Standard Brewing Co. v. Anderson

46 So. 926, 121 La. 935, 1908 La. LEXIS 774
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 27, 1908
DocketNo. 16,855
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 46 So. 926 (Standard Brewing Co. v. Anderson) 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
Standard Brewing Co. v. Anderson, 46 So. 926, 121 La. 935, 1908 La. LEXIS 774 (La. 1908).

Opinion

PRO VO STY, J.

As a means of increasing the sale of its beer, the plaintiff company rents the premises No. 437 St. Charles street, in this city, and subleases them for a beer saloon. In September, 1906, the defendant bought out the former sublessee, and became the sublessee of the plaintiff. The price of the transfer to defendant was $8,500. Of this, about $8,000 was for the good will of the place, and about $500 for the movables on the premises — the bar fixtures, etc., and some goods of little value. Plaintiff and defendant signed a new lease for a term of five years. It stipulated that the premises were not to be used for anything else than for a saloon, and all the draught beer and 75 per cent, of the locally bottled beer to be sold on the premises were to be of plaintiff’s beer. It is contended that, although perhaps plaintiff has lived up to the letter of his contract, he has violated its spirit. The contract, as already stated, was entered into in September, 1906. In June following the defendant became the New Orleans agent of the Lemps’ St. Louis beer. This the plaintiff did not relish. Its president, Mr. Wirth, told defendant that defendant could not serve two masters at once. A few days before the present suit was brought, the defendant had taken down from the front of his saloon the signs of the plaintiff company, which theretofore he had kept there for advertising plaintiff’s beer. This suit was filed in September, 1907, one year after the date of the contract. Mr. Wirth, the president of the plaintiff company, testified that in this year defendant had bought only $33 of plaintiff’s bottled beer; and that the bottled beer sold by defendant during this time had been Lemps’; that as agent' for the Lemps Company the defendant sold beer at wholesale to the different customers of plaintiff, and sold the same beer at two other drinking establishments of his own; that he saw defendant “loading up the Lemps beer from the leased premises, taking cases out, and making a warehouse and beer depot of the premises; that he called for his company’s bottled beer at defendant’s saloon, and none was on hand; that defendant’s purchases of keg beer decreased continually, except during the month immediately preceding the filing of the suit, decreasing from 82 barrels for the [938]*938first month to 42 barrels in. May, and 39 in July, and increasing to 48 in August; that he (meaning his company) would not have paid $7,000 for the lease of the place if he had known that defendant was going to sell other beer than that of his company. A report came to the witness, it seems, that defendant had boasted of the increase in his business since he had Lemps’ beer in his place, and this nettled the witness.

This was the situation, when, on the 6th of September, 1907, after the contract had been going on one year, Mr. Wirth learned that defendant had not paid his rent note falling due on the first of the month, and that defendant’s keg beer bill for the preceding month, payable on the 25th of the month just expired, ■ and amounting to $257.40 for the saloon on the leased premises and $72.60 for defendant’s other'saloon, had not been paid; and thereupon, without demanding of defendant the payment of the rent, or otherwise warning him, he caused this suit to be instituted.

The suit is for dissolution of the lease, and is accompanied by provisional seizure for the amount of the rent past due, and for such amount as may accrue until the possession of the leased premises is returned. The allegations are that defendant has defaulted in the payment of his rent, and has violated the contract by selling other draught beer than plaintiff’s and by not letting 75 per cent, of his sales of local bottled beer be of plaintiff’s beer.

Defendant at once offered to pay the rent, and let the lease continue, but plaintiff would not agree to this. For the purpose of showing that the moving cause of the suit was not plaintiff’s fear of losing its rent, but simply plaintiff’s offense at his being agent for and selling Lemps’ beer, defendant offered to prove that Mr. Wirth, in an interview with him after the seizure, was very angry in his manner. But, on objection, the court ruled that while the words used on that occasion by Mr. Wirth could be repeated his manner could not be described. We think this was error, and we shall assume that this animosity of Mr. Wirth would have been shown if the testimony had been allowed, although further evidence of it than- what sticks out of the entire testimony of Mr. Wirth is really quite superfluous.

There is no longer any contention that defendant sold any other draught beer than defendant’s or sold a single bottle of local beer other than plaintiff’s, and there is not a word in the contract against defendant’s becoming agent for Lemps’ or any other beer, or against his confining his sale of bottled beer to Lemps’ or other bottled beer not of local manufacture. Defendant explains that the reason of his not selling plaintiff’s bottled beer was that his customers were mainly theatrical people, and theater frequenters familiar with the best-known brands of the country, who, when wanting bottled beer, would call for these brands, and not for plaintiff’s, and when wanting plaintiff’s beer would prefer to pay 5 cents for the draught beer than 15 ■ cents for the bottled; and that for that reason he found that it did not pay to keep plaintiff’s bottled beer on ice. Defendant also explains how the signs of the plaintiff company came to be removed. He says that one of them was broken and he ordered some workmen to take it down, to be replaced later on by a new one, and that the workmen, by mistake, took down both signs. This excuse, we must say, appears rather lame, but defendant testifies to it, and we give it as we find it in the record.

Mr. Wirth would make out that he was led to bring this suit and sue out the provisional seizure from fear of losing his rent; but we cannot escape the conclusion from the record that if it had not been for defendant’s connection with the Lemps beer this suit would never have been brought. Defendant had bought from plaintiff $4,900 of beer in the preceding 10 months, and he had theretofore [940]*940been slow in. bis payments, and plaintiff had in no way become alarmed. Mr. Wirth would have it that he was in great part influenced by the fact that in addition to the rent, defendant owed a debt of $100 for an ice box, and also a note for $233, both of which were long past due; and the company’s collector had called at defendant’s place for the payment of these debts on the 25th of August and several times on the days following and had not found defendant in, and, finally, when he did meet defendant, had been put off to the 5th of September, and that on the latter day defendant had admitted his uneasiness. But 'defendant had had occasion to ask indulgence in the past and nothing had been thought of it. . Mr. Wirth knew that the property of defendant on the leased premises was hardly worth the amount of the debt of defendant, while the good will of the place was worth several thousand dollars. He says he did not know how much defendant had paid for this good will, but that he knew it was worth not less than $4,000. As already stated, defendant had paid $8,000 for it; and defendant testifies it was worth that much at the date of the seizure. Under these circumstances, Mr. Wirth could not but have known that defendant was in no position to defeat the lessor’s claim by running off the movables from the leased premises. The movables were worth at most $1,000, and by running them off defendant would have destroyed a good will acquired at a price of $8,000, and worth that much, and which Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 926, 121 La. 935, 1908 La. LEXIS 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/standard-brewing-co-v-anderson-la-1908.