RTL CORP. v. Manufacturer's Enterprises, Inc.
This text of 429 So. 2d 855 (RTL CORP. v. Manufacturer's Enterprises, Inc.) 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.
Opinion
RTL CORPORATION
v.
MANUFACTURER'S ENTERPRISES, INC.
Supreme Court of Louisiana.
Nathan T. Gisclair, Jr., Montgomery, Barnett, Brown & Read, New Orleans, for applicant.
F. Barry Marionneaux, Plaquemine, for respondent.
*856 DENNIS, Justice.
This suit arose from a dispute between the parties to an equipment lease agreement concerning whether a payment by the lessee constituted full payment or only a partial payment of the obligation. After a trial, the trial court dismissed the suit without reasons; the court of appeal affirmed this judgment on the grounds that the lessor's deposit of a check tendered in full payment by the lessee constituted an accord and satisfaction, thus extinguishing the lessee's obligation. We granted writs to evaluate this result under the civilian concepts of our law. We reverse.
On July 9, 1979, Ben Cook, manager of Manufacturer's Enterprises, arranged by telephone for the lease of two large cranes, labor and accessory equipment from the RTL Corporation on an emergency basis. The oral agreement reached over the telephone between Cook and Terrell Carmouche, President of RTL, fixed the hourly rental rate for the cranes and the minimum daily usage for the cranes. However, other details of the calculation of rent were not fixed. Later that afternoon, the cranes, accessory equipment and personnel arrived at defendant's plant. RTL's workers began assembly of the cranes and work on the job on an around-the-clock basis. At the change of each 12-hour shift, an RTL employee prepared a manpower and equipment report and obtained the signature of one of defendant's supervisors for verification. No dispute arose during performance of the job.
At the conclusion of the job, RTL sent an invoice to Manufacturer's Enterprises for $143,016.93. In a letter to RTL dated August 21, 1979, Ben Cook challenged several items on the invoice and the method of calculation of the charges related to transportation and assembly of the cranes. RTL proposed that Manufacturer's Enterprises pay the undisputed amount and leave the disputed charges for subsequent negotiation. On September 11, 1979, RTL received a check from Manufacturer's Enterprises for $107,023.68, with a notation "Payment in full for crane rentals" on the check stub. Terrell Carmouche and his brother, Ronald, treasurer of RTL, then contacted Ben Cook by telephone to insist that the check be considered only a partial payment of the amount owed. Both brothers testified that Cook assented to their treatment of the check as partial payment and to again meet with them to discuss the remainder. On his part, Ben Cook agreed that Carmouche insisted that the check be considered partial payment, but Cook testified that he silently let the demand pass without rejecting or acceding to it.
After this conversation, Ronald Carmouche substituted the words "partial payment" for "payment in full" on the notation on the check stub, and deposited the check. In the following three months, the parties corresponded through their attorneys concerning the disputed remainder of the invoice amount. Following the unsuccessful meeting between officials of both companies in December, 1979, plaintiff filed suit for the unpaid balance of $35,993.25. Defendant answered and pleaded the defense of accord and satisfaction. Trial was held and the trial judge dismissed the suit without assigning reasons. The court of appeal affirmed, reasoning that an accord and satisfaction had extinguished the entire debt, notwithstanding RTL's deletion of the "payment in full" notation. 415 So.2d 412.
The sole issue before us is whether the deposit by RTL of a check tendered to it in full payment of a pre-existing obligation operated to extinguish the entire debt. The debtor maintains that its offer to compromise the disputed debt at the amount of the full-payment check was accepted by RTL when it deposited this check, notwithstanding RTL's protests to the contrary. RTL counters that Manufacturer's Enterprises' offer of the full-payment check in settlement was voluntarily withdrawn by its manager, Ben Cook, in his telephone conversation with the Carmouches. RTL insists that it only deposited the check after Cook assented to regard the check as a partial payment toward the existing debt.
A contract is the law between the parties and it cannot be revoked, unless by *857 mutual consent of the parties, or for causes acknowledged by law. La.Civ.Code art. 1901. Implicit in this precept is the proposition that when a dispute arises between the parties to a contract as to its provisions, they may by further mutual consent freely modify their contract. Furthermore, article 3071 of the Civil Code specifically provides that persons may enter a contract of transaction or compromise to adjust their differences by mutual consent for the purpose of preventing or putting an end to a lawsuit.
These precepts are called into play when a debtor tenders a check as payment in full of an obligation due under contract to his creditor, the amount of which has been disputed by the parties. This offer by the debtor confers on the creditor a specific right to consent to full satisfaction of the debt by accepting the check or to retain his rights under the prior agreement by rejecting the check. Without the debtor's express or tacit consent, the creditor cannot make use of the check and then renounce the condition upon which the debtor made the offer. Fuss v. Cordeleria de San Juan, S.A., 224 La. 338, 69 So.2d 365 (1953); Henriques v. Vaccaro, 220 La. 216, 56 So.2d 236 (1951); Berger v. Quintero, 170 La. 37, 127 So. 356 (1930); Eppling v. Jon-T Chemicals, Inc., 363 So.2d 1263 (La.App. 4th Cir.1978).
In the present case, the lower courts failed to examine the parties' intent but apparently concluded that, as a matter of law, the creditor's deposit of a full payment check constituted an accord and satisfaction. As we have indicated, however, under our law whether the parties altered their original contract or entered a transaction or compromise depends on whether there was mutual consent. In order to correctly decide the case, therefore, it is necessary to examine the evidence and determine whether the parties arrived at a new agreement or acted under the existing one.
Though Manufacturer's Enterprises made an offer to RTL by tendering a check in full payment of the disputed debt, we find that RTL did not accept this offer. The record reveals that when the RTL officials received the check and noticed the "payment in full" notation, they immediately contacted Ben Cook, defendant's manager. RTL's Terrell and Ronald Carmouche and Ben Cook testified concerning this telephone conversation. Both Carmouches testified that they insisted that the check constitute partial payment, leaving the remainder of the debt for negotiation. They further testified that Ben Cook voiced his agreement to this proposal. Ben Cook acknowledged in testimony that the Carmouches informed him that they considered the check as partial payment, but maintained that he could not recall assenting to this treatment of his company's proposal. Instead, he contended that he remained silent on the subject. We find it unnecessary to resolve this conflict of testimony. Even if Mr. Cook did not expressly agree to the Carmouches' insistence, under these circumstances his silence reasonably implies his assent to their proposal. See La.Civ.Code art.
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429 So. 2d 855, 1983 La. LEXIS 10361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rtl-corp-v-manufacturers-enterprises-inc-la-1983.