State Block, Inc. v. Poche
This text of 444 So. 2d 680 (State Block, Inc. v. Poche) 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
STATE BLOCK, INC.
v.
Eugene J. POCHE, Jr.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Fifth Circuit.
*681 Terrence J. Hand, New Orleans, for plaintiff-appellant.
Patrick C. Leitz, Metairie, for defendant-appellee.
Before CHEHARDY, GRISBAUM and DUFRESNE, JJ.
CHEHARDY, Judge.
This lawsuit arose from a dispute between a corporation and its former vicepresident/stockholder over the ownership of eight season tickets to Louisiana State University football games. The district court awarded judgment in favor of the former corporate officer, and the corporation appealed.
The following facts were established at trial:
Eugene Poche, Jr., was one of four incorporators of State Enterprises, which later changed its name to State Block, Inc., in July 1957. Poche, vice president of the corporation, was employed in the production and sales end of the business. He described his function as "public relations." In that capacity, one of his duties was to *682 entertain customers; he estimated that 75% of the customers listed in the corporate accounts receivable were his customers. He was paid a salary by the corporation, and received a bonus if the corporation made money.
At some unspecified time, apparently within a year or two after the corporation was started, Poche decided to purchase season tickets to Louisiana State University football games. He testified he did not discuss the purchase with any of the other corporate officers; he stated, "I just bought them because I enjoy football and I wanted to go. I bought the tickets and I used them as entertainment." The name on the tickets was "Eugene J. Poche, Jr., State Block, Inc., P.O. Box 642, Metairie, La. 70004."
He admitted that State Block paid LSU directly for the tickets, and that he used them for State Block purposes, to entertain the corporation's customers. He insisted, nonetheless, they were his tickets. He also said he "always" offered use of the tickets to other members of the firm, but the others never wanted to go to the games except when there was a special occasion and "they felt like they should show their face."
Although State Block always paid for the tickets, Poche never felt they were being given to him as an extra benefit from the corporation: "The tickets they paid for were my tickets. Just like if I were entertaining anybody else at a restaurant, they were my customers. State Block always reimbursed me for my expenses." He never considered the cost of the tickets as income, and it was not reported on his tax returns.
He admitted that State Block had many accounts used for entertainment purposes, for which the corporation was billed directly "I never even had to come up with my money," he said. He had an American Express credit card in his name and State Block's; he agreed it was a normal custom for entertainment expenses to be placed on that charge account, and the bills would be paid directly out of State Block's funds.
Poche testified that he left State Block in 1981, selling his stock in the corporation to Daniel Aucoin, who is the son of the corporation's president, Dennis "Heavy" Aucoin, Jr. Poche then became involved in several new corporations. (The evidence implies that at least one of these businesses is in direct competition with State Block.)
After LSU mailed out the 1981 season tickets, Poche asked "Heavy" to send the tickets to him, but Aucoin refused. As a result, Poche went in person to the LSU Athletic Department's season ticket office in Baton Rouge. He requested they issue the tickets for subsequent seasons to him in care of his new corporation, Baton Rouge Concrete Products. When the tickets for the 1982 football season were mailed to Poche's new address rather than to State Block's, State Block filed this suit.
Dennis Aucoin testified he was one of the original incorporators of State Block, and has been president of the company since 1957. He did not recall how the tickets originally were purchased, but said Poche always went to football games. Aucoin said Poche probably told him he was going to buy them, and Aucoin had probably had no objections. Poche got the tickets and the corporation used them as entertainment. State Block has paid for the tickets each and every year, he said, and the corporation charged the expense as "office and entertainment."
Aucoin admitted Poche had never informed the other stockholders of the company how he planned to use the tickets. Poche used them as he pleased, and always offered them to anyone who wanted any. Aucoin admitted that Poche could use the tickets to entertain people who were not customers of State Block.
Aucoin also admitted that he himself seldom went to LSU games, but said that he never thought the LSU tickets were owned by Poche. Aucoin said he had never particularly wanted any control over the tickets before, but wanted them after Poche left the company because his son had taken *683 over Poche's former job of entertaining customers.
Aucoin testified further that he and Poche each had an American Express card for entertainment of customers; each one's card had his own name and State Block's name on it. Documents introduced into evidence show that Poche's American Express card was in the name, "Eugene J. Poche, Jr., State Block Inc., P.O. Box 642, Metairie, La. 70004." This is the same way the LSU tickets are listed. State Block always paid the American Express bills directly.
The trial judge, after hearing the evidence, ruled from the bench that the tickets belonged to Poche. In oral reasons for judgment, the court found as a fact that Poche never discussed purchase of the tickets with anyone else in the corporation prior to buying them. He also found as a fact that the tickets were in Poche's name; he concluded that State Block's name had been on the tickets as part of the mailing address rather than as an indication of ownership.
In reaching the last conclusion, the judge placed great emphasis on LSU's action in changing the mailing address of the tickets at Poche's request. The court stated,
"I have the testimony of Mr. Poche as far as changing the address of the tickets relative to the fact that they were able to be changed and I know for a fact that there are certain times, places and procedures where the ownership of LSU tickets can be changed at a certain time of year and it's after the order forms go out and, in other words, State Block, Inc. and that address could not be taken off of the season tickets ownership unless the times and procedures were followed by Mr. Poche. So, when LSU took it off of their rolls that indicates to me, that proves to me that the ownership is in the name of Eugene J. Poche and that the address is State Block Inc., P.O. Box 642, Metairie, Louisiana 70004. So, that resolves the problem in my mind whether State Block Inc. was in the ownership name or in the address part of it."
The court also considered it important that Poche intended the tickets to be for his personal ownership, while Aucoin did not even know the tickets had been purchased when Poche first bought them. The judge felt that State Block's paying for the tickets did not affect the ownership, but rather that ownership was set at the time the tickets were initially purchased.
(We disregard evidence that when Poche first made an offer to sell his interest in the corporation, he sought to obtain the LSU season tickets as part of the sale price.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
444 So. 2d 680, 15 Educ. L. Rep. 1387, 1984 La. App. LEXIS 7866, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-block-inc-v-poche-lactapp-1984.