Landry v. Guidry

26 So. 2d 695, 210 La. 194, 1946 La. LEXIS 779
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 27, 1946
DocketNo. 37812.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 695 (Landry v. Guidry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Landry v. Guidry, 26 So. 2d 695, 210 La. 194, 1946 La. LEXIS 779 (La. 1946).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is a suit to recover the balance allegedly due on a promissory note executed, by Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Guidry. The note, dated January 1, 1931, and payable on December 31, 1931, is for $1,980 with eight per cent per annum interest from date until paid and ten per cent on principal and interest as attorney’s fees.

R. J. Guidry died on January 23, 1941, and by authentic act executed on February 17, 1941, his heirs with the exception of *198 Edwin J. Guidry, a brother, renounced his succession. Among the heirs renouncing the succession was Mrs. Josephine Guidry Landry, a sister of R. J. Guidry and the wife of Silvere Landry, the plaintiff in this suit. By the authentic act in which his co-heirs renounced the succession of R. J. Guidry, Edwin J. Guidry accepted the succession and assumed such obligations of the decedent and his divorced wife, Elvina Guillory Guidry, as might be legally enforcible. The suit was brought against Edwin J. Guidry on the theory that under the terms of the authentic act he assumed all the obligations of R. J. Guidry including the note sued on.

Plaintiff in his petition listed certain payments which he alleges were made on account of the principal of the note from November 26, 1931, through December 1, 1939. Defendant filed a plea of prescription of five years which was referred to the merits. Defendant then answered the petition renewing the plea of prescription and pleading in the alternative that the note sued on had been paid in full from the proceeds of an insurance policy issued on July 27, 1934, on the life of R. J. Guidry in which “Silvere Landry, — Sister” was named as the beneficiary. After hearing the parties the trial judge, for reasons orally assigned, rendered a judgment in favor of defendant and against plaintiff dismissing the suit. Plaintiff is appealing.

On the reverse of the note appears endorsements purporting to show three payments on account of the note. One. payment of $150 allegedly was made on November 26, 1931, before the maturity of the note on December 31, 1931. Two payments of $100 each allegedly were made on November 28, 1935, and November 2, 1936, after the maturity of the note and within the prescriptive period. It is on these last two alleged payments plaintiff relies to defeat the plea of prescription, The note being prescribed on its face, the burden of proving that the prescription had been interrupted by these payments is on plaintiff, and the proof must be clear, specific and positive. Union National Bank v. Evans, 43 La.Ann. 372, 9 So. 44; Waterman v. Dupeire, 180 La. 320, 156 So. 405.

The testimony of plaintiff concerning the alleged payments on account of the note is confused, uncertain and inconsistent and discloses that he had no personal knowledge of the facts of which he was attempting to testify. He is possessed' of only a meager education and did not attend to his business affairs but delegated all such matters to his wife.

Mrs. Landry, plaintiff’s wife and his only witness, testified that the payment of $100 on November 28, 1935, was made by the check of R. J. Guidry and credited by her on the principal of the note without any direction or instruction from Guidry. Opposed to the testimony of Mrs. Landry is the testimony of the defendant, Edwin J. Guidry, that immediately after the death of R. J. Guidry, at the request of his sister, *200 Mrs. Silvere Landry, plaintiff’s wife, he went to Eunice, Louisiana, and took charge of the affairs of the decedent. Being aware of the existence of the note sued on, he examined the records and effects of the decedent to obtain evidence of a payment having been made on the note but was unable to find any such evidence. In the presence of the attorney of the decedent and his secretary he examined the check books, stubs and cancelled checks of R. J. Guidry, running from January 31, 1935, to the end of the year and failed to find anything to corroborate the testimony of Mrs. Landry. The check- books and a complete set of all the checks issued by the decedent, R. J. Guidry, maker of the note, as well as a complete set of the check stubs, covering the year 1935, are filed in the record and there is no evidence at all that such a check as testified to by Mrs. Landry had been issued on November 28, 1935, or on any other date during that year.

With reference to the alleged payment on November 2, 1936, the record discloses that on that date Mrs. Landry, not Mr. Landry, received a Western Union money order for $100. The money order was endorsed by Mrs. Landry, the payee, and by E. J. Guidry, the defendant. It was received by Mrs. Landry while her brother, E. J. Guidry, was visiting her at her home and she requested that he cash the order, which he did, and for that reason his endorsement appears on the document. Silvere Landry, the plaintiff, was confined to a hospital at Houston, Texas, and he and his wife being in need of money, Mrs. Landry asked her brother, R. J. Guidry, for $100, which he sent her by means of the Western Union money order issued in New Orleans on November 2, 1936. Whether the money was sent by R. J. Guidry to his sister, Mrs. Landry, to help meet the necessities brought about by the illness of Mr. Landry, or for what other account, is not made clear. It appears -to be clear, however, that the $100 sent on November 2, 1936, by R. J. Guidry to Mrs. Landry, who was not the holder of the note sued on, was unaccompanied by any direction or understanding that it was to be applied as a payment on the note. At the time the note sued on was executed by-R. J. Guidry, he received from Silvere Landry $224 additional for which a note signed by Sosthene B. Ardoin, a stepson of Guidry, was given to Landry. The name of R. J. Guidry, who actually received the money from Landry, also appears on this note, but whether as a witness, or as a co-maker, or as a solidary obligor does not clearly appear. Therefore, on November 28, 1935, and November 2, 1936, there were two obligations held by Silvere Landry for which R. J. Guidry was responsible.

The record also discloses that during the years 1935 and 1936, R. J. Guidry operated under the name of Silvere Landry, the plaintiff, a grocery and restaurant in the Town of Eunice, Louisi *202 ana. It appears that some time prior to the year 1935, R. J,.Guidry was having a controversy over alimony with his first wife, whom he had divorced and for that reason desired to operate his business in the name of Silvere Landry. Mr. Landry at first objected to this but later agreed to permit Guidry to conduct his business in the name of Silvere Landry who thereafter, to. all intents and purposes, appeared to be the owner and proprietor of the business. It is not clear what arrangement, if any, was made as to the compensation Landry was to receive for the use of his name in the business conducted by R. J. Guidry, but that he was to receive some compensation or advantage therefor appears from the testimony of Mrs. Landry that they expected to receive something from her brother for permitting him to do business in her husband’s name. It is suggested by counsel for defendant that when Mrs. Landry, in November, 1936, asked her brother, R. J. Guidry, for $100 because she and her husband needed the money that the money was sent her as compensation for permitting Guidry to operate his business in Landry’s name and not as a payment on the note sued on.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Maison Royale, LLC
E.D. Louisiana, 2024
Whitney National Bank v. Demarest
947 F.2d 182 (Fifth Circuit, 1991)
Vicki Mikulecky v. Marriott Corporation
854 F.2d 115 (Fifth Circuit, 1988)
Curry v. Winnfield
398 So. 2d 97 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)
Pearson v. Hartford Accident & Indemnity Company
281 So. 2d 724 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1973)
Lake Providence Equipment Co. v. Tallulah Production Credit Ass'n
241 So. 2d 506 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1970)
Lake Providence Equipment Co. v. Tallulah Production Credit Ass'n
228 So. 2d 315 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1969)
State ex rel. Sunseri v. Thoman
135 So. 2d 791 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1961)
Succession of Aurianne
53 So. 2d 901 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1951)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 695, 210 La. 194, 1946 La. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/landry-v-guidry-la-1946.