson" at the Dwyer Road Terminal.
Around June 4, 1980, Massey went to Gulf's Julia Street office to pick up a check for partial payment for the dredging. With the check, he was given some invoices to Hight on Smith and Johnson (Shipping) Inc. billing forms which bore the old First National Bank of Commerce Building address for Shipping. The invoices had been issued in error, as Gulf's personnel admitted, when Massey and his attorney went to Gulf's Julia Street office a month later to clarify those invoices. Mr. Labbe, vice president of Gulf, acknowledged the billing to Hight was a mistake and withdrew the bill. At trial Labbe explained Gulf was using up an excess supply of Shipping's old billing forms; Gulf's name and address were supposed to be stamped on the old forms, but the stamp had not been used on those particular invoices.
Evidence at trial showed the sign on Gulf's Julia Street office read, "Smith and Johnson, established 1927," without differentiating between the two corporations. Gulf was not in existence until 1979.
The record also shows that service of plaintiff's supplemental petition, directed to Smith and Johnson (Shipping) Inc., was delivered to the Julia Street address, and accepted by a Gulf secretarial employee.
All of plaintiff's witnesses agreed that, in their contacts with Gulf's employees, the corporation was referred to as simply "Smith and Johnson," not "Smith and Johnson (Gulf) Inc.," and that they were unaware of Gulf and Shipping as separate entities. Hansen, Labbe and East the three Gulf employees who testified admitted they usually identified their employer as just "Smith and Johnson." No employees or representatives of Shipping were in contact with Massey or Hight in connection with the dredging contract or plaintiff's claim, and no Shipping personnel testified at trial.
SHIPPING'S LIABILITY AS AGENT
In somewhat ambiguous Reasons for Judgment, the trial court found Shipping acted as either apparent or undisclosed agent of Armasal or Gulf. We disagree and find no basis for holding Shipping liable under either agency doctrine. The "apparent authority" doctrine applies to situations in which the principal is held liable to third parties for acts of his agent which, although exceeding the agent's actual authority, were done with the ostensible or apparent authorization of the principal. "The concern *269 here is whether the principal did anything to clothe the agent with apparent authority to perform the act though no actual authority was given." Pailet v. Guillory, 315 So.2d 893, 896 (La.App.3rd Cir. 1975). (Emphasis ours). As the principal in this case would be either Gulf or Armasal whose liability is not in question, the theory of apparent authority cannot serve as a basis for liability of Shipping as an agent.
The doctrine of "undisclosed principal," on the other hand, does provide support for holding an agent liable to third parties, but its application is restricted to persons with whom the agent has contracted without disclosing his status as agent and the identity of his principal. We do not question the current viability of that doctrine in Louisiana, which, as plaintiff points out, was recently reiterated by the First and Third Circuits. See Livingston Roofing Co., Inc. v. E.E. Rabelais & Son, Inc., 401 So.2d 1047 (La.App.3rd Cir.1981) and J.T. Doiron, Inc. v. Lundin, 385 So.2d 450 (La. App. 1st Cir.1980). We find, however, plaintiff's reliance on those cases is misplaced.
In the cited cases, the alleged agent was the party with whom the claimant had actually contracted or transacted the business in question. In each instance, it was the agent who had been in contact with the claimant and who had actually incurred the obligation, which he later claimed had been done on the principal's behalf and with the principal's authority. Liability of an agent of an undisclosed principal must be predicated on actions of the agent under LSA-C.C. Art. 3013 which provides:
The mandatory is responsible to those with whom he contracts, only when he has bound himself personally, or when he has exceeded his authority without having exhibited his powers. (Emphasis added).
Thus, in order for Shipping to be liable as agent for either Armasal or Gulf (the undisclosed principals), the facts would have to show that Shipping dealt with plaintiff in some way in connection with the dredging agreement.
The learned Trial Judge's oral Reasons for Judgment, and plaintiff-appellee's brief, point to several items in support of the "undisclosed agency" theory. First, it is contended that the erroneous invoice to plaintiff on Shipping's stationery indicated to plaintiff it was dealing with Shipping. The evidence shows, however: that the invoice was given to plaintiff at Gulf's place of business by one of Gulf's employees; that it was Gulf's policy to stamp Gulf's address on the old forms and Gulf's personnel were in error in failing to correct the address and in billing Hight for monies not due; that the invoice had nothing to do with the subject dredging contract; and that the invoice was not given to plaintiff until after the dredging work had been contracted for and substantially completed.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
421 So. 2d 267, 1982 La. App. LEXIS 7999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hight-enterprises-inc-v-smith-and-johnson-shipping-inc-lactapp-1982.