Knox Glass Bottle Co. v. Golden Gate Liquor Co.

174 So. 684, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 248
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 31, 1937
DocketNo. 16550.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 174 So. 684 (Knox Glass Bottle Co. v. Golden Gate Liquor Co.) 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
Knox Glass Bottle Co. v. Golden Gate Liquor Co., 174 So. 684, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 248 (La. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

Knox Glass Bottle Company, a Mississippi corporation, claiming to have sold and delivered certain bottles termed “decanters” to Golden Gate Liquor Company, Inc., a corporation domiciled in New Orleans, and that Herman Suffrin, prior to delivery and in writing, guaranteed payment of the account, seeks recovery from the liquor company and from Suffrin of the alleged price of the .said bottles. Plaintiff, alleging also that a large part of the assets of the liquor company were transferred later to Suffrin for. the fraudulent purpose of placing them beyond the reach of the creditors of the corporation and in order to give Suffrin an unfair preference as a stockholder and as a creditor, prays that the said transfer be set aside and that, by reason of the attempt to so transfer the assets, Suffrin be held personally .liable for,.the. debt due to plaintiff *686 and that the said assets be held to be subject to the common pledge of such creditors of the corporation as may not have been paid.

Defendants deny that the bottles, for the price of which judgment was sought, were ordered' by the liquor company or delivered by plaintiff, and deny that the transfer by the liquor company of a portion of its assets to Suffrin was fraudulent, or that that transfer improperly affected the rights of plaintiff, and they especially deny that Suf-frin guaranteed payment of the price of the particular bottles, the alleged sale of which forms the basis of this suit.

Below there was judgment for the major portion of the amount sued for in favor of plaintiff against Suffrin and the liquor company jointly and solidarily, but the demand for annulment of the transfer of the corporation’s assets to Suffrin was denied. Suffrin appealed from the judgment against him and plaintiff answered the appeal praying that the judgment be increased to the amount originally prayed for and that 'it be also amended so as to annul and set aside the alleged transfer.

The first question which we shall consider is whether Suffrin guaranteed payment of the account.

On June 12, 1935, he, as president of the Golden Gate Liquor Company, Inc., signed and delivered to the representative of plaintiff company a letter reading as follows :

“June 12th, 1935.
“Knox Glass Bottle Co.
“Jackson, Miss.
“Gentlemen:—
“Please enter our order for the following
“50 gross Private Mould Decanters 1 doz. C $8.75 “50 gross Private Mould Decanters 1 doz. A 9.25
“Freight allowed to New Orleans.
“The above order is given with the understanding that should we order out during the year 1935-an amount to exceed 500 gross we are to own the Mould and same will be known as our private Mould. Should we order shipped in the year of 1935 an amount less than 500 gross it is understood that we have no 'claim on the ownership of the Mould and can be supplied to your regular trade.
"Wc also agree to cause Mr. H. Suffrin to guarantee payment of our account with you.
“Very truly yours,
“Golden Gate Liquor Company
“[Signed] H. Suffrin, Pres.”
“It is mutually agreed to that should the Golden Gate Liquor not order out the entire 500 gross in the year 1935 and pay the amount of fifty cents per gross on balance of 500 the said mould belongs to the said' Golden Gate Liquor Co.
“Knox Glass Bottle Co.
“By [Signed] C. R. Underwood.”

At the same time he executed and delivered the guarantee referred to in the letter. It reads as follows:

“Know all men, that, in consideration of the making of a contract between Golden Gate Liquor Co., Inc. of New Orleans La. and Knox Glass Bottle Co., of Jackson, Miss and/or Knox Glass Associates, Inc. Oil City, Pa., for the supply of Glass Bottles, and for value received, I, H. Suffrin of New Orleans, La., do hereby guarantee to the said Knox Glass Bottle Co., and/or Knox Glass Associates, Inc., the payment of the account of the said Golden Gate Liquor Co., Inc. and I hereby waive notice of the non-payment of the said account by the said Golden Gate Liquor Co., Inc. and the failure of the collection of same.
“In Witness whereof, I have hereunto set my hand this 12th day of June 1935.
“[Signed] H. Suffrin
“In presence of
“[Signed] C. Horton Smith.”

It will be noted that the letter is an unconditional order for 100 gross of bottles and! it is conceded that, if any part of the price of those bottles had not been paid, Suffrin,. under the guarantee, would have been liable therefor.

But it is not the price of those bottles which concerns us. The bottles which are here involved are others which plaintiff claims to have supplied on order as a part of the additional 400 gross to which the letter makes reference, and Suffrin contends that neither the letter nor the guarantee can be-construed as an agreement on his part to be liable for more than the price of the order placed when the guarantee was executed. In other words, he maintains that the account, which he guaranteed included' only the order placed at that time and was not intended to include further purchases and that the additional 400 gross referred to in the letter were not ordered at that time, but were: merely mentioned in-connection with a separate agreement to the effect that, if they should be ordered, the purchaser should receive a certain concession.

*687 Suffrin does not contend that no consideration was given for his guarantee, conceding that he is liable if the contract can be interpreted as including bottles other than those involved in the first 100 gross ordered and if it can be shown that other bottles were ordered and delivered.

We consider the contract of guarantee ambiguous in the sense that, from it alone, we are unable to determine whether the parties intended that it should refer only to the order which was placed simultaneously with its execution, or whether it was intended that it should include all purchases referred to in the letter written when the guarantee was executed. And, since we find the document ambiguous, it is necessary to resort to the circumstances and transactions surrounding its execution and to the acts of the parties to determine what they intended, and we bear in mind, at the outset, certain legal principles applicable to the interpretation of ambiguous written documents. First we note that both the letter which refers to the guarantee and the guarantee itself were written on letterheads of the plaintiff company and, from this and from other evidence, we conclude that they were prepared by the representative of said plaintiff company and we bear in mind' what we said in Crescent Cigar & Tobacco Company v. Rizzuto, 15 La.App. 642, 132 So. 801, 802:

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174 So. 684, 1937 La. App. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-glass-bottle-co-v-golden-gate-liquor-co-lactapp-1937.