Michelin Tire Co. v. Delcourt

149 So. 313, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1937
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 30, 1933
DocketNo. 1192.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 149 So. 313 (Michelin Tire Co. v. Delcourt) 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
Michelin Tire Co. v. Delcourt, 149 So. 313, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1937 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

MOUTON, Judge.

Plaintiff company sold merchandise to Paul E. Delcourt of Hammond, La., to a considerable amount.

Mrs. M. Billeaud, Jr., widow of M. Bil-leaud, Jr,, on October 20, 1926, executed her obligation to indemnify plaintiff company for whatever advances it might make to Paul E. Delcourt, to any amount not exceeding $2,000.

Plaintiff, alleging that, acting on the guaranty of the contract of indemnification, above referred to, it sold and delivered to Paul E. Delcourt merchandise upon which a balance of $1,604.85 is due, brings this suit for that amount with legal interest from March 30, 1928, against the defendant, Mrs. Camille Delcourt, widow of M. Billeaud, Jr.

The defendant, Mrs. Delcourt, filed a plea of prescription of three years to the amount demanded, which was on open account.

This plea was referred to the merits by the district judge by whom it was maintained, and the suit dismissed.

Plaintiff company appeals.

The last item of merchandise on the account was delivered March 31, 1928, and the record shows that the suit was filed on September 24, 1931, more than three years thereafter.

If defendant is entitled to the three-year prescription urged by her against the demand of plaintiff, the judgment appealed from is correct, and the suit was therefore properly dismissed.

The contract signed by Mrs. Camille Del-court, defendant, in favor of plaintiff company for the goods it might advance to Paul E. Delcourt for Quality Tires owed by him, reads as follows:

“I agree to indemnify you against any loss on account of any moneys which he may from time to time owe you not exceeding $2000.00 and I agree that you may extend in his favor the usual periods of credit, renew wholly or in part any notes, accept any settlement and execute any release in respect thereof, grant any indulgences to him or any persons liable upon bills, notes and other securities without my/their liability under this guarantee being therciby affected, and that this guarantee shall continue in force notwithstanding any change in the concern in which he/they shall be trading or in the terms and conditions under which goods are supplied to him/them by you unless cancelled by me/us in writing, sent by registered mail, such cancellation to date from the receipt of such notice by you. I/we agree that no cancellation shall affect my /our liability-hereunder for merchandise theretofore supplied and I/we also agree, in case of any assignment or declaration in trust for the benefit of creditors or bankruptcy of the said Quality Tires that all his/their indebtedness to the extent of my/our liability hereunder due or to become due shall become im *314 mediately payable by,me/us. This is a guaranty of payment, tha.t is the obligation hereunder may be directly and legally enforced even though you have not- taken any legal proceedings against Quality Tires.

“I/we expressly waive hereby notice of your acceptance of this guarantee, also notice of any transactions between you and him/them and of any obligation contracted by him/them to you upon faith of this guarantee or otherwise and of any default by him/them.”

This agreement is signed by the defendant, Mrs. Camille Delcourt.

There is no claim that there-ever was a cancellation of this guaranty.

Counsel for defendant refer in their brief to the case of Hibernia Bank & Trust Company v. Succession of Cancienne, 140 La. 969, 74 So. 267, 272, L. R. A. 1917D, 402, wherein they say that the continuing guaranty is expressly recognized in this state. In addition, they say to note how closely the guaranty referred to in that decision is followed in language and purpose by the guaranty given in this ease by Mrs. Camille Delcourt. We think that the contracts of guaranty in the instant case and the one referred to by the court in the Hibernia Bank Case are similar, if not' practically identical, and .carry the same obligations.

The court in the Hibernia Case, above mentioned, found that the guarantor was liable in solido with the principal debtor, “the same as if the obligation had been contracted by the guarantor in person.” This statement of the court indicates that the guaranty of payment created in that case a direct and original obligation to pay the indebtedness for which the guarantor had bound himself.

Counsel for defendant refer to Civ. Code, art. 3060, which says that the surety may oppose to the creditor all the exceptions belonging to the principal debtor, and which are inherent to the debt; but he cannot oppose exceptions which are personal to the debtor. They refer to Gilbert v. Meriam, 2 La. Ann. 160, and other cases on this subject which recognize the right of the surety to plead prescription against the creditor’s demand which has been extinguished by prescription. The exception of prescription is no doubt inherent to the debt, and the surety may urge it against the creditor.

Civ. Code, art. 3035, says: “Suretyship is an accessory promise by which a person binds himself "for another already bound, and agrees with the creditor to satisfy the obligation, if the debtor does not.”

In the Hibernia Bank Case, the court, in construing a contract similar to the one under review, said the guarantor was bound in solido “the same as if the obligation had been contracted by the guarantor in person.” Evidently, the court concluded that the guarantor had contracted a direct and original obligation to pay the indebtedness.

Hence in this case the obligation of Mrs. Camille Delcourt was a direct and original obligation to pay for the advances made to Paul E. Delcourt for any amount not in excess of $2,000. It was therefore her debt, which could be extinguished by the pre-scriptible period of ten years, and not by that of three years, urged by defendant. As a bond was given by defendant to secure the debt, the prescription of three years ceased under article 3538, Civ. Code, and the prescription of ten years applies under Civ. Code, art. 3544.

Counsel for defendant refer us to the case of Graves v. Scott, 23 La. Ann. 690, where the court held that a guaranty is the promise to answer for the payment of some debt or the performance of some duty in the case of the failure of another person, who in the first instance is liable.

In that case it was clearly shown that there was under the contract the promise to pay the debt of a third person which- the court held could not be shown by parol.

In this case the guaranty or -bond given by Mrs. Camille Delcourt created a direct or original obligation on her part which distinguishes it from the Graves’ Case relied upon by counsel for defendant.

In the instant case Mrs. Camille Delcourt was bound in solido, and as was said in the Hibernia Bank Case, when such an obligation is contracted, the creditor may proceed against any one of the debtors, and the defendant will not be entitled to a plea of discussion or division. The reason is that those so bound are each debtors for the whole debt, and which gives the right to the creditor to proceed against any one of the debtors, at his option.

The action of plaintiff company herein is governed by article 3544, Civ. Code, and is prescribed in ten years.

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Bluebook (online)
149 So. 313, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1937, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michelin-tire-co-v-delcourt-lactapp-1933.