Shreveport Packing Co. v. Marrs

180 So. 220
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 28, 1938
DocketNos. 5567, 5570.
StatusPublished

This text of 180 So. 220 (Shreveport Packing Co. v. Marrs) 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
Shreveport Packing Co. v. Marrs, 180 So. 220 (La. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

These cases were consolidated for trial in the lower court and here. In each, plaintiff sues to recover an alleged balance due on open account. Hicks Company, Limited, sues for $1,608.14. Its account embraces the period from December 11, 1936, to January 23, 1937. The Shreveport Packing Company, Inc., sues for $420.41. Its account covers the period from December 10, 1936, to January 2, 1937. In each petition it is alleged that defendant, Mrs. W. G. Marrs, is the owner and operator of Marrs’ Grocery and Market, in the city of Shreveport, and that she conducts said business separate from her husband. In each case, defendant articulately denied plaintiff’s allegations. However, there is an admission by defendant in the note of evidence that as to amounts the accounts are correct.

During the progress of trial, each plaintiff filed a plea of estoppel against defendant’s contention that her husband, and nbt she, is the true debtor. The demands in both suits were rejected. Plaintiffs prosecute separate appeal.

The plea of estoppel in the Hicks case is here quoted:

“Now comes the plaintiff, The Hicks Company, Ltd., and with respect shows to the Court that defendant in said above cause is estopped to deny her liability to plaintiff for said amount claimed in this suit for the reasons that said defendant represented to plaintiff that she was owner of the business conducted under the name of Marrs Grocery and Market, and that she would pay said account for all merchandise sold to said Marrs Grocery and Market by plaintiff, and for the merchandise the amount of which is sued for •in the above numbered and entitled cause, and that she, said defendant, represented to your plaintiff not only that she would pay said account, but that she was well able financially to pay same, all of which said statements of said defendant your plaintiff relied upon in making the sale of said merchandise to said defendant, Mrs. Beulah B. Marrs, and extending the credit to her for said merchandise sold and delivered to her and for which judgment is sought in the above numbered and'entitled cause, and that said Mrs. Beulah B. Marrs, defendant herein, is now estopped to deny that she was sole owner of said business of Marrs Grocery and Market under which name she did business 'during the time that said merchandise was sold to her, and is now estopped to deny personal liability for the amount sued for in this suit, being the purchase price which she agreed to pay for said merchandise and for the account herein sued on, said estoppel being hereby especially pleaded.”

The plea in the Packing Company case is of samé wording, substantially.

These suits, as developed by answers and testimony, propound an original and two alternative propositions as regards liability of defendant, viz.: (1) That the accounts are her direct obligations because she was the owner of the Marrs’ Grocery and Market when the obligations arose; (2) that, even though she was not such owner, nevertheless she may be held liable for payment of the accounts, and is estop-ped to deny such liability, because she held herself out as owner; (3) that she prom- • ised to pay the accounts.

Prior to February 26, 1936, W. G. Marrs, husband of defendant, conducted a retail jewelry business at 211 Texas street in the city of Shreveport; and on this date added a line of retail groceries. Defendant -loaned him $900 to enable him to put in the stock of groceries. Some thirty days thereafter, he adopted the trade-name “Marrs Grocery & Market,” moved the en *222 tire business twice, and finally leased and occupied a building at corner of Spring and Texas streets in said city. Marrs appears to have had limited capital and from time to time borrowed from his wife various amounts, the total of which was around $4,000. Some portion of this amount she personally borrowed from local banks. He also procured loans from a brother-in-law and one from another person. The business does not appear to have prospered at any time.

A few weeks after opening up the grocery business, Marrs arranged with Hicks Company, Limited, for a limited line of credit, payable weekly, and they sold him regularly on this basis. He began to default in his weekly payments, and on October 1, 1936, was due the firm $307.12. The condition of the account and tardy payments thereon aroused some uneasiness on the company’s part, and its credit manager, W. D. Sandifer, went to Marrs’ place of business to and did interview him and defendant concerning the past due indebtedness. His firm was unwilling to extend further credit to the business unless the account was paid in full, secured, or otherwise satisfactorily arranged. Mr. Sandifer gave the .following testimony touching the nature of his conversation with Mrs. Marrs on this visit, and her commitment to him, viz.:

“Q. In this suit, Mr. Sandifer, the Hicks Company claim that Mrs. Beulah Blaxton Marrs is indebted unto them in the sum of Sixteen Hundred Eight Dollars and Fourteen Cents for merchandise sold and delivered to her between the dates of December 11th, 1936, and continued on down through January 23rd, 1937, is that correct? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Has that been paid ? A. No, sir.
“Q. To whom were those goods stated in the account sold and delivered? A. Mrs. Marrs.
“Q. Mrs. Beulah Blaxton Marrs? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Did you ever consult Mrs. Marrs, be-. fore selling these goods to her? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Just state to the Court what took place in that conversation between you and Mrs. Marrs? A. Along in the early part of October, the account of Mrs. Marrs was building up a little and I asked her who owned the business and she says, “I own it” and she assured me that she would be responsible for the account, that she owned the business. She also stated that she owned oil interests in Rodessa.
“Q. Did you consult Mr. Marrs at any time at all before the delivery of these goods for which this account is claimed here against Mrs. Beulah Blaxton Marrs? A. I have talked to him on various occasions about the account, but so far as asking him for a settlement, no, I did not.
“Q. Was it after the conversation in October, 1936, that all of the merchandise for which judgment is asked in this petition, were sold and delivered to Mrs. Marrs? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Why did you sell them to her? A. Oh her representations to me that she owned the business, and she stated she had -ample assets with which to take care of the account.”

Mr. Marrs gave the following illuminating testimony, anent this interview, viz:

“Q. When was the first time that Hicks Company knew Mrs. Marrs? A. I do not think that Mr. Sandifer knew Mrs. Marrs until she came there to keep my books. (This was in September, 1936)
“Q. That was when the business conducted under the name of Marrs Grocery and Market started to expand after she came there? A. No, sir, expanded before that; it was expanding and getting in bad shape.
“Q. It was then your credit was getting in bad shape? A. Yes, sir.
“Q. That was about the time when Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
180 So. 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shreveport-packing-co-v-marrs-lactapp-1938.