Stehr Auto Sheet Metal Works v. Pacholik

148 So. 482, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1842
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 1933
DocketNo. 4578.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 148 So. 482 (Stehr Auto Sheet Metal Works v. Pacholik) 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
Stehr Auto Sheet Metal Works v. Pacholik, 148 So. 482, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1842 (La. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Plaintiff, a copartnership, instituted this suit against the widow and heirs of Prank Hromadka, deceased, to recover $215 alleged to be due for “goods sold and delivered” and for “services rendered” to the deceased while operating a business under the style and trade-name of “Auto Sheet Metal Works” in the city of Alexandria, La., as shown by itemized statement attached to the petition. The account attached is at variance with the allegations of the petition. It contains three distinct charges of indebtedness:

Rebuild Plymouth.$180.00
Cost of Court. 10.00
Attorney’s fee. 25.00 ...$215.00

No objection has been raised as to the variance. Evidence was introduced to support the account sued on, broadening the pleadings.

To clarify the situation at this time it is well to here state that Prank Hromadka died on January 13, 1929, whereas $180 of the indebtedness sued for herein arose in November, following, while his widow was operating the Auto Sheet Metal Works’ business, and the balance of the amount sued for was advanced for defendant’s account subsequent to January, 1930. Therefore, if there is liability to plaintiff for any .part of said indebtedness, the children of the deceased Prank Hromadka cannot be held for same. We shall hereafter refer to the widow of the deceased, now wife of one Pacholik, as the defendant in the case.

Defendant denies owing plaintiff any amount. She alleges, and it is established, that about one year after her husband’s death, she and the two Stehrs, members of plaintiff firm, reached an agreement to form a corporation to conduct the two lines of business they had theretofore engaged in; that the corporation was formed and the tangible property and equipment of the two old firms was transferred to the corporation. She further alleges that on or about February 25, 1930, and “before the formation of the corporation,” she reached a settlement with the Stehrs, “as related to all existing indebtedness and settled said amount (that sued for) in full and received a receipt from J. J. Stehr” to that effect, and further, “that at the time of said transfer and organization it was distinctly understood that all indebtedness existing between the parties had been settled, all as will be more fully shown on trial of this case.”

The new corporation, organized February 10, 1930, it is alleged and established, was unsuccessful, and was by mutual consent dissolved, each side retaining the property transferred by them, respectively, to it at time of organization.

Plaintiff’s suit was dismissed and its demand rejected. This appeal is prosecuted by it.

During the life of Prank Hromadka he carried an account with plaintiff firm and purchased material from it, for use in his repair work, which he did not carry in stock himself, and would send over to it automobiles, etc., intrusted to him for repair and reconditioning which required a character of work and repair hei was not in a position to perform. After his death his widow, the defendant, undertook to operate the business, with the assistance of her older son, along the same lines it had been previously operated. This was done until formation of the corporation above mentioned. In November, 1929, one J. M. McKenzie, Jr., brought to defendant’s place of business a Plymouth car, badly damaged from fire, and authorized that it be reconditioned. It was transferred to plaintiff’s business for first repairs and when *483 this had been done it was returned to defendant. Plaintiff charged defendant with the amount of repairs done by it, $180. -Defendant charged $64 for the work done by her. The repaired car remained in defendant’s possession and was so held when the corporation was formed.

On February 17, 1930, defendant, at the suggestion of J. J. Stehr, of plaintiff firm, instituted suit against McKenzie for the repair bills on his car, $244. The record does not disclose the course this suit took, but it does appear that it was barren of results so far as collecting from McKenzie. Stehr advanced the court costs incident to filing this suit and paid the fee of the counsel who represented plaintiff therein, $25. These amounts were charged to defendant and with the repair bill make up the amount herein sued for. Plaintiff herein was materially interested in the success of the suit against McKenzie; Its interest was about three times as great as that of defendant, from a pecuniary standpoint.

The itemized account in the record shows that to January 1, 1930, defendant was due plaintiff $488.33, and that during the months of January and February this amount was augmented by $S0.75, making a total, to about the time the corporation was formed, of $569.08. This itemized account shows two credits, viz.: $34.75 and $354.33, leaving a balance due of $180. The receipt mentioned in defendant’s answer and relied on by her as establishing payment or settlement of the entire account due by her to plaintiff is in the following words and figures:

“Feby. 25,1930.
$488.33 (Note: This was the total of the a/c to 1/1/30).
Less 185.00 (Note: This should
-- have been $180.00).
303.33
Jan. 8 - 16.00
Jan.23 - 11.50
Jan.28 - 20.75
Feb.12 - 35.00
Feb.14 - 2.50
389.08
Stehr acct. 34.75
Total - 354.33 Paid in Full.”

This receipt is not signed by any one. J. J. Stehr denies he wrote it, or knows anything about it. Defendant is positive he did construct it and handed it to her. Whether he did or not has no decisive bearing upon the issue of payment. It is certain that whoever wrote the figures and made the deductions appearing in the receipt had plaintiff’s books before him, or a true copy of the account against defendant. There are minor variances between some of the debit items of the itemized account and the corresponding charges in January and February on the receipt but the totals of debits and credits, and balance shown, are the same.

It is not now seriously questioned, and the record establishes to our satisfaction, that the incorporation of the businesses conducted by plaintiff and defendant did not involve or affect the ownership of their bills and accounts receivable; that each side retained its own accounts unaffected by the transfer of their equipment to the new company.

Defendant, in her answer, alleges that before the corporation was formed she and plaintiff reached an agreement whereby the account due by her to it was settled in full, and in the same answer alleges that at the time of the organization of the corporation and' the transfer to it of the equipment of the Auto Sheet Metal Works, “it was distinctly understood that all indebtedness” between them had been canceled.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Succession of Acosta
396 So. 2d 499 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1981)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 So. 482, 1933 La. App. LEXIS 1842, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stehr-auto-sheet-metal-works-v-pacholik-lactapp-1933.