National Supply Co. v. Baillio

99 So. 2d 103, 234 La. 257, 1958 La. LEXIS 1097
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 6, 1958
DocketNo. 43209
StatusPublished

This text of 99 So. 2d 103 (National Supply Co. v. Baillio) 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
National Supply Co. v. Baillio, 99 So. 2d 103, 234 La. 257, 1958 La. LEXIS 1097 (La. 1958).

Opinion

SIMON, Justice.

The National Supply Company,- a Pennsylvania Corporation authorized to do business in Louisiana, sued to recover from George Baillio an indebtedness due to plaintiff by Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., of Houston, Texas, in the sum of $3,671.23 with 6% per annum interest from July 30, ,1955, plus reasonable attorney’s fees, to be fixed at 25% of the main demand.

' Baillio was president and principal stockholder of Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., for whom he executed a written guaranty dated ■August 27, 1952 wherein he agreed to pay [261]*261to plaintiff any and all indebtedness owing or to thereafter become owing to plaintiff by the Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., for an amount not exceeding $7,500 which may exist at any one time. He also agreed to pay all costs and expenses, including reasonable attorney’s fees, that may be incurred by plaintiff in any suit or action brought against Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., or himself to enforce payment of the indebtedness guaranteed thereby.

Acting under said guaranty agreement plaintiff sold and delivered certain drilling equipment, supplies and materials to Bayou Drilling Company, Inc. between the dates of December 5, 1953 and July 30, 1955, the balance indebtedness for said supplies amounting to $3,671.23, the sum sued for herein.

After filing exceptions of vagueness and nonjoinder which were in due course overruled, the defendant answered denying liability and averring notice to plaintiff of the cancellation of the guaranty prior to the sales and deliveries herein sued for. Defendant further avers on information and belief that the plaintiff failed to properly credit payments made to charges arising during the guaranty period.

Judgment was rendered by the learned trial judge in favor of plaintiff in the principal sum of $2,457.30 with interest at the rate of 5% from judicial demand until paid, attorney’s fees in the sum of 10% of the aggregate of principal and interest, together with all costs, but denied recovery for items totalling $1,092.20 representing sales and deliveries originally billed to Fortune Oil Company, assigning as his reason that the guaranty agreement did not cover credit sales to parties other than Bayou Drilling Company, Inc. From this judgment defendant appealed. Plaintiff answered the appeal and seeks an 'amendment of said judgment to have the award increased to the. full sum originally sued for plus interest at the rate of 6% per annum from judicial demand until paid, plus attorney’s fees in the sum of 25% of the aggregate amount of the principal and interest, and all costs of court, and as thus amended, the judgment of the lower court herein be affirmed. On appeal plaintiff has abandoned its demand for 6% interest, and claims only the legal interest of 5% per annum from date of judicial demand.

Defendant concedes that generally speaking evidence consisting of copies of invoices and sales orders, which in this instance were admitted in evidence over his objection in proof of the alleged account and indebtedness herein sued for, gives rise to a prima facie assumption of the correctness of the said indebtedness. However, defendant contends that such evidence giving rise'to such prima facie presumption is not under our jurisprudence admissible as against guarantors. He also contends that if proper credits showing payments made by the Bayóu . Drilling [263]*263Company, Inc., upon charges covered by the guaranty had been allowed the indebtedness herein sued on would have been discharged and that accordingly he could not be held liable therefor as guarantor or otherwise. In the alternative, he further contends that should the indebtedness sued for be held to be sufficiently proved that he, having canceled and revoked the guaranty agreement prior to the incurrence of the debt, is relieved from liability therefor.

During the presentation of plaintiff’s case in chief the defendant objected to the introduction of testimony by members of the credit department of plaintiff which consisted of the identification of statements of account, invoices and sales order slips on the ground that it had not been established that Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., authorized the charges shown on said documents, or that the charges represented merchandise actually sold and delivered to some one authorized to purchase and receive it on behalf of the said drilling company. The objection was overruled; and we think correctly so. The witness, Dean H. Radie, a credit clerk in plaintiff’s employ for a period of over ten years, testified that he had personal knowledge of the account of the Bayou Drilling Company, Inc.; that the ledger sheets representing this account were kept in the Tulsa office of plaintiff in the regular course of business; that all charges and credits were shown therein; that the account had a zero balance on November 12, 1953; that the charges after said date began on November 18, 1953; that the ledger sheets covering the account of the Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., from November 12, 1953 to the date suit was filed on September 7, 1955 reflected a true and correct statement of the account and that all credits had been properly entered thereon. In addition to this uncontradicted testimony sales orders and invoices covering each of the items for which payment had not been received were offered in evidence in order to show delivery and receipt thereof and notice of the then status of the account on the date of each sale. The correctness of this evidence was not refuted.

Leslie E. Minor, the chief clerk of plaintiff’s credit department in Houston, Texas, testified that monthly statements were mailed to Bayou Drilling Company, Inc., and that at no time were there any objections made to their correctness. Mr. Minor further testified that he personally called at the office of Bayou Drilling Company, Inc. on many occasions, requesting payment of the delinquent account during and after January 1954, and that again no one made any objection to the correctness thereof. But on the contrary, he testified that the defendant on these several occasions solicited his aid in obtaining payment from the drilling company and thereby relieve him of any liability. It appears that to this end several months [265]*265of grace were allowed, without avail, and plaintiff then made demand upon the defendant alone as guarantor for payments.

LSA-C.C. art. 2277 provides as follows: “All agreements relative to movable property, and all contracts for the payment of money, where the value does not exceed five hundred dollars, which are not.reduced to writing, may be proved by any other competent evidence; such contracts or agreements, above five hundred dollars in value, must be proved at least by one credible witness, and other corroborating circumstances.”

In the case of Horton v. Haralson, 130 La. 100, 57 So. 643, 644, we considered whether certain accounts were sustained by sufficient proof and observed that: “They were proved up in the usual manner, and witnesses, doubtless, refreshed their memories from the books, and the general trend of the business, .and showed that the goods had been sold and delivered. It was not necessary to prove the actual delivery of each item of the different accounts as that is impossible. The sales were proven and everything combined in showing delivery. The testimony made out at least prima facie proof, and it was then for the defendants to prove wherein the testimony was not sufficient for the purpose offered.” See also Louisiana Abstract & Title Guarantee Co. v. Xeter Realty, Limited, 156 La. 1019, 101 So. 402, and Ritchie Grocer Co. v. Dean, 182 La.

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Bluebook (online)
99 So. 2d 103, 234 La. 257, 1958 La. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-supply-co-v-baillio-la-1958.