Holmes Co. v. Hiller

7 La. App. 590, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 66
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1928
DocketNo. 11,165
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 La. App. 590 (Holmes Co. v. Hiller) 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
Holmes Co. v. Hiller, 7 La. App. 590, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 66 (La. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinion

CLAIBORNE, J.

This is a suit for $158.36 balance due on an account for merchandise sold and delivered.

The plaintiff alleged that on January 5th, 1926, the defendant admitted that he owed plaintiff one hundred and fifty-six and 36-100 dollars; that he agreed to take care of said debt within a reasonable time but that he has failed so to do.

By a supplemental petition the plaintiff filed a statement of accounts with the defendant showing the items of merchandise sold and delivered to the defendant from September 30th, 1920, to May 26th, 1922, inclusive, together with the payments made on account, the last payment having,been made on May 18th, 1923, by which statement it appeared that on that date, May 18th, 1923, there remained a balance due of one hundred and fifty-eight and 36-100 dollars.

It thus appears that a period of two years seven, months and seventeen days intervened between the last payment on account, May 18th, 1923, and the alleged acknowledgment of the debt, January 5th, 1926.

The defendant pleaded the “prescription of three years, as provided by Article 3538 of the Civil Code”, and a general denial.

There was judgment maintaining the plea of prescription and dismissing plaintiff’s suit.

Plaintiff has appealed.

Upon the trial of the case on the exception and the merits, Robert Leinhard, assistant secretary and treasurer of the plaintiff company, testified that in the early part of January, 1926, a few days after they filed suit against Mr. Hiller, he called at his office at D. H. Holmes & Co. and told him he had filed an answer to their suit, but the reason that he did it was to gain a little time as he was expecting some money, and that money would reach him in a short time, but by filing an answer he would gain a little time; his intention was to pay the debt; he promised to pay it when the money came in which he was expecting; the amount sued for is correct because the accounting and credit department is under his direct supervision; he acquires his knowledge from the books, and if any complaints had been made about the account being incorrect, 'he would know about it.

The defendant, Edwin J. Hiller, did not testify; therefore the testimony of the witness, Leinhard, remains uncontradicted and must be taken as true and establishing the correctness of plaintiff’s claim. The law requires only a preponderance of evidence and not moral certainty. X Starkie 514; Rose vs. Shaw, 144 La. 571, 80 So. 727; Dunn vs. Fire & Marine Ins., 109 La. 524, 33 So. 585; Goepper vs. Lusse, 30 La. 392.

In the case of Horton vs. Haralson, 130 La. 100, 57 So. 643, which was a suit on open account, of merchandise sold, the defense was that the accounts were not sustained by sufficient proof. The Court said:

“The testimony made out at least prima facie proof, and it was then for the defendants to prove wherein the testimony was not sufficient for the purpose offered.” Goepper vs. Tusse, 30 La. Ann. 392.

But the defendant contends that neither partial payments on account set forth in the itemized statement annexed to the petition nor the verbal acknowledgment of the [592]*592account made by defendant to Leinhard are sufficient to operate as an interruption of the prescription of the account, because the law requires an acknowledgment in writing of the debtor. He relies upon Article C. C. 3538, as amended by Act 78 of 1888, p. 8’6, which reads as follows:

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

The last item sold by the plaintiff as appears hy the itemized account annexed to its petition is May 26th, 1922. This suit was filed January 11th, 1927, or four years, seven months and twenty-five days thereafter. Therefore, on the date of the filing of this suit the claim sued on was prescribed, unless the several partial payments made by the defendant in the years 1921, 1922, and May, 1923, or the verbal acknowledgment made by the defendant in January, 1926, proven by the above testimony operated an interruption of the prescription.

In the case of Bennett vs. Wakeman, 2 La. App. 376, the court said on p. 379:

“It is true also that a payment on a debt liquidated and certain interrupts prescription thereon; the payment being equivalent to an acknowledgment of the correctness of the account or debt.” C. C. 3520; 6 La. Dig., S. 167, p. 184; Whitworth vs. Ferguson, 18 Ann. 602; Walker vs. Cruikshank, 23 Ann. 252, 703; Lewis vs. Am. Creosote Works, 150 La. 196, 90 So. 566.

This statute of 1888 has been the subject of various and varying, interpretations although apparently so plain in language.

In the case of Sleet vs. Sleet, 109 La. 302, 33 So. 322, (1903), the court said on page 308:

“The only change that the statute makes in the article amended is in substituting for the wards, ‘all other open accounts,’ the words, ‘all other accounts,’ and the effect is that the prescription denounced is now made to apply to accounts stated or rendered, and verbally and tacitly acknowledged, as well as to open accounts not so acknowledged,” while the prescription of ten years only would apply to accounts acknowledged in writing.

In the case of Block vs. Papania, 5 Orl. App. 88, decided in 1908, the court said:

“Since the enactment of Act 78 of 1888 amending Art. C. C. 3538 a verbal promise before prescription has accrued is not sufficient to interrupt prescription.” Judge Moore dissenting.

On a writ of review, Block vs. Papania, 121 La. 683, 46. So. 694, the Supreme Court decided in April, 1908, that:

“The object and effect of Act 78 of 1888 is not to prohibit proof of an interruption of 'the prescription running upon accounts sued on which are governed by that prescription by reason of parol evidence, but to prevent such evidence, when received, having the effect of shifting the prescription of three years applicable to those accounts to a prescription of ten years.”

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

This decision was followed by 'this court in 1913 in Ludwig vs. Sussman, 10 Ct. App. 169, when the court said:

“Oral acknowledgments of open accounts serve only to interrupt the three years prescription, which thereupon begins to run anew; but from the time of an acknowledgment in writing said prescription (of three years) ceases to run, and a new and longer prescription begins to-wit: the prescription of five or ten years, according to the form given to such acknowledgment, by mere writing, or by a note, or bond.” 151 La. 254 (262).

[593]*593In the case of Harper vs. Barton, 2 La. App. 317, Second Circuit (June 6th,, 1925) the court said:

“Under Article 3538 of the Civil Code, as amended by Act No. 78 of 1888, items in an account over three years old at the time suit is brought are prescribed.”

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7 La. App. 590, 1928 La. App. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holmes-co-v-hiller-lactapp-1928.