Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. St. Louis Cypress Co.

46 So. 193, 121 La. 152, 1908 La. LEXIS 646
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1908
DocketNo. 16,889
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 46 So. 193 (Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. St. Louis Cypress 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
Barber Asphalt Paving Co. v. St. Louis Cypress Co., 46 So. 193, 121 La. 152, 1908 La. LEXIS 646 (La. 1908).

Opinion

PROVOSTY, J.

Asking for instructions, the Court of Appeal of the First circuit for the parish of Iberville submits to this court the question whether a cause of action is [154]*154■shown by a petition wherein the petitioner claims the ownership of a steam shovel, alleging that petitioner sold the same to one Hoyt for $1,200, payable one-fourth cash and balance in three equal instalments at 30, 60, and 90 days, with a stipulation that the property should remain petitioner’s until final payment; and that Hoyt paid the cash part of the price; but that, without having paid the credit part, he sold, the shovel to the defendant.

The contention for the petitioner is that under the express terms of the contract the payment of the entire price was a condition "precedent to Hoyt’s becoming owner, and that inasmuch as the condition was never fulfilled he never became owner, and, in consequence, the sale to defendant was of the property of another, and null.

The contention of defendant is that Hoyt became owner notwithstanding the express ■stipulation to the contrary.

The object which the parties desired to accomplish by this contract is obvious. Hoyt desired to have the steam shovel, and plaintiff desired to have the price of it. That is to say. they desired .to enter into a contract by which plaintiff should give the steam ■shovel to Hoyt, and Hoyt should give plaintiff the price; or, in other words, they desired to enter into a contract of sale; which is defined by the Code to be “an agreement by which one gives a thing for a price in current money, and the other gives the price in order to have the thing itself.” Article 2439. •

In order that there should be a giving in the sense of this article, or, in other words, in ■order that there should be a sale, it is not necessary that the thing which forms the object of the sale should be actually delivered or the price paid. This is explained in another article of the Civil Code:

“Art. 2456. The sale is considered to be perfect between the parties, and the property is of right acquired to the purchaser with regard to the seller, as soon as there exists an ■agreement for the object and for the price thereof, although the object has not yet been delivered, nor the price paid.”

Plaintiff did, however, actually deliver the property, and Hoyt paid a part of the price. Nothing is said in the petition concerning possession, but from the fact that plaintiff is suing for possession and is not complaining of defendant’s having acquired possession by undue means, the implication is that possession was delivered by plaintiff to Hoyt and by Hoyt to defendant, and that these deliveries were in pursuance of the two contracts of sale.

Had Hoyt paid the entire price in cash, no difficulty would have arisen in connection with this transaction. But he was either unable or unwilling to do this, and the sale was made to him partly on credit, and the plaintiff company stipulated that it should continue to be owner of the property until the entire price should have been paid. The purpose of adding this stipulation is as obvious as that of entering into the contract.' It was simply and purely to procure greater security to plaintiff for the payment of the price, and merely by way of an accessory agreement— precisely as a mortgage would have been stipulated if the property had been real estate on which it would have been possible to give a mortgage.

The plaintiff company is not now suing to set aside the contract, or in disaffirmance of it; it has not offered, and is not now offering, to return the money received; its position is that the contract can, and should, be enforced as made — that is to say, that Hoyt- should owe the price without having ever become the owner of the thing; and that it, plaintiff company, should be held to have continued to be owner of the thing and yet to have become the creditor of Hoyt for the price.

Such a contract appears to us to be legally impossible. But we must acknowledge that it has been sustained by the Supreme Courts of a great many, if not of all, of the other [156]*156states, and has been given recognition in one case by this court, and, hi a measure, has been approved by the Supreme Court of the United States.

The decision of this court to which we have reference is that in the case of Baldwin v. Young, 47 La. Ann. 1466, 17 South. 883, where such a stipulation of continued ownership was given effect. It may be well to add, however, that in that ease the question of the validity of such a stipulation was not put at issue, and was not discussed; the court expressly and significantly stated, in the course of the opinion, that there was in the case “no controversy on the question of the ownership of the heater.”

In the cases of Bulkley v. Whited & Wheless, 104 La. 125, 28 South. 922, Adams Mach. Co. v. Newman, 107 La. 702, 32 South. 38, and Foreman v. Mace, 111 La. 28, 35 South. 372, the court pronounced against the efficacy of such a stipulation.

In the first of these cases, the facts were that Bulkley had agreed to sell, and Whited & Wheless to buy, certain shares of stock, part cash and part credit, the credit part to be evidenced by interest-bearing notes of the purchaser maturing at fixed intervals, with the stipulation that'the title to the stock was to remain in the vendor until the purchase price was fully paid, and should continue to stand on the books of the company in the name of the vendor, and that “for the mutual protection of the parties” the stock, as well as the notes given for the purchase price, were .to be placed in escrow, the stock to be delivered to the purchaser after full payment of the purchase price, and not otherwise; default on any one of the notes to cause all those yet unpaid to become exigible, and in that contingency the vendors to have the right to sell the stock, and with the price thus obtained to pay the notes, any surplus to belong to the purchaser. It was further stipulated that the dividends accruing on the stock should be in like manner xfiaced in escrow, “and shall be held like the other security for the payment of the purchase notes.” The notes were duly executed, and both they and the stock were placed in escrow as agreed. Later, Bulkley sought to exercise the right of a stockholder, founding himself on his continued ownership of the stock. The court said: “The disputed point in this litigation is whether relators are stockholders or not. Relators deny that they have sold their stock. They contend that the contract is an agreement to sell or conditional sale.” The court held that the contract was a sale, and that the ownership had passed. The court said:

“Parties are at liberty to make contracts so-long as they are legal, and to agree to accidental stipulations; but where they actually make a contract with fixed legal essentials they are powerless to control the legal effect of the contract itself. The contract .being made, the law governs its results” — citing Cooley v. Broad, 29 La. Ann. 347, 29 Am. Rep. 332, and Herryford v. Davis, 102 U. S. 235, 26 L. Ed. 160.

In the case of Adams Mach. Co. v. Newman, 107 La. 702, 32 South.

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Bluebook (online)
46 So. 193, 121 La. 152, 1908 La. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barber-asphalt-paving-co-v-st-louis-cypress-co-la-1908.