ITEM CO. v. Polazzo

134 So. 345, 18 La. App. 594, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 296
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 5, 1931
DocketNos. 775, 874
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 134 So. 345 (ITEM CO. v. Polazzo) 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
ITEM CO. v. Polazzo, 134 So. 345, 18 La. App. 594, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 296 (La. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinions

MOUTON, J.

This, suit is brought for $249.68, balance on account on a written contract, in solido, against Carlo Polazzo, principal, and Mrs. Parguilla Cerami and Peter Panepinto, as sureties thereon.

Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff company against Polazzo, the principal, and in favor of Mrs. Cerami and Pane-pinto, rejecting the demand against them.

Plaintiff company appeals, and is the only appellant.

This opinion will therefore be restricted to the issues, in reference to the controverted questions between plaintiff and the two sureties.

Plaintiff company, through C. Hayler, its representative, entered into a written contract with Carlo Polazzo to furnish him, at certain specified prices, copies of the New Orleans Item, Morning Tribune, and Sunday Item-Tribune during a period of not less than three months.

This contract was signed, as bondsmen, by Mrs. Cerami and Panepinto.

The clause of the contract pertinent to the issue presented for decision reads as follows:

“You may furnish (referring to plaintiff company) to Carlo Polazzo of Plaquemine, La., ‘Party of the Second part’ such copies of the New Orleans Item, The Morning Tribune and the Sunday Item-Tribune as he may order, and we, the undersigned guarantee the payment to you of his bills at their several maturities, all bills being due and exigible on the semi of each monthly following in which the indebtedness shall have been incurred by the said party of the second part, and, in the event of the failure on the part of the party of the second part to meet his bills promptly, we promise, severally and collectively to pay you on demand, the full amount due not to exceed Three Hundred Dollars ($300.00).”

The contention of the two sureties is that they obligated themselves under the foregoing terms of the contract to pay the orders of Carlo Polazzo, their principal, semimonthly if credit was extended to him on [596]*596a semi-monthly basis; that plaintiff company, in violation of this stipulation in the agreement, sold the papers to Polazzo on terms of monthly credits instead of on a semi-monthly basis.

The court in its opinion said that the ambiguous words “on the semi of each monthly,’’ used in the agreement, were intended to mean, as he understood them, semi-monthly, but nevertheless admitted the introduction of parol evidence to show what was. the intent or meaning of the parties to the contract, over the objection of counsel for plaintiff company urged on the ground that there were no allegations of error, fraud, or ambiguity in the answer of defendants.

Under the provisions of article 2276, C. C., no parol evidence is permitted against or beyond what is contained in the written acts of the parties thereto. This is elementary, and the courts have invariably excluded such evidence to alter, vary, or contradict contracts in writing, without allegations, of fraiid or error. Counsel for defendants contend that the same rule applies where an ambiguity in a written agreement is sought to be cleared up by verbal proof.

In support of that contention counsel refer us to the case of Bank of Napoleonville v. Knobloch & Rainold, 144 La. 100, 80 So. 214, 216, where the court said the intentions of the parties could not be sought outside the four corners of the written instrument. The court said,, however, that when the terms, of the agreement are so ambiguous that they are not susceptible of intelligent construction, parol evidence may be admitted to make clear what is obscure and this is followed by the following significant remark, quoting:

“But it is certainly in direct contravention of article 2276, Civ. Code, to admit parol, not to explain, but to add to and contradict, a written agreement.”

The court in its ruling in that case draws a marked distinction between parol proof offered, for the purpose of explaining a written agreement by that kind of evidence, and when introduced not to explain but to add to or to contradict its terms. This ruling is in perfect harmony with article, C. C. art. 2276, which excludes evidence of that character when admitted against or beyond what is contained in the acts.

In the final ruling of the court in the case above cited, in referring to the evidence therein introduced for the purpose of adding to or contradicting the written agreement, it is stated that it should have been excluded, which clearly indicates that there were no averments of fraud or error in the pleadings, as otherwise it is obvious the admission of the evidence below would have been approved. The opinion also shows, according to the reasoning of the court, that if the parol evidence had been introduced solely for the purpose of “explaining” the contract or to make clear “that which was obscure,” the court would not have said that it should have been excluded. Hence, from our analysis of that opinion, we find that a latent ambiguity in a written instrument may be explained by parol without the necessity of pleading fraud, error or ambiguity .to support such evidence.

In the ease of Destrehan v. Lumber Co., 45 La. Ann. 921, 13 So. 230, 232, 40 Am. St. Rep. 265, the court, quoting from Best on Evidence, p. 231, says:

“That the written instrument fairly and fully represents the intent of the parties at the time of its execution, the duty of the court becomes merely one of inter[597]*597pretation and construction of the language employed. * * * That meaning, once ascertained, is incontrovertible by any parol evidence. No new words can be added. The court cannot, as is said, travel out , of the four corners of the paper. But the language to be interpreted is to be read in the light of all surrounding circumstances (as the phrase is), it being obviously impossible to tell what a man has said until it is ascertained what he has meant to say. Any relevant evidence, therefore, which fairly partakes of explanation, or is reasonably calculated to place the court in the situation of the parties at the time of the execution, will, in general, be received.”

When the language of the instrument is clear, the meaning of the contracting parties, it is well settled, must be sought within its four corners. Where there is a latent ambiguity and the intent of the parties is shrouded in obscurity, parol is admissible to make “clear what is obscure,” and to explain the intent of the parties at the time of the execution of the instrument. The purpose of such testimony is evidently not to alter, vary, add to, or contradict the contract, but simply to ascertain the intent of the parties, and to carry out its provisions according to their understanding at the time of its execution. Such has been the ruling of our courts on •this subject. Adeline Sugar Factory Co. v. Evangeline Oil Co., 121 La. 961, 46 So. 935; Mixon et al. v. St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Co., 147 La. 302, 84 So. 790; Tremont Lumber Co. v. Peavy, 162 La. 35, 110 So. 79.

In affirming this rule of evidence in Bagley v. Rose Hill Sugar Co., 111 La. 249, 35 So. 539, the court refers to the case of Bayley, Testamentary Executor, v. David Denny, 26 La. Ann. 255. That case directs us to Greenleaf on Evidence, chapter 15, par. 286. That author, in his usual lucid style, has the following to say on the subject:

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134 So. 345, 18 La. App. 594, 1931 La. App. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/item-co-v-polazzo-lactapp-1931.