Johnson v. New Orleans Electric Engineering

179 So. 121
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 1938
DocketNo. 16728.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 179 So. 121 (Johnson v. New Orleans Electric Engineering) 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
Johnson v. New Orleans Electric Engineering, 179 So. 121 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

McCALEB, Judge.

This suit was instituted by Bonnie E. Johnson to recover the sum of $462, the alleged balance due on commissions earned by him, from New Orleans Electric Engineering, a commercial copartnership, composed of N. L. Maxwell and Dan J. Duvoison, engaged in the business of selling Diesel engines. Plaintiff avers that a short time before August 17, 1934, he was employed by the defendant to furnish it with prospective purchasers for Diesel engines and, in consideration of the services to be performed, the defendant agreed to pay him a commission of 5 per cent, on the amount of any sales made to his prospects. He further alleges that, in conformity with this contract of employment, he presented the Home Ice & Water- Manufacturing Company of New Orleans to the defendant a ProsPective purchaser of Diesél engines and that, as a result of his efforts, a sale was consummated whereby his prospect purchased two Diesel engines from the defendant for the price of $11,700. He contends that, by virtue of his engagement, he was entitled to receive a commission on the sale of the engines amounting to $585 and that the defendant has paid him on account thereof the sum of $123, leaving a balance due of $462.

-The defendant answered and admitted that plaintiff had been in its employ. It denied, however, plaintiff’s allegations with *122 respect to the percentage to which he claimed to be entitled on sales made to prospects furnished by him and averred that it had promised to pay plaintiff only 1 per cent, of the sale price on Diesel engines thus sold. It further alleged that the sale price of the Diesel engines sold to the Home Ice & Water Manufacturing Company was $11,400; that plaintiff had earned a commission of $114 on the deal; and that this amount had been duly paid by it.

The case proceeded to trial on these issues. At the hearing, the plaintiff called for cross-examination Dan J. Duvoison, one of the members of the defendant firm. Mr. Duvoison produced an account showing commissions earned by the plaintiff and, according to this statement, - defendant, on October 29, 1934, was indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $82.68. On that day, the plaintiff wrote the following letter to the defendant:

“October 29, 1934.
“New Orleans Electric Engineering, 741 St. Joseph St., New Orleans, La.
“Gentlemen: For value received, you are hereby authorized to pay Mr. L. E. Anderson the sum of $82.68, balance due me for commission on Diesel Engines sold the Home Ice Company.
“(Sgd) B. E. Johnson.”

Mr. Duvoison says that this assignment of the balance due the plaintiff for commissions on the sale of the Diesel engines was accepted by the defendant and that Mr. Anderson has received the money transferred thereunder.

Plaintiff was then placed on the witness stand. When he was confronted with the above-quoted assignment, he admitted his signature, but he stated that while the document purports' to be a final receipt, it is not and was not considered as such by the defendant and himself. He explained that, at the time the sale of the engines was consummated, the defendant contended that his commission was only 1 per cent., whereas he maintained that under the agreement he was to receive 5 per cent.; that, after some discussion, Mr. Maxwell (one of the partners) told him that the matter would be taken up with Mr. Duvoison and that on the following' day Maxwell and Du-voison informed him that defendant was not financially able to pay him the full - 5 per cent, commission at that time. Plaintiff further stated that, while he at first insisted upon payment of the entire commission, he finally agreed, in view of defendant’s lack of funds, to accept a cash payment of 1 per cent, provided the defendant would agree to pay him’ the balance of 4 per cent, as soon as another engine was sold. He asserts that defendant acceded to this arrangement; that the partners promised to furnish him a letter embodying the understanding, but that they later recanted from this promise. At this juncture of the proceeding, counsel for defendant offered the assignment of the plaintiff to Mr. Anderson in evidence and thereupon filed an exception of no right or cause of action on the ground that the contents of the document plainly revealed an acknowledgment on plaintiff’s part that the balance due him on the sale of the Diesel engines was only $82.68 and that this amount was disbursed by defendant to plaintiff’s assignee in ex-tinguishment of the debt.

The court a qua entertained this exception over plaintiff’s protest and, being of the opinion that the same was well founded in law, sustained it and dismissed the plaintiff’s suit. Wherefore this appeal.

In this court, counsel for the plaintiff argues that it was improper for the district judge to consider the exception of no right or cause of action which was filed during the progress of the trial. He relies upon numerous adjudications holding that an exception of no cause of action admits, for the purpose of trial of the exception, all facts well pleaded. It is true that an exception of no right or cause of action is to be considered as being leveled against the sufficiency of a petition. In this respect, it may be said that the action of the trial judge in entertaining the exception filed by the defendant was technically incorrect inasmuch as the issue involved was whether the plaintiff was entitled to recover a commission of 5 per cent, on the sale of the engines. However, the defendant’s contention was that plaintiff was entitled to receive only 1 per cent, of the sale price and that its obligation to him for this 1 per cent, commission had been extinguished by payment. The effect of defendant’s exception, filed during the course of the trial, was no more than an insistence upon the maintenance of its plea of payment at that stage of the proceeding, and it was founded upon plaintiff’s admission that he had signed the assignment which purported, on its face, to be a final receipt and acknowledgment that the commission of 1 per cent. *123 was the agreed amount of plaintiff’s compensation.

Article 345 bf the Code of Practice provides :

“Peremptory exceptions-, founded on law, are those which, without going into - the merits of the cause, show that the plaintiff can not maintain his action, either because it is prescribed or because the cause of action has been destroyed or extinguished.” (Italics ours.)

By virtue of this article, it has been held that a plea of payment is a peremptory exception. See Reiners v. St. Ceran, 19 La.Ann. 207, and Bay Shoe Co. v. Nacol, 8 La.App. 620. Therefore, the receipt executed by the plaintiff wherein hg admits that the balance due by defendant is the sum of $82.68, if unexplained, would be sufficient to warrant the dismissal of his suit. But here wé find that the plaintiff has explained in his testimony that the assignment issued by him was not to be considered by the parties to the controversy as an extinguishment of defendant’s obligation.

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Bluebook (online)
179 So. 121, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-new-orleans-electric-engineering-lactapp-1938.