Mall Tool Co. v. Poulan

40 So. 2d 512, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 510
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 30, 1949
DocketNo. 7314.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 40 So. 2d 512 (Mall Tool Co. v. Poulan) 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
Mall Tool Co. v. Poulan, 40 So. 2d 512, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 510 (La. Ct. App. 1949).

Opinion

Plaintiff, alleging that it had delivered to defendant on or about February 13, 1947 five of its Mall Gas Chain Saws for an agreed price of $2092.50, and that defendant *Page 513 was entitled to two credits, one for $276.08, paid on March 10, 1947, and another on April 30, 1947, for "returned parts" amounting to $97.57, filed suit for an alleged balance due of $1727.85.

Attached to plaintiff's petition were a photostatic copy of the invoice listing the five chain saws and also twelve interrogatories on facts and articles addressed to the defendant.

Defendant in answer admitted the delivery by plaintiff in February, 1947 of the five chain saws, covered by plaintiff's invoice number 95675 as alleged, but set forth that the March 10th payment mentioned in plaintiff's petition in the sum of $267.08 constituted a payment in satisfaction of the balance due and in support of his contention attached to his answer an original check for this sum, payable to plaintiff, and on the face of which was contained the following writing in ink:

"Inv. 95675 2092.50 Parts returned for credit 1825.42 -------- 267.08"

and in print: This check is in full settlement of account as shown hereon. Acceptance by endorsement constitutes receipt in full."

The answer further set forth that defendant had been an equipment dealer for the plaintiff company for several years prior to the delivery of the merchandise sued on; that plaintiff, in the early part of 1947, through its agent, Frank I. Fisher, and with the cooperation of defendant, had transferred this dealership; that in the course of the discussion in which defendant and the prospective dealers participated, plaintiff's agent Fisher advised defendant that he might return certain parts which he had in stock and which would not be taken over by the new dealers, to plaintiff company for credit; that Fisher, plaintiff's agent, advised defendant to make a detailed list of the parts and forward same prepaid to plaintiff's factory in Chicago, and that pursuant to this authorization, and in accordance with the customary dealings with the plaintiff, he had forwarded to plaintiff at Chicago parts of a value of $1825.42, which with the $267.08 remitted in March, 1947, constituted a full settlement of the account sued upon.

After the answer was filed, the District Court overruled a motion by the plaintiff for judgment on the pleadings and likewise denied plaintiff's motion for a rehearing on this ruling. After trial, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff as prayed for. Defendant, after the denial of his motion for a rehearing, asked for and perfected the present appeal.

Defendant urges the contention set forth in his answer, namely, that plaintiff had authorized him as a dealer, and particularly in the Alexandria conference resulting in the transfer of the Mall gas saw dealership, to return for credit the parts which were not purchased by the incoming dealers. The defendant was a dealer for plaintiff's gasoline chain saw and for several years prior to February, 1947 had sold the equipment manufactured by plaintiff over a territory extending across North Louisiana and East Texas. Defendant maintained a sizable inventory (over $10,000 at time of giving up dealership) of spare parts and plaintiff had, on one or more occasions, issued defendant a credit memorandum for parts returned by him to its Chicago factory. The evidence further shows that at one time during his dealership, defendant had contacted plaintiff's Chicago office by telephone, requesting that plaintiff write a letter to a bank (from which defendant expected to borrow money based on his stock of parts, etc.), stating that defendant was entitled to return parts at will for credit. Defendant made this request — apparently from the bank — in a telephone conversation with Mr. Sanders, an authorized official of the plaintiff company in its Chicago office. Mr. Sanders told defendant that plaintiff would not permit such a practice and declined to write the requested letter. We therefore find that the record does not support defendant's contention that, as a Mall dealer, he had blanket authority to return parts to the Chicago plant for credit.

We next consider defendant's contention that plaintiff's agent Fisher, in a conference *Page 514 at Alexandria with defendant and the incoming dealers, had authorized defendant to return all parts which he had in stock and which were not purchased by one of the incoming dealers. Mr. Fisher did tell defendant and the prospective dealers that parts might be returned to the Mall Company's Chicago office, provided same were sent prepaid and a detailed list furnished. Mr. Fisher admitted stating that parts could be returned under the conditions above named, but testified that he also told plaintiff and the prospective dealers that it was necessary to secure authorization in advance from the Chicago office. We conclude that, while Mr. Fisher was — salesman like — enthusiastic and overoptimistic as to the ease with which dealers might return parts for credit, the record does not establish that his statements amounted to an authorization to defendant to return such portions of his parts stock as were not taken over by the incoming dealers.

We next consider the merit of defendant's reliance upon the doctrine of accord and satisfaction and his contention that, under the circumstances shown by the record, plaintiff's acceptance and cashing of the $267.08 check, with notations as above set forth, constituted an estoppel against its pressing the claim sued upon.

The elements necessary for invocation of the doctrine are set forth in the opinion of Judge McCaleb — now Justice McCaleb — in the case of Davis-Wood Lumber Company, Inc. v. Farnsworth Co., Inc., et al, La. App., 171 So. 622, 627, in the following language: "It is apparent to us that there are present in this case the three concurring elements necessary for the invocation of the doctrine of accord and satisfaction. First, there was a disputed claim between the parties to the contracts; second, a tender was made in full settlement of the claim; and, third, the tender was accepted by the plaintiff. Under these circumstances, we are bound, under the jurisprudence of this state, to sustain the plea of estoppel."

In the case before us, there is little doubt but that the second and third of the above requirements were fulfilled, and the case turns principally upon whether or not there existed, at the time plaintiff cashed the check, a dispute between the parties.

The evidence shows that the two incoming dealers each purchased from the defendant parts worth about $4300, consequently, the $1825.42 worth of parts returned by defendant constituted approximately 20% of his stock and the return of a portion of the stock was not necessarily inconsistent with the statement by Mr. Sanders (the company's Chicago representative) in the telephone conversation with the defendant at his bank, that the company would not give blanket or unlimited authority for the return of his entire stock of spare parts.

The plaintiff company knew, at the time it received the check from defendant, that his dealership had been terminated, or was in the process of termination. Defendant attached to his answer and introduced in evidence the check payable to plaintiff and bearing on its face notations that should have put plaintiff on notice that defendant expected full credit for $1825.42 in spare parts and that the check was tendered conditionally, and, if accepted, would constitute a settlement of defendant's remaining liability under plaintiff's invoice number 95675.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 So. 2d 512, 1949 La. App. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mall-tool-co-v-poulan-lactapp-1949.