Winter v. Gani.

199 So. 600
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 14, 1941
DocketNo. 2191.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 So. 600 (Winter v. Gani.) 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
Winter v. Gani., 199 So. 600 (La. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

OTT, Judge.

The suit is to recover the balance on an open account for goods and merchandise sold by the F. C. Winter Mercantile Company to the defendant between December 1, 1928, and December 2, 1932. It is admitted that the plaintiff has the right to prosecute the suit in the capacity in which she has brought it and that she has succeeded to all the rights of the mercantile company as the original creditor. The account filed in the record gives an itemized statement of all purchases and credits made by the defendant, showing a balance of $276.21, including interest on the account. The last admitted payment on the account was made on July 5, 1933. The suit was filed in August, 1937, and the account is prescribed unless a credit of $3.05 alleged to have been made on July 2, 1935, had the effect of interrupting prescription.

The defendant pleaded the prescription of three years and alleged that the credit of $3.05 shown on the statement of account as having been made on July 2, 1935, was not made by him, nor did he authorize any one to make any such payment for him. The sole question presented is whether or not the plea of prescription is well founded. Other than this credit of $3.05, the defendant does not dispute the correctness of the account.

The trial court overruled the plea of prescription and rendered judgment against the defendant for $206.39, with interest thereon in the sum of $66.77, with 5% interest on said principal from judicial demand. The case is here on a devolutive appeal taken from this judgment by the defendant.

It appears that a short time after the defendant incurred the indebtedness sued on, he discontinued the business which he was operating when the debt was incurred. In 1934, his wife started up a business of her own and in her name. As a part of that business, she sold fireworks. On July 2, 1935, Jack Winter, a 14-year-old boy, son of Mr. F. C. Winter who was the owner and operator of the mercantile company which had sold the goods to defendant, went to the store operated by Mrs. Gani and purchased fireworks amounting to $3.05 for which he was given a charge slip. Mr. Winter died in 1937, just before this suit was filed.

Young Winter testified that he purchased these fireworks from Mrs. Gani at the suggestion of his father who was living at that time and that the purchase was to be applied as a credit on the old account which the defendant owed the Winter Mercantile Company; that he gave the slip to Miss Waite, the bookkeeper of the mercantile company; that he asked Mrs. Gani if'he could get the fireworks and charge them to the old account which her husband owed his father and she assented to this; that the defendant was not present at the time and knew nothing of this purchase and the agreement to charge it to the old account.

Miss Waite testified that she was the bookkeeper for the Winter Mercantile Company in 1935 when Jack Winter got permission from his father to buy these fireworks from Mrs. Gani; that he went and purchased the fireworks and gave her the slip; that she did not credit defendant’s account with this item in the ledger for the reason that this account had been *602 charged to profit and loss; that she carried the slip in her books as part of the company records, but did not enter it as a credit on the account; that she had the slip when she prepared the statement of account, but does not know what finally became of it and the slip was not produced on the trial.

Mrs. Gani admits selling Jack Winter the fireworks and that she gave him a charge slip for same, but she denies that she agreed that this item was to be credited on her husband's old account, or that anything was mentioned about this old account. The defendant also denies that he knew anything about the purchase of these fireworks from his wife by young Winter, or that any credit therefor was to be made on his old account.

The city judge made the following finding on this point:

“Passing now to the question as to whether or not there was an acknowledgment of. the account by the alleged credit transaction dated July 2, 1935, which credit was in the sum of Three & OB/ioo ($3.05) Dollars, the Court is of the opinion that Jack Winter, as he testified, purchased some firecrackers from Mrs. Robert Gani, who at that time was operating a business of her own, separate and apart from her husband. The Court is further of the opinion from the testimony that Mrs. Robert Gani gave young Jack Winter the firecrackers and charged the debt to the old account of her husband, Robert Gani. The Court is impressed on that point by the testimony of Jack Winter and Miss Waite and this fact, although vaguely denied by Mrs. Robert Gani is substantiated by her own testimony. The evidence reveals that Mr. & Mrs. Robert Gani were at the time of this transaction and are now living together as husband and wife and there existed at that time a community of property between them.”

The judge then proceeded to hold that, as Mrs. Gani was a public merchant, her husband was liable for her debts, and as she could thus bind her husband for the obligations incurred by her in her business, she could likewise bind him by acknowledge ing his debt so as to interrupt prescription thereon. He cites Article 131 of the Civil Code and Charles Lob’s Sons, Ltd., v. Karnofsky et al., 177 La. 229, 148 So. 34, as authority for his holding.

Conceding that Mrs. Gani did agree for this purchase by Jack Winter to go on the old account of her husband (and we seriously doubt that the proof shows that she made such an agreement), it remains a fact that the proof fails to show that the defendant authorized his wife to make such an agreement or that he knew anything of it. There is no doubt of the authority of the wife to bind herself and her husband in anything relating to her trade, if she is a public merchant and living with her husband. The cited case and article of the Code lay down that principle of law.

However, the principle of law that a married woman in this state is not liable for a community debt is so well established that it requires no citation of authority. Mrs. Gani was not liable for the community debt which' was due the plaintiff; the defendant husband was alone liable therefor and he alone could be sued for it. He was the debtor and not his wife, as this debt had no relation whatever to the separate trade carried on by the wife.

Article 3520 of the Civil Code provides that prescription ceases to run whenever the debtor or possessor makes acknowledgment of the right of the person whose title they prescribe. The acknowledgment of the debt must be made by the debtor himself or by his authorized agent, and the power to acknowledge the debt must be express and special. Civil Code, Art. 2997. In order for a payment on a debt to toll the statute of limitations, such payment must be made by the debtor himself or by another under his authority and with his full knowledge and consent. Guaranty Bank & Trust Co. v. Heiderich, 163 La. 957, 113 So. 161, on rehearing; Gaillardanne v. Locascio, La.App., 166 So. 505; Brock, Bank Com’r v. Sharkey et al., La.App., 191 So. 137.

Assuming that Mrs. Gani did undertake to acknowledge the old debt due by her husband, she had no authority to do so.

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199 So. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winter-v-gani-lactapp-1941.