Andrus v. Eunice Band Mill Co.

169 So. 449, 185 La. 403, 1936 La. LEXIS 1189
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 25, 1936
DocketNo. 33469.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 169 So. 449 (Andrus v. Eunice Band Mill Co.) 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
Andrus v. Eunice Band Mill Co., 169 So. 449, 185 La. 403, 1936 La. LEXIS 1189 (La. 1936).

Opinions

FOURNET, Justice.

Plaintiffs filed suit against the Eunice Band Mill Company, Inc., successors to the Roy O. Martin Lumber Company, to recover the sum of $29,595.58, alleged to be the amount due them under a contract of sale of timber.

Defendant filed exceptions of no right or cause of action which were sustained by the trial judge and the plaintiffs’ suit was dismissed. The plaintiffs have appealed.

This suit is based on a contract dated November 5, 1926, under the terms of which plaintiffs sold all of the merchantable timber of certain kinds and dimensions suitable for sawmill purposes, located on their lands, at a certain and definite price per thousand feet for each particular kind of timber. The contract stipulates that the purchase price shall be paid “$3,000 cash” upon the acceptance of the contract, the balance to be paid every two weeks from acceptance, as the timber is cut and scaled, with the privilege granted to the vendee to reimburse itself for the $3,000 cash payment after $9,000 had been paid out of the purchase price of timber thereafter cut. The contract further provides that the purchaser should have eighteen months within which to cut, remove, and pay for the timber. The contract also contains the following clause:

“If at the expiration of eighteen (18) months there remains standing on said described lands, or otherwise, merchantable timber, suitable for saw mill-purposes, said purchaser obligates itself to pay for said timber on the stumpage basis herein fixed, quantity to be established and determined by joint estimate, which shall be made within thirty (30) days of the expiration of said first eighteen (18) months. * * * The agreement of two of the three aforementioned estimators shall then be accepted as a basis of final settlement.”

Plaintiffs alleged that timber was cut and paid for by the defendant under the terms of and during the period allowed by the contract, but that defendant declined to join the plaintiffs in making an estimate of the merchantable timber suitable for sawmill purposes which remained standing on the property as provided for in the contract; that an estimate of each kind of timber had been made and set out in plaintiffs’ petition, showing the value thereof according to the prices fixed in the contract, aggregating the sum of $30,070.03; that they paid the taxes for the year 1927, amounting to $214.20, which, under the terms of the contract, were due by the defendant.; and that after having credited defendant with the balance remaining in their (plaintiffs’) hands from the cash deposit of $3,000, defendant still owed the amount sued for.

The exceptions of no cause or right of action are predicated upon the decisions *407 in the cases of Louis Werner Sawmill Co. v. O’Shee, 111 La. 817, 35 So. 919, and Charles Tiernan, et al. v. John Martin, et al., 2 Rob. 523.

In the Werner Case the defendant interposed exceptions of no right or cause of action to plaintiff’s suit which sought to compel specific performance of a contract wherein it is provided that “O’Shee agrees to sell and L. W. S. M. Co. agrees to buy all the lands of said O’Shee * * *. The consideration to be one dollar and fifty cents per M. for each thousand feet of merchantable pine timber found on said lands. The * * * amount of money which L. W. S. M. Co. is to pay O’Shee for said lands, is to be arrived at by two estimators, one to be chosen by each of the parties to this agreement.” The court maintained the exceptions on the ground that one of the requisites of a contract .of sale is a fixed price, and although it was agreed in the contract that such a price should be fixed by two estimators, the estimators appointed having failed to agree, the contract was never completed and perfected and, therefore, of no effect.

In the Tiernan Case, supra, the court said:

“It is one of the legal requisites for the perfection of a contract of sale, that that there shall be a fixed price. Civ.Code, art. 2414; Wilson v. McHugh, 1 La. [380], 383; Walker et al. v. Fort et al., 3 La. 535. Pothier, Vente, Nos. 16 and 17. And although it may be agreed in the contract, that such price shall be fixed by the estimation of a third person, if this is not done, or it becomes impossible to do it, there is no price, and the contract remains imperfect.” (Italics ours.)

And held: ■

“In this case, it has been shown that the agreement cannot be perfected, as originally contemplated, between the parties, owing to Hall’s death in insolvent circumstances, and to the fact of the creditors having, in the mean time, obtained judgments against him, which operate as a lien on the property.” (Italics ours.)

Counsel for plaintiffs contends that the Werner and Tiernan Cases are not controlling in the instant case because in those cases the contracts were never perfected and completed and were, therefore, no contracts in law or in fact, but that the contract in the instant case was perfected and completed and the clause in controversy was not of the essence of the contract but an “accidental stipulation,” within the meaning and contemplation of article 1764 of the Revised Civil Code, and cite in support thereof article 1901 of the Revised Civil Code; Blanks et al. v. Lephiew et al., 132 La. 545, 61 So. 615; Kent v. Davis Bros. Lumber Co., 122 La. 1046, 48 So. 451, 457; and Moore v. O’Bannon & Julien et al., 126 La. 161, 52 So. 253, 255.

“Contracts for the sale of standing timber, with varying stipulations as to price and as to the time in which the timber should be removed, have more than once been held by this court to be sales.” Smith v. Huie-Hodge Lumber Co., 123 La. 959, 49 So. 655, 656. See, also, article 1920, Rev. Civ.Code; Lumber Co. v. Sheriff, 106 La. *409 414, 30 So. 902; Shepherd v. Davis Bros. Lumber Co., 121 La. 1011, 46 So. 999; Lee Lumber Co. v. Hotard, 122 La. 850, 48 So. 286, 129 Am.St.Rep. 368; Kent v. Davis Bros. Lumber Co., 122 La. 1046, 48 So. 451, 457.

In the case of Blanks et al. v. Lephiew et al., supra, the court held, as is expressed in syllabus No. 3:

“A contract providing that the owners of standing timber thereby sold it 'to defendants for $3.50 a thousand feet, the quantity to be estimated by experts, and that, after paying $8,000, defendants might relieve themselves of all further liability, except for timber already cut or deadened by paying $500, subsequently modified to provide that the quantity of timber should be ascertained by the number of shingles manufactured from it, was a sale of the timber and made defendants liable for the contract price, since, while the original contract had no binding force as either party could have nullified it by declining to appoint an expert, this defect was cured by the supplemental contract, and defendant's privilege of retiring from the contract by paying $500 was merely a resolutory condition which, as expressly provided in Rev. Civ.Code, art. 2045, did not suspend the contract or prevent it from having full effect.” (Italics ours.)

Counsel for defendant called our attention to the holding by the court in that case to the effect that the contract as originally written in the Blanks Case had no binding effect,

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Bluebook (online)
169 So. 449, 185 La. 403, 1936 La. LEXIS 1189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrus-v-eunice-band-mill-co-la-1936.