Legal Rate Loan Co. v. Bouanchaud

148 So. 101, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1803
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMay 22, 1933
DocketNo. 14512.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 So. 101 (Legal Rate Loan Co. v. Bouanchaud) 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
Legal Rate Loan Co. v. Bouanchaud, 148 So. 101, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1803 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

JANVIER, Judge.

This case involves the applicability, vel non, of the Louisiana garnishment .statute of 1932 (Act No. 181) to commissions earned under a contract of employment in which it is stipulated that the employee (whose earnings are sought to be attached) shall be em titled, immediately upon receipt thereof, to a certain fixed pro rata of all amounts colr lected by him for account of the employer.

Section 6 of the garnishment act provides that wherever the employer, in answer to the interrogatories, shall disclose that the person whose earnings are sought to be attached is employed on a commission basis, said employer “shall make a full disclosure of the terms of employment, the amount of the commission and the method of payment of such commission and the dates on which settlements are made with the employee.” And the-same section further requires that, upon the making of such disclosure, “the court shall- * ⅜ * render a judgment ordering a full; accounting to be made at each date when, such settlements are made and * * * shall fix the exempt portion and order the non-exempt portion paid in satisfaction of whatever judgment may be rendered.”

Legal Rate Loan Company, having obtained judgment against Joseph Bouanchaud, caused to be served upon First National Life Insurance Company the usual and appropriate interrogatories in an effort to- ascertain whether that company was indebted unto the said Bouanchaud, the object being the attachment of such sums as might be d ue to Bouanchaud. by the said garnishee. In answer to the interrogatories the garnishee stated:

*102 “Defendant works on salary and commission basis. There is no salary or commission due him for service rendered at this time.”

Upon the filing of this answer plaintiff, by rule, sought to obtain against the garnishee judgment in accordance with the act of 1932, and in answer to this rule garnishee made the following averment:

“Respondent shows that the defendant herein is now employed by it as a detached agent located at Ponehatoula, Louisiana, earning commissions only approximating $30.00 per week; that the defendant sells industrial • life insurance policies to various policyholders of respondent, collecting the premiums thereon in weekly or monthly installments; that defendant then deducts the commissions accruing to him out of the said premiums and remits the remainder to respondent; that at the present time defendant herein is indebted unto respondent in the sum of $41.62; that under the contract in force between respondent and the defendant -herein at the present time, respondent will never be, and cannot possibly be, indebted unto defendant.”

Garnishee’s contention thus is that at no time is it ever in possession of anything belonging to Bouanchaud and that at no time is it ever indebted to him because he is entitled to no commission until he makes each collection, and, as soon as he makes each collection, he has the right, under his contract of employment, to his pro rata of the amount collected; in other words and to use figures, that of each dollar collected by Bou-anchaud 70 cents goes directly to the company and 30 cents directly to him.

Plaintiff admits that Bouanchaud’s contract of employment gives him the right to 30 cents out of each dollar collected by him, but contends that, nevertheless, each dollar, as it is collected by Bouanchaud, comes into his possession as agent for his employer, the garnishee, and that before he is entitled to his 30 cents thereof, the whole dollar must first come into the legal custody of garnishee through its agent and that, while it is thus vicariously in the possession of the garnishee, it is subject to attachment.

This view was adopted by the judge, a quo, who rendered judgment ordering the garnishee to hold a certain pro rata of such commissions as might, through the agent, come into the possession of the garnishee. In his reasons for judgment the trial judge said:

“All corporations necessarily act through agents since it cannot act alone. In this case the employee of garnishee, the defendant, is employed by garnishee in a dual capacity. He collects the premiums due his employer and the total of his collections remain the property of his employer, until he, the employee, acting in his second capacity as paymaster for his employer, takes from the total collections the commissions due the collecting employee and pays the amount earned by him. Up to the moment that payment is made by the paymaster employee to the collecting employee, the full and total sum of collections are the property of the employer and the amount due the collecting employee is, up to the time of payment to the collecting employee, in the possession of and under the control of the employer, the garnishee. The employer has not the manual possession of the property, nevertheless, the employer controls the funds which are in the possession of the paymaster agent and employee of the employer.”

When we carefully analyze the situation which was presented by the agreed statement of facts, which we deem it unnecessary to set forth here, we reach the conclusion that the collection by the agent of the amount due to the company precedes the payment by the agent to himself of his share of the collection.

Respondent vehemently declares that when the agent makes a collection he does not go through the “ritualistic hocus pocus” by which he, as agent, first collects the whole amount and then, as paymaster, pays to himself as an individual the proportion due to himself, and that the truth is that, when the collection is made, part of it goes directly to the employer and the other part directly to the collecting agent as his own. But the whole amount of each collection before the collection is made is due to the employer. None of it is due to the collector, and it is only the collection of the whole which creates in the collector any right- to the part. The one must precede the other. In fact, the language used by respondent in its answer to the rule is an admission (no doubt inadvertent) that the collection of the whole precedes the payment of the commission. We refer to the following averment in paragraph 4 of the answer, in which it is admitted that the agent, after making each collection, “then deducts the commission accruing to him.” If, for however short a time, amounts due Bou-anchaud are in the theoretical legal possession of the garnishee, then during that infinitesimal fraction of time they are subject to garnishment, and during that time the attachment, which has been hovering like a bird of prey over the head of the garnishee, swoops down and sinks its talons into those funds, and from that time on holds them subject to the rights of the seizing creditor.

We recognize, of course, that, because of the contract of employment under which Bou-anchaud is given the right to immediately take out of each collection his share thereof, it may be difficult for the employer to control Bouanchaud and to force him to retain and to hold, subject to the attachment, the funds which would otherwise be his own; but we see no force in the argument that, to *103 require the employer to insist that the employee retain such funds is to force the making of a new contract of employment.

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

Related

Burwell v. Board of Selectmen
423 A.2d 156 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1979)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 So. 101, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1803, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legal-rate-loan-co-v-bouanchaud-lactapp-1933.