SCHEINUK FLORIST, INC. v. Southern Bell T. & T. Co.
This text of 128 So. 2d 683 (SCHEINUK FLORIST, INC. v. Southern Bell T. & T. 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.
Opinion
SCHEINUK THE FLORIST, INC.
v.
SOUTHERN BELL TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fourth Circuit.
Ogden, Woods, Henriques & Rives, James W. Hammet, James C. Henriques, Jr., New Orleans, for defendant and appellant.
Hammett & Bertel, Harry L. Hammett, New Orleans, for plaintiff and appellee.
Before REGAN, YARRUT and SAMUEL, JJ.
REGAN, Judge.
Plaintiff, Scheinuk the Florist, Inc., instituted this suit against the defendant, Southern Bell Telephone & Telegraph Company, endeavoring to recover the sum *684 of $25,147.53, representing damages which plaintiff asserts it incurred as a result of defendant's negligent failure to list its trade name in the "white pages" of the New Orleans telephone directory for a period of thirteen months, or from November 6, 1955, to December 5, 1956.
Defendant answered and admitted that the listing was omitted through error, but denied the plaintiff had been damaged as a result thereof.
From a judgment awarding plaintiff the sum of $2,008.00,[1] the defendant has prosecuted this appeal. The plaintiff has answered the appeal, requesting that the judgment be increased to $25,147.53.
The record reveals that plaintiff is the second largest, well-established florist[2] engaged in this business in the City of New Orleans.
The facts hereof are relatively simple and in substance undisputed. The New Orleans telephone directory for the period of November 6, 1955, to December 5, 1956, omitted to list the name of plaintiff, Scheinuk the Florist, in the "white pages" or section wherein subscribers' names appear alphabetically, although the name, address, and correct telephone number of plaintiff was advertised in the "yellow pages" or classified section of the directory.
Plaintiff contended that as a result of the foregoing omission, its gross sales during the thirteen months in question decreased, from the preceding corresponding period, by the sum of $4,660.51, therefore its loss in gross profits was 62½% of $4,660.51 or a loss for this item of $2,912.18; it further contended that the amount of $16,726.72 was the gross profit on the increase of sales which it would have enjoyed during the period of omission based upon a general increase for all other florists located in the City of New Orleans of 11.4%[3]; plaintiff also claimed as damages the sum of $508.00 which it expended in addition to its usual advertisements in an endeavor to acquaint its customers with the fact that it was still conducting its business despite the omission. In addition thereto, plaintiff also claimed loss on future sales after the period of omission which it estimated at the sum of $5,000.00.[4]
Defendant's counsel during oral argument before this court conceded that plaintiff incurred damages to the extent of $508.00, which was the amount it had expended to advertise in the New Orleans newspapers the omission of its name from the telephone directory, but denied that plaintiff had suffered any other damage as a result of the omission, and in explanation thereof reasoned that anyone endeavoring to find the plaintiff's name in the directory would have noticed the names of the individual persons associated with Scheinuk the Florist, and if they had purchased flowers from plaintiff before, they would have recognized the telephone number and address even though the trade name of the business was not listed in the "white pages" of the directory. The defendant, in conclusion, emphasized that the plaintiff had several other listings of Scheinuk the Florist in the "yellow" or classified pages of the directory.
At the inception of this opinion, it is of interest to note that there are no decisions which appear in the Louisiana jurisprudence involving an award of damages for omitting from the directory a subscriber's trade name, which, to say the least, is most unusual in view of the innumerable subscribers *685 to telephone service in the state of Louisiana.
In any event, there exists no doubt in our minds that nothing more disconcerting can befall a business establishment than to have its trade name omitted from the telephone directory.
As we observed hereinabove, plaintiff is the second largest, well-established florist in metropolitan New Orleans. Its mailing list of customers includes about 20,000 persons, and approximately 95% of its business is transacted through the medium of the telephone. We have no doubt that plaintiff suffered some damage by virtue of the omission of its name from the directory. The only vital question posed for consideration here, as it was in the lower court, is proof of the loss incurred with that certainty which the law requires.
In endeavoring to prove its damage, plaintiff pointed to the fact that its sales were less during the period of omission than the year before despite the fact that other florists in the city had enjoyed a 11.4% gain in sales. John A. Peyroux, Jr., a certified public accountant of this city, testified that its gross profit on such sales would have amounted to 62½%; therefore, plaintiff claimed that its loss in gross profits because of the declining sales during the period of omission amounted to $2,912.81.
Alfred N. Byrnes, also a certified public accountant of this city, testified that, in addition to its loss in sales, if it would have enjoyed the same increase that the other florists had enjoyed, its loss in gross profits would have amounted to $16,726.72. Knowledge of the general increase in sales of the florists of this city was acquired from sales tax records maintained in the city hall.
In connection with the foregoing testimony, it is extremely pertinent to observe that the record reflects that the profits referred to by the accountants are gross rather than net and as such, they are ineffectual insofar as an aid to this court in determining the damage with that certainty required by law which the plaintiff incurred.[5]
On the other hand, defendant's reasons for suggesting that no damages were incurred by the plaintiff are utterly unconvincing. The defendant, as we have observed heretofore, claims that the names of the individual persons associated with this business appear above the space in the directory where the trade name of "Scheinuk the Florist" was intended to be printed and that this fact, together with the fact that plaintiff's telephone number appears further down in the directory's listing was sufficient to advise its customers of both the telephone number and address of plaintiff's establishment.
The rationalization that any customer or potential customer looking for the trade name of plaintiff's business would have recognized its telephone number and address when they finally located it, is without merit since it is obvious that very few people make any effort to remember such *686 telephone numbers. The purchasers of flowers are frequently in a hurry and are not inclined to indulge themselves in a tedious search when looking for the name of their florist in the alphabetical section of a telephone directory. It is true that a customer might have been persistent enough to turn to the "yellow" or classified pages of the directory and it is likewise true that many customers must have necessarily referred their business to other florists because of the omission.
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128 So. 2d 683, 1961 La. App. LEXIS 2000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheinuk-florist-inc-v-southern-bell-t-t-co-lactapp-1961.