Masset v. Baldwin Piano Co.

199 So. 422, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 384
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 4, 1940
DocketNo. 6011.
StatusPublished

This text of 199 So. 422 (Masset v. Baldwin Piano 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
Masset v. Baldwin Piano Co., 199 So. 422, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 384 (La. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinions

*423 HAMITER, Judge.

Under a written contract of date May-10, 1929, plaintiff, John F. Masset, agreed with the defendant, a corporation maintaining general offices in Cincinnati, Ohio, and St. Louis, Missouri, to receive musical instruments from the latter on a consignment basis and to dispose of them by sale. The parties contemplated that his operations would be conducted in and near the City of Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

The written agreement provided in part that:

“The undersigned (plaintiff) will be allowed as commission the difference between the price at which the instruments are sold and the price of the instruments to the undersigned, and prices are subject to change on notice. On all cash sales the undersigned shall immediately remit to you (defendant) in cash for the instrument sold as per agreed prices and terms furnished by you. On time sales, the undersigned will send you the proceeds of the same, including notes, mortgages, contracts or leases, retaining the cash payment, provided this does not exceed the commission; the balance of the commission to be credited the undersigned as received by you from the customer in proportion. (Undersigned is to retain the first four monthly payments and then share in balance of payments proportionately.)”

A letter addressed by defendant to plaintiff under date of January 29, 1930, evidenced the termination of their agency relationship and stated:

“This letter will confirm cancellation of your agency agreement as of January 25th and in accordance with Mr. Youse’s conversation with you at that time. It being understood that the provisions of consignment contract dated May 10th, 1929 and any other contracts pertaining to John F. Masset or the Baton Rouge Piano Company are to remain in force and effect as far as outstanding accounts made in accordance therewith are concerned.”

Numerous sales of pianos and other instruments were made by plaintiff in his representative capacity, most of which were on the installment basis. As the notes and purchase agreements were received he forwarded them to his principal. When his contract came to an end there were approximately 28 outstanding and unpaid accounts involving piano sales, from which plaintiff was entitled to a gross contingent commission of $3,594.86. In other words, that amount represented the gross commission to which he would be entitled upon full satisfaction of the purchase obligations.

On December 4, 1934, suit No. 65,470, on the docket of the District Court of Caddo Parish, was instituted by plaintiff to recover the net commissions due from the mentioned transactions, allegedly in the sum of $3,103.75. That proceeding will be referred to hereinafter as the former suit. The judgment rendered therein was in his favor for $491.98, and decreed “that the demands of the plaintiff, John F. Masset, in excess of the foregoing sum be and they are hereby dismissed as of nonsuit, with reservation of the plaintiff’s right to sue for an accounting, and without prejudice by the judgment herein.” On appeal to the Supreme Court the judgment was affirmed. 186 La. 356, 172 So. 418.

The instant suit was commenced on February 19, 1937. It involves the same contract and has for its purpose the recovery of commissions due and owing thereunder. Plaintiff prays for judgment against defendant “for such sums of money and interest as a full and complete accounting by the defendant may disclose that your petitioner is entitled to have.” He further prays that in the event defendant fails to render a full and complete accounting he have judgment for $2,136.51, with interest, “being the amount which your petitioner alleges and believes to be due him by the defendant.” The petition alleges total gross commissions of $3,594.86, subject to a credit of $491.98, being the amount of the judgment of the former suit, and a further credit of $966.37, which is a sum judicially admitted to be due by plaintiff to defendant; and that the balance remaining is $2,136.51.

Defendant, in' its answer, “admits that the plaintiff took orders for the pianos and other instruments shown on the list annexed to plaintiff’s petition, and further avers that had the purchasers paid to defendant the amounts representing the deferred purchase price of said instruments and had plaintiff in all other respects performed the obligations assumed by him”, he would have been entitled to commissions aggregating the above stated sum of $3,594.-86. It further avers its right to be credited with various detailed amounts, respecting *424 items hereinafter referred to and discussed, the total of which equals the mentioned aggregate of contingently earned commissions.

At the commencement of the trial of the case on its merits,-defendant filed a plea of res judicata predicated on the judgment in the former suit. On this being overruled, evidence' was adduced. After completion of the trial, but before the case was submitted for adjudication, plaintiff, by formal motion, entered a remittitur for $275. The district court rendered judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $1,796.85, this being the amount suggested in the prayer of the petition less the sum remitted and less the further sum of $64.66. Defendant appealed suspensively and devolutively.

The plea of res judicata, which is reurged here by appellant, obviously was correctly overruled. The judgment of the former suit respecting the amount claimed herein was one of nonsuit; and the. right to institute this proceeding was expressly reserved to plaintiff.

It is contended by appellant in the brief of its counsel that plaintiff's claim has prescribed. We do not find that such was ever pleaded in this cause. In all events, however, the Supreme Court specifically held in the former suit that prescription has not accrued.

Properly allowed by the trial court as credits against the gross claim of $3,594.86, and concerning which there is no contest here, are the following items totaling the sum of $1,798.01, viz: judgment of former suit—paid, $491.98; collections retained by plaintiff, $64.66; credit judicially admitted under article 11 of the petition, $966.37; accounts of Emma Washington and Solo-man Brown-—-covered by above mentioned remittitur, $275.

Some of the pianos and other instruments sold on the installment plan, for which plaintiff had contingently earned commissions, were repossessed by defendant because of nonpayment of the notes given therefor; and defendant urges that by reason of such repossessions it is entitled to be credited with the commissions charged in connection with the respective sales. The names of these purchasers, with the commissions claimed, are: A. M. Medlin, $130; Laulie Langhart, $128.20; Annette Wilson, $165.66; J. J. Donaldson, $200; Anna F. Day, $71.75; James J. Jarvis, $123.75; Creacy Field, $210; E. L. Lindbergh, $72.

With reference to the matter of repossession, the agency contract provided in paragraph 4 that:

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199 So. 422, 1940 La. App. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masset-v-baldwin-piano-co-lactapp-1940.