Southern Fleet Leasing Corp. v. Brown

257 So. 2d 819, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6485
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 31, 1972
DocketNo. 8705
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 257 So. 2d 819 (Southern Fleet Leasing Corp. v. Brown) 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
Southern Fleet Leasing Corp. v. Brown, 257 So. 2d 819, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6485 (La. Ct. App. 1972).

Opinions

TUCKER, Judge.

Plaintiff-appellee, Southern Fleet Leasing Corporation, leased to defendant-appellant, Jerry W. Brown, d/b/a Typewriter Discounts of Louisiana, ten Toshiba calculators. The lease agreement between the parties was in the form of a written contract which provided for the lease of said calculators for a term of thirty-six months, commencing February 26, 1969, at a monthly rental of $225.89. The lease contained the usual acceleration clause providing that if the lessee failed to pay any installment of rent when due and the default continued for more than ten days after the lessor had demanded payment, all monthly rentals due the lessor and to become due under the lease would immediately become payable in full at the lessor’s option and further provided in such event that fifteen percent additional on the amount due or in said suit should be paid as attorney’s fees. The agreement further provided that upon the expiration or earlier termination of the lease, the lessee would return the equipment in good repair and that the equipment at all times would remain the lessor’s property during the term of the lease.

The lessee paid monthly rentals totaling $2,225.03 but failed to pay timely the rental due on December 12, 1969. Upon termination of the lease, by virtue of the lessee’s default, the lessee was unable to deliver to the lessor and to account for all of the calculators because he had sold them. After amicable demand, this suit was instituted for the balance due on the lease agreement in the sum of $5,707.14 plus legal interest from date of judicial demand until paid and attorney’s fees.

An answer was filed on behalf of lessee alleging that the transaction between lessor and lessee was a sale rather than a lease, that the debt sued upon by lessor was listed as a debt in lessee’s bankruptcy and that lessee was discharged from the debt by his bankruptcy.

At the trial the written lease was introduced into evidence. The lessee admitted that he had executed the written lease and also admitted that he had executed a document entitled “Acceptance of Equipment, Lease No. 3971,” dated February 26, 1969, also offered into evidence.

After trial, judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff-lessor and against defendant-lessee as prayed for. In his Oral Reasons for Judgment, the trial judge stated that the transaction between the parties was a lease, not a sale, because the agreement did not provide for passage of title; that the lessee had willfully and maliciously converted the calculators in that the sales were intentional, not accidental; and [821]*821that, accordingly, lessee’s debt was not discharged by bankruptcy.

From said judgment the defendant-lessee has perfected this appeal, and we affirm.

Specified as error is the trial court’s finding that the instrument executed by the parties was a contract of lease and that some of the machines were intentionally, as opposed to accidentally, sold by the defendant, such conduct constituting a malicious conversion. Further specified as error is the insufficiency of the evidence to warrant a finding of willful and malicious conversion of the property under the provisions of the Bankruptcy Act.

The instrument signed by the parties by its unequivocal terms is a lease. Defendant admitted that the written document was a lease. On the front of the lease agreement and just above plaintiff’s signature are the following clearly printed and legible provisions:

“Lessee hereby leases from Lessor who leases to Lessee the equipment described above, upon the terms and conditions set forth on the reverse side of this page; and Lessee acknowledges that Lessee has read them. THE TERMS AND CONDITIONS SET FORTH ON THE REVERSE SIDE OF THIS PAGE ARE A PART OF THIS LEASE.
“The undersigned agree to all the terms and' conditions set forth above and on the reverse side hereof, and in witness thereof hereby execute this lease.” (Exhibit D-l, Record, p. 7)

The words “lease,” “Lessor” and “Lessee” are used innumerable times throughout the document, and the assertion that the document was, in fact, a sale is totally without merit. However, defendant contends that even though the agreement was called a “lease,” it actually was intended by the parties to be a sale. In support thereof he relies on a prior business arrangement that he had with plaintiff concerning the lease of fifty typewriters. At the trial, over plaintiff’s objection, the defendant testified that he had made the same arrangements with the plaintiff in 1968 for the lease of fifty typewriters, with the understanding that he could sell the typewriters, and that he had the identical understanding with the plaintiff at the time he executed the lease of the calculators.

The landmark case of Salley v. Louviere, 183 La. 92, 162 So. 811 (1935), spells out when the terms of a written contract may be varied by parol:

“Article 2276 of the Civil Code declares that parol evidence shall not be admitted against or beyond what is contained in a written contract, nor on what may have been said before, or at the time of making the contract, or since. This article of the Code is not to be construed so as to forbid the proving by pa-rol evidence of a subsequent agreement modifying or abrogating a written contract of a character which the law does not require to be in writing. It is true that the article says that parol evidence shall not be admitted to prove what may have been said by the parties to a written contract, before or at the time of making the contract, or since. But the meaning is that parol evidence as to what the parties to a written contract may have said at any time shall not be admitted for the purpose of proving that they had an antecedent or a contemporaneous agreement contrary to that which was reduced to writing. The words ‘or since’ have reference to the phrase ‘what may have been said,’ and not to what may have been agreed to, since the making of the written contract. It is well settled that this article of the Civil Code does not forbid the proving by parol evidence of a subsequent agreement to modify or to revoke a written agreement. [Citations omitted]” (Salley v. Louviere, 162 So. 811, 813)

Therefore, the defendant’s testimony for the purpose of proving that he and the plaintiff had agreed that he could sell the calculators or that defendant had a right to [822]*822lease them to others 1 prior to the execution of the lease agreement was inadmissible to contradict the terms of said written agreement. However, such testimony was admissible as having a bearing on the issue of whether the defendant had willfully and intentionally converted the plaintiff’s property so as to bar his discharge from bankruptcy. The only evidence offered as to such an understanding was the testimony of the defendant, Jerry Brown, who testified that he had an understanding with plaintiff that he could sell the calculators, which was denied by plaintiff’s agents. But defendant argues that we should accept his version of the agreement when we consider the nature of the defendant’s business and the written lease agreement in light thereof.

A consideration of the foregoing would show that to construe the agreement as a lease would lead to absurd consequences. For example, the agreement provided that the equipment should be kept on the lessee’s premises and should not be removed without the lessor’s written consent.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
257 So. 2d 819, 1972 La. App. LEXIS 6485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-fleet-leasing-corp-v-brown-lactapp-1972.